Fed leaves policy unchanged despite strong

The US Federal Reserve is paring back its monthly purchases, but has not said when it will start raising its benchmark short-term interest rate.

US Federal Reserve Bank building.

The US Federal Reserve is further slowing the pace of its bond purchases. (AAP)

The Federal Reserve has stuck to its plan of holding its base interest rate near zero while steadily trimming its stimulus, despite a surprisingly strong second-quarter economic growth report.

The Fed as expected reduced its monthly bond purchases by $US10 billion ($A11 billion), taking the program to $US25 billion a month, but said the low federal funds rate remains needed to support growth and improvement in the labor market.

In a statement at the end of a two-day policy meeting, the Federal Open Market Committee acknowledged that the economy shows "sufficient underlying strength" to support the recent gains in job creation and cutting unemployment.

However, it also suggested continued disappointment with the state of the jobs market, saying that various data "suggests that there remains significant underutilisation of labor resources".

But in a significant shift that recognises the gains in the economy, the FOMC dropped its previous expression of concern over low inflation.

"The Committee sees the risks to the outlook for economic activity and the labour market as nearly balanced and judges that the likelihood of inflation running persistently below two per cent has diminished somewhat."

The statement came shortly after the Commerce Department reported that the economy grew at a 4.0 per cent annual rate in the second quarter, rebounding solidly from the first quarter's sharp contraction.


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