The Federal Reserve is extending a program intended to further lower long-term interest rates, noting hiring has weakened, consumer spending is rising more slowly, and the economy needs more support. The Fed will continue Operation Twist through the end of the year, it announced today. The Fed has been selling $400 billion in short-term Treasurys since September and buying longer-term Treasurys. It says it will shift another $267 billion through December.
The Fed's goal is to spur more borrowing, spending, and growth. But extending Operation Twist might not provide much benefit. Long-term US rates have already touched record lows. Businesses and consumers who aren't borrowing now might not do so if rates slipped slightly more. Fed officials are also reiterating their plan to keep short-term rates at record lows until at least late 2014. (More Federal Reserve stories.)