Fed leads fresh $200bn money market intervention, today 03/11/2008
Fed leads fresh $200bn money market intervention
By Norma Cohen, Economics Correspondent
A group of the world’s largest central banks launched a co-ordinated effort to inject liquidity into money markets in North America and Europe, with the US Federal Reserve offering to double the sums it is prepared to lend, raising the total facilities available by a further $200bn from what it announced only last Friday.
The Fed also said it would increase the currency swap arrangements it already put in place with the European Central Bank and the Swiss National Bank by $10bn and $2bn respecitvely. In addition, the terms of the swap agreements have been extended through to the end of September 2008.
Although the funds will be loaned to banks and primary dealers, or brokers that trade directly with the Fed, the US central bank is hoping that the fresh liquidity will be extended to market participants such as hedge funds which are struggling to raise it.
The move by the Fed, which follows a $200bn emergency intervention by the US central bank on Friday to ease strains in the credit markets, sent equities in Europe and the US sharply higher and helped the dollar rebound against the world’s leading currencies. Gold and oil retrenched from their recent highs.
The S&P 500 opened 2.4 per cent higher at 1,303.26, the Nasdaq Composite climbed 2.4 per cent to 2,221.27 and the Dow Jones Industrial Average put on 2.3 per cent to 12,014.42.
In London, the FTSE 100 soared 149.5 points or 2.6 per cent to 5,777.4 in afternoon trade. Frankfurt’s Xetra Dax climbed 2.1 per cent to 6,584.67 and the CAC 40 in Paris gained 2.4 per cent to 4,676.46.
The dollar, which earlier in the session sunk to a fresh record low of $1.5495 against the euro after a survey of German economic confidence came in much stronger than expected, rebounded to stand at $1.5385, down just 0.3 per cent on the session.
In the fixed-income market Treasuries sold off sharply with the yield on the 2-year note jumping 22bp to 1.70 per cent while the 10-year note yield climbed 11bp to 3.57 per cent, flattening the yield curve.
Markets have been in turmoil in recent days as margin calls on hedge funds and other investors have forced a mad scramble for cash. The rush to raise cash has forced sales of securities, which in turn is knocking down the price of other collateral pledged for loans. Fears are that that, in turn, will set off yet more margin calls in a frightening downward spiral that leaves banks in a frantic dash to raise still more cash.
Rising short term interest rates suggest banks are already struggling. In the UK, the key 3-month Libor rate was fixed on Tuesday at 5.79 per cent, the highest level in two months and well above the Bank rate of 5.25 per cent.
The Bank of England has joined the operation, and left open the possibility that it could even increase sums available. It announced it would extend its 3-month open market operation, rolling over an existing collateralised loan that expires next week. It will offer £10bn to the market for three months on March 18 against the same expanded list of collateral it accepted in December and January and said that it will conduct a similar operation in April.
But it declined to specify the April amount, saying the sum to be loaned will be decided “in the light of March’s operation.”
The European Central Bank also said it will join the co-ordinated effort to add US dollar liquidity to the system. It will offer auctions on 25 March, replacing loans made to the market three months earlier and make available up to $15bn. The Swiss National Bank said it will add US dollar liquidity at the end of this month via collateralised, 28-day loans totalling $6bn.
Bank of Canada, which cut its key rate by a half point last week, is also participating in the liquidity injection. It will loan C$2bn to the banking system for one month beginning next week and a further C$2bn for a month beginning in April.





















Would this intervention
have anything to do with helping out the Carlyle Group indirectly since they are heavily invested with the subprimes also, and on the brink ?
If they can do it
like this, why do we have to pay taxes? All they have to do is print more. Duh!
"He who exercises government by means of his virtue may be compared to the north polar star, which keeps its place and all the stars turn towards it." Confucius
"He who exercises government by means of his virtue may be compared to the north polar star, which keeps its place and all the stars turn towards it." Confucius
The inflation race!
It is interesting the moves that the Federal Reserve is making to protect the dollar. But also wise to watch what Central banks around the world are doing as well. The Brazilian government for example is in discussion to intervene in their Central banks activities. One plan is to limit and raise taxes on foreign investments made in dollars and allow Brazilian companies to keep accounts abroad to prevent more dollars from coming into the country. This is to keep the dollar from falling even further. Of course another option is for Central banks in foreign countries to inflate their own money, since most nowadays, like the dollar are fiat as well.
Fractional Reserve Banking
Does it apply to the Fed itself? Bush just borrowed 168B for us which if the Fed must follow the 10:1 ratio would mean they now have 9x to "lend"
I just heard its 400 billion
I just heard its 400 billion in the last 4 days!!!
“A prudent man foreseeth the evil, and hideth himself: but the simple pass on, and are punished.” (Prov. 22:3; 27:12 KJV)
Hey McCain-----┌П┐(◣_◢)┌П┐
We need graphs!
Like RonPaulGraphs, but of Fed rate changes and fed auctions-
A picture speaks a thousand words!
Very dumb question, here
Can someone explain in simple language just how/where the Fed has money to *lend*?
I've always thought it just changed the *reserve ratios* that banks are required to hold related to our own deposits with the banks in order to "control" the money supply.
Is the Fed loaning out/charging interest on funds in reserve that are there *due* to our savings/trust funds/IRAs?
What happens in an economic crash to those Fed receivables, when those banks cannot afford to pay, just like so many consumers?
Related question: With the Fed lowering their interest rate, what happens when it gets to zero? If it goes negative, does that mean the Fed will have to *pay* others to use its monies? (I'm only half kidding!)
The last we were allowed to see
was the Fed reserves going negative for the first time ever. Starting in March, the figures were no longer available to the public, supposedly.
The Fed has money to lend because it just makes it. Yes, that will further devalue the dollar and cause our inflation numbers to go higher. (Current independant estimates peg our inflation rate now at around 17%)
The Feds lowering the interest rates under 2.25% will give a negative return on bonds, basically.
So they have to lower the rates to keep the markets going, but if they keep lowering them, our economy is over.
However, if they stop lowering rates, then our economy is over.
So, it's just over.
:(
~Live life to its fullest, with an open heart, open arms and most important... an open mind~
Chavez will not allow the Bank in his country
Keep that in mind when you are being told how awful and evil he is...
'Live for yourself, there's no one else more worth living for,
Begging hands and bleeding hearts
Will only cry out for more...'
'Live for yourself, there's no one else more worth living for,
Begging hands and bleeding hearts
Will only cry out for more...'
Print Money???
Our government is not so cruel to the environment that it would actually "print" the money....duh! They'll just create serial numbers on the computers and wire transfer the billions.
Remember Willie Wonka and the Chocolate factory? Our money is like the giant candy bar being transfered in micro dots through the air.
Come on...our government wouldn't waste resources...sheesh
Thanks for all your replys
Look forward to tomorrow and the next couple weeks.
Get to the pumps early!
News today from Hugo Chavez (he is just another puppet, probably smokes Cuban cigars with Bush on trips to Saudi Arabia). Hugo Chavez with his current dispute with Exxon is selling his oil to China instead of Exxon refineries. This means higher gasoline prices, also means China is spending their dollars buying up as many raw materials as they can with their dollars before the dollar collapses. (Hugo probably sends his dollars to the States, has and buys gold, smart, eh)! Meanwhile the Fed is printing more dollars! Expect the dollar to fall again tomorrow and gold to start rising when all the dust clears. Buy food and other basic necessities first then gold and silver.
As long as we are talking about spending
ridiculous amounts of money for no reason here, did anyone hear they are going to spend $43 m to send out letters to taxpayers to watch out for their "loan until next tax year " checks. Could they just mail the things out and be done with it.
Right. I got mine.
My big question: Why? Just send the $$!!
New Hampshire and Ecuador
Seems some people need a vocabulary lesson, too!
"The dollar, which earlier in the session sunk to a fresh record low of $1.5495 against the euro after a survey of German economic confidence came in much stronger than expected, rebounded to stand at $1.5385, down just 0.3 per cent on the session."
Someone actually has the b!@*lls to use the word "rebound" here? Rebound? .01 a rebound? Boy, we are in such trouble here...Astonishing. Holy cow...this one is gonna be real painful--the Depression, that is.
They have already pumped $160 B before this $200B
into the banks since last Dec., and economists are saying it will not boost the confindence level to loosen lending. So now what ?
Halt income tax collection
The need is to pump money directly into the small business community and
middle/lower class.
Halting collection of all income tax, would put the money directly in the hands of the working class, where it is needed the most.
They should have never
They should have never started the income tax in the first place. As far as I know, the income tax was ruled unconstitutional back in 1881 when they tried to implement it back then. Try and try again, right? Bleh...
...
That would be the obvious correct thing
to do, but lets see if instead they put the fiat printing press into overload. Maybe a good investment would be in whatever paper they use to print them.
Except....the income tax pays the interest on our already
weighty debt. If we stop and re-direct those funds into the economy, we'd have to default and our creditors might get a bit pissy. (Peter got his pocket picked so Paul could be paid...and paid...and paid :)
40% of that is interest to the Fed.
It's time the Fed floats a few payments for America.
They're rich enough if they have $800 billion laying around.
so theorectically they could forgive 40% of America's tax
obligations for a year (that would be very fair in that everyone would get the 40% instead of certain categories of mortgage forgiveness etc bailouts). That's a much better idea than the "pay-day advance" stimulus package.
I agree with you about exports, but how?
The problem is how can the U.S. possilbly compete in exports. With labor laws as they stand, who in their right mind would invest in the U.S. market. The only thing that is keeping us afloat is agriculture (even in this case we have the government giving the farmers support). Everything else can be produced much cheaper abroad. I mean I never understood why a company can't pay a worker here in the States $300 dollars a month to produce, but can go to another country, pay $300 dollars a month, then turn around and sell the product here in the States! That is why I am all for eliminating the minimum wage or using tariffs on foreign products. But as the laws stand today, it will be a long time before we see Levi's or Barbie' being produced in the States for export.
Exactly. We can't compete
Exactly. We can't compete with minimum wage, regulations etc. There is no way to. As long as the world keeps accepting the dollar as the world reserve currency, we really don't have to. The world is beginning to wake up though and the days of accepting the dollar carte blanche are coming to an end. Look at Venezuela and Iran.
http://www.kpfa.org/archives/index.php?arch=24447
Give Michael Hudson a listen. This guy is right on the money.
OUR COUNTRY'S THE BIGGEST PRODUCER OF WEAPONS
OF MASS DESTRUCTION-87% OF OUR GNP IS WEAPONS! HOW IRONIC IS THAT? It makes me SICK that a country that was always on the cutting edge of manufacturing, technology, etc. is now reduced to a debt laden Consumer union! We used to make EVERYTHING here and export to other countries, no MORE!
That's George Bush's legacy; president of WEAPONS OF MASS DESTRUCTION sums it up pretty well - he's managed to DESTROY EVERYTHING he touches!
"If virtue and knowledge are diffused among the People, they will never be enslaved. This will be their great security."
-Samuel Adams-
Dollar going down, down, down in a burning fire!
Markets rose today, the dollar even had a spike in some instances, this could be to attract foreign investors to put their dollars in foreign markets, this is precisely the case in Brazil. So many dollars are coming into Brazil that the dollar fell another 1% and the Brazilian stock market Bovespa rose 3%. Central banks including Brazil are supporting the dollar by buying them off the market, then turning around and lending them back to U.S. banks.
I like..
.. that song.
=)
*ankers
Pardon me for a silly question but...
How can the bank of england lend money to buy dollars when they borrow money from other nations and we are already some £40-100billion in the red depending on whether you include state pension funds and the loan to Northern Rock? (We are already indebted).On the BBC Q&A it says that they needed to do this to 'get access to dollars'. What do we want dollars for? I don't geddit, I just don't.
'I always think of all you canvassors and precinct leaders at the front line.
Good luck out there &Thank you. It's appreciated'.-fip -U.K
'I always thank of all you canvassors and precinct leaders and delegates who were at the front line and caucuses.
Good luck out there &Thank you. You're a gift.
If you are already in debt and you borrow to buy into the fun
on this side of the pond then someone, somewhere, is as nervous as the only cat in a dog show.
One of the guys on FOX said it should create a bottom to the market so, you know, get ready for the boom!
Just a word of caution -
Just a word of caution - don't put all your faith into what FOX is telling you...
My analysis is that we aren't even close to the bottom and probably won't see it until 2009. We'll have a fairly steady decline with a few rallies along the way. Commodities and precious metals will continue to rise while most other areas of the market decline into the abyss...
...