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Fed lifts key interest rate from near zero

<p>Federal interest rates will (likely) increase. </p><p>"Doing so will be a testament also to how far our economy has come in recovering from the effects of the financial crisis and the Great Recession," Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen <a href="http://www.c-span.org/video/?401470-1/federal-reserve-chair-janet-yellen-us-economy" target="_blank">said at The Economic Club in Washington, D.C.</a></p><p>Don't worry. It'll only be a small increase at first: probably about 0.25 percent. That's not much.</p><p>So what will it mean for folks with auto loans, student loans, credit card debt or savings accounts?</p><p>Well, if you're taking out a $25,000 auto loan, a quarter-point increase means you'll only be paying about $3 more a month. Not bad.</p><p>Student loans depend on what type of rate you have: variable or fixed. Fixed rates won't change; those are locked in. This includes any federal student loans. Variable-rate loans will keep pace with increases to the federal interest rate.</p><p>Likewise, credit card rates <a href="http://www.usatoday.com/story/money/2015/12/14/fed-rate-hike-impact/77300960/" target="_blank">will go up at a similar pace</a>. Every time the fed raises its interest rate, the rate on cards will go up as well.</p><p>As for savings, there is some good news here. Your rates will go up — in time.</p><p>The main thing to keep in mind with the federal interest rate hike is that it's small at first. Because of that, its effects are small — at first. As rates continue to go up, though, you may start to feel it more.</p><p><i>This video includes music "tubshop" from </i><i><a href="http://birocratic.bandcamp.com/track/tubshop" target="_blank">Birocratic / CC BY 3.0</a></i><i>.</i></p>
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WASHINGTON (AP) — The Federal Reserve is raising interest rates after seven years of record lows. But it's signaling that further rate hikes will likely be made slowly as the economy strengthens further and muted inflation rises.

The Fed's move to lift its key rate by a quarter-point to a range of 0.25 percent to 0.5 percent ends an extraordinary seven-year period of near-zero rates that began at the depths of the 2008 financial crisis. Consumers and businesses could now face modestly higher rates on some loans.

The Fed's action reflects its belief that the economy has finally regained enough strength 6½ years after the Great Recession ended to withstand higher borrowing rates. But the statement announcing the rate hike said the committee expects "only gradual increases" in rates going forward.

 

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Rates on mortgages and car loans aren't expected to rise much soon. The Fed's benchmark rate doesn't directly affect them. Long-term mortgages, for example, tend to track 10-year U.S. Treasury yields, which will likely stay low as long as inflation does and investors keep buying Treasurys.

But rates on some other loans, like credit cards and home equity credit lines, will likely rise, though probably only slightly as long as the Fed's rate hikes remain modest.

For months, Chair Janet Yellen and other Fed officials have said they expected any rate hikes to be small and gradual. But nervous investors have been looking for further assurances.

The central bank's target for the federal funds rate — the interest that banks charge each other — has been at a record low between zero and 0.25 percent since December 2008. At the time, Fed officials led by Ben Bernanke were struggling to contain a devastating financial crisis that triggered the worst recession since the Great Depression.

The recession officially ended in June 2009. But unemployment kept rising, peaking at 10 percent before starting to fall. The jobless rate is now at a seven-year low of 5 percent, close to the Fed's target for full employment.

After the financial crisis, the Fed turned to other extraordinary measures, including a series of bond purchases intended to shrink long-term loan rates. The Fed ended the purchases in October 2014, though it's kept credit loose by reinvesting its bond holdings.

Those enormous holdings will complicate the Fed's efforts to raise its target rate. But the central bank has tested other tools to help it achieve the increases it wants in the funds rate.

Some analysts expect the Fed to raise rates at every other meeting in 2016, for a total of four quarter-point moves. Others think that after Wednesday's hike, the Fed could wait until June before raising rates again.

While Fed officials want to move slowly, an acceleration in inflation could force them to raise rates more quickly. Right now, the Fed's preferred price gauge is up a scant 0.2 percent over the past 12 months. Even excluding volatile energy and food, prices are up just 1.3 percent.ent announcing the rate hike said the committee expects "only gradual increases" in rates going forward.

This video includes music "tubshop" from Birocratic / CC BY 3.0.