Bernanke: Fed will not raise rates in forseeable future
Fed still plans to quantitative easing stimulus, if growth remains steady: Bernanke

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke reiterated Wednesday that the Fed is nowhere close to raising interest rates, assuring markets that the US easy money tap would not soon dry up.
With the economy still facing risks, especially from government spending cuts, Bernanke told a Congressional panel that the Fed was still planning to trim its quantitative easing stimulus, if growth continues at a steady pace.
But expectations that the Fed was poised to start tightening monetary policy, which have sent interest rates jumping and sparked turmoil in global markets, were unwarranted, he stressed.
“I don’t think the Fed can get interest rates up very much, because the economy is weak, inflation rates are low,” Bernanke told the House Financial Services Committee.
“If we were to tighten policy, the economy would tank.”
Seeking to clarify Fed policy, after interest rates jumped more than a full percentage point in two months, Bernanke pledged to stick to the path that he laid out in June, after the last meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee.