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The clock is ticking for the Federal Reserve.
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The US Central Bank is considering increasing interest rates because the economy has strengthened and Central Bank has believed,
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there is a growing risk that inflation may eventually get out of control.
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Currently interest rates are near zero and FED officials have stressed that the first increase would be small and following ones, gradual.
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The rate high would be the first since the 2008 financial crisis,
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and it may pave the way for the Bank of England to go the same way.
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However, all the central banks in the Euro Zone, Japan, and China are unlikely to raise rates for quite some time,
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meaning that the year of cheap money globally is not completely over yet.
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Were the FED to hike rates, US consumers and businesses would face higher borrowing costs on their loans.
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The value of the dollar would rise as more investors would put money in the US chasing higher returns.
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This matters for companies around the world that have borrowed in dollars, as they will find these loans harder to repay.
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Then there is the question of the how financial markets would react, some fear there may be wide-spread panic,
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one thing that the FED exactly has been trying to avoid.