Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke pauses on Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday, Feb. 27, 2008, during his testimony before the House Financial Services Committee hearing on the latest measures to heal the U.S. economy. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

Fed Ready to Cut Interest Rates Again

JEANNINE AVERSA | February 27, 2008 05:23 PM EST | AP

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WASHINGTON — The Federal Reserve is ready to lower interest rates again to brace the wobbly economy even as zooming oil prices spread inflation, Chairman Ben Bernanke signaled to Congress on Wednesday.

He is fighting to keep the economy afloat after mighty blows from the housing and credit crises, while trying to contain inflation.

For now, the priority is shoring up the economy, Bernanke suggested in an appearance before the House Financial Services Committee. He pledged anew to slice a key interest rate and help the economy, which many fear is on the verge of a recession, if not already in one.

"The economic situation has become distinctly less favorable" since the summer, the Fed chief told lawmakers.

Since then, the housing slump has worsened, credit problems have intensified and the job market has deteriorated. Bernanke said that combination of bad news has made people and businesses more cautious about spending and investing, further weakening the economy.

The country should prepare for "sluggish economic activity in the near term," Bernanke said. Concern is growing about the possible return of stagflation, when stagnant growth is combined with rising inflation, for the first time since the 1970s.

Were energy prices to continue to rise at a sharp clip _ something the Fed does not anticipate _ it would "create a very difficult problem" for the economy, Bernanke said. Inflation would spread and growth would be further restrained, he said. If that happened, it would be a "very tough situation," he added.

The Fed is prepared to lower rates again to bolster economic growth, Bernanke said. The Fed "will act in a timely manner as needed to support growth and to provide adequate insurance against downside risks," he said, sticking closely to assurances he offered earlier this month.

The central bank started lowering a key interest rate in September. Over just eight days in January, the Fed shaved 1.25 percentage points, the biggest one-month reduction in a quarter-century. Economists and Wall Street investors predict the Fed will cut rates again at its next meeting, March 18. Some analysts believe rates will drop again in April.

Brian Bethune, economist at Global Insight, said Bernanke's remarks "keeps the door wide open for further rate cuts."

On Wall Street, the Dow Jones industrials edged up 9.36 points.

Bernanke said that at some point this year, the Fed will need to "assess whether the stance of monetary policy is properly calibrated" to foster the Fed's objectives of price stability "in an environment of downside risks to growth."

He was hopeful that previous rate reductions and the $168 billion economic aid plan of tax rebates for people and tax breaks for business would energize the economy in the second half of 2008.

As the Fed chief began his first day of back-to-back appearances on Capitol Hill to discuss the economy, there was more bad news on the housing and manufacturing fronts. Sales of new homes fell in January for a third straight month. Orders to factories for big-ticket manufactured goods dropped in January by the largest amount in five months.

Bernanke has come under some criticism for not acting sooner in cutting rates. But Alabama Rep. Spencer Bachus, the committee's top Republican, expressed sympathy. "There is perhaps no other public figure in America who has been subjected to as much Monday morning quarterbacking as you have" over the past months, Bachus said.

The committee chairman, Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., suggested the economy is not suffering through a garden-variety slowdown.

He made clear that he wasn't trying to put the R-word _ recession _ in Bernanke's mouth. "I'm not going to be responsible for the nervous people at the stock market who overreact when you twitch your nose," Frank told Bernanke. "But the problems we now have are different."

Many of those woes are linked to the housing meltdown. Bernanke was asked when he thought the housing market might stabilize. It's possible, he said, that by "later this year it will stop being such a big drag directly" on the economy. But home prices probably will decline into next year, he added.

"It is very difficult to know, and we've been wrong before," Bernanke said.

Even as the Fed tries to bolster the economy, it must remain mindful of inflationary pressures, Bernanke said.

Oil prices, which have set records, briefly shot past $102 a barrel on Wednesday; prices eased, but still remain close to $100 a barrel.

"Should high rates of overall inflation persist," Bernanke said, "the possibility also exists that inflation expectations could become less well-anchored." If people think inflation is escalating, they will act in ways that could make things even worse, a sort of self-fulfilling prophecy. Bernanke said that could complicate the Fed's job of trying to nurture growth while keeping inflation under control.

If oil prices continue to skyrocket this year, it would be "hard to maintain low inflation," Bernanke acknowledged.


 
 

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- Harrier See Profile I'm a Fan of Harrier

It doesn't mean jack unless you correct poor laws that are slanted against the average working person like. Financial, Oil, medical and insurance industries laws all need to be completely revised

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:38 AM on 02/28/2008
- fourex See Profile I'm a Fan of fourex

Bernanke warns public he'll blame them for future inflation.

" Bernanke warned. If people, companies and investors think inflation will move higher, they will act in ways that could turn inflation even worse, a sort of self-fulfilling prophecy."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:38 PM on 02/27/2008
- PigLipstick See Profile I'm a Fan of PigLipstick

A one trick pony, that's all Wall Street will allow him to do !

Never fails to protect his investment banking buddies by printing billions in funny money to bail them out of their gambling debts. Inflation is picking up steam as the dollar becomes worth less than the paper it is printed on. International firms have stopped excepting the Dollar and switched to the Euro, we got some real problems. I've been on the Precious Metal train for a while now and I have never regretted it. Betting the farm in an unregulated environment is pure insanity !

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:59 PM on 02/27/2008
- wolf58 See Profile I'm a Fan of wolf58

time to start boycotting, one oil company at a time. Exxon Mobil for starters total boycott for one year then move on to the next one.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:46 PM on 02/27/2008
- gcallaghan See Profile I'm a Fan of gcallaghan

The problem there is although the wealth gets redistributed it stays in the same circle. The only way to hurt the greedy bastards is to conserve oil and leave them dangling in their own futures market. When cigarettes hit $3 per pack, I quit. When gas hit $3 a gallon, I cut my driving by 40%.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:21 PM on 02/27/2008
- mmckinl See Profile I'm a Fan of mmckinl

The plan is in motion ...

Pay for the banks incompetence, greed and fraud with more inflation on consumers and wage earners.

Take the bad loans off banks' books by expanding the amounts Freddie and Fannie can lend so that the taxpayers will be on the hook for those too.

Fire the Fed, before they bankrupt us all!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:34 PM on 02/27/2008
- amanda85 See Profile I'm a Fan of amanda85

What can I say, guys buy Euros and Canadian $$$ before all your assets turn to dust...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:02 PM on 02/27/2008
- WIpatriot See Profile I'm a Fan of WIpatriot

...or precious metals.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:31 AM on 02/28/2008
- robbor See Profile I'm a Fan of robbor

wonderful, Bernanke cuts the rate and the bankers raise their interest rates, keeping the difference for themselves instead of passing the savings to the public. banks get bailed out, public doesn't.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:21 PM on 02/27/2008
- unbozo See Profile I'm a Fan of unbozo

Oh Bernanke! Still pushing on that string I see. When will you ever learn?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:39 PM on 02/27/2008
- Boboday555 See Profile I'm a Fan of Boboday555

President Decider and his lackey Bernanke are desperately trying to hold this smoke and mirror economy together with spit, scotch tape, bailing wire and a prayer.
Question: if this economy is so strong Mr. President and Senator McCain, why does it need "Intravenous I.V." assistance from the Fed every fifteen minutes?

Man-child Bush had hoped he could slither away into the back pages of history before his fairytale economy hit the fan!
Thankfully, the spoiled little rich kid from Crawford won"t have his Mommy and Daddy to bail him out this time.
In the end, the Decider"s only real legacy, aside from dividing this nation for all time, will be a Second Great Depression...which is right "round the corner!
Thanks again neo-cons for putting a child in My White House!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:35 PM on 02/27/2008
- realitytrumpsbull See Profile I'm a Fan of realitytrumpsbull

The way you balance a scales is to set it to zero. They should do the same with our federal budget, I think.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:33 PM on 02/27/2008
- Manx See Profile I'm a Fan of Manx

When Wall street yells, "cut," Bernanke responds with, "How low?" The hell with the low dollar and inflation, which is hurting middle-class Americans. Marie Antoinette couldn't say it better: "Let them eat inflation!"

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:50 PM on 02/27/2008
- Nova16 See Profile I'm a Fan of Nova16

You can't scare anyone with the talk of inflation, stagflation, whatever--we're in recession headed for a depression. The fed, Wall Street, the financial markets, the corrupt administration, the general public are all in a quandry as to how to deal with and correct the economic mess we're facing today. The American people have elected incompetency into the White house then chose to ignore the gross failures of this administration leading to the perils at home and aboad. Federal debt of nearly ten trillion dollars, six trillion accrued by the dolt himself in just seven years with reckless spending on endless war, tax cuts for his cronies and enablers, budget deficits on stupidity like faith-based programs and heavy borrowing from abroad to finance his failures. We're in an economic "no-man's land". Vote republican at your peril

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:47 PM on 02/27/2008
- Chavez08 See Profile I'm a Fan of Chavez08

Me?? -

I'm waiting for some of that **trillion-dollar** Oil Company profits to trickle down like ole Uncle Miltie and Daddy Reagan promised to do when we let the corporate interests destroy collective bargaining.

Maybe our share is held up in paperwork....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:09 PM on 02/27/2008
- VictoriaLynnLewis See Profile I'm a Fan of VictoriaLynnLewis

Would someone please tell me hw to get a low rate re-mortgage. I built my own house, from top to bottom,(est. value 140,000 however I still owe for the land. When I tell my friends and family that I owe a 38,000 mortgage for 13 more years at 379. a month. They laugh at me and tell me my mortgage is a joke compared to theirs. Which maybe it is to some ameicans. I was going to re-mortgage around the last of January, my bank loan officer said I could afford to wait a little while rates came down more. Stupid me! I listened to her rates on a 15 year mortgage went from 5.3% to 4.5 % and back up to 5.5% HAD I REMORTGAGED WHEN I WANTED TO I COULD HAVE SAVED MYSELF AT LEAST 50.00 A MONTH. Now I feel screwed and used, and I have no-one to blame but my own ignorance. Now with gas prices headed up to nearly impossible to afford highs, I need that extra 50.00 to survive on.. Damn Bush Oil. I will take advice from strangers..loll. probably be better than my so-called loan officer.. Victoria

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:08 PM on 02/27/2008
- gcallaghan See Profile I'm a Fan of gcallaghan

IMHO If there ever was a time to avoid taking on more debt, it is now. Refinance your existing loan balance at a rate lower than you're paying and leave your equity intact. As the housing slump deepens, more and more people will see their equity vanish and find themselves stuck if they need to sell. Your 102K cushion should be enough to see you through the worst that will come and still leave you with future options.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:33 PM on 02/27/2008
- VictoriaLynnLewis See Profile I'm a Fan of VictoriaLynnLewis

Yes, there are typing errors. I decided to grown long fingernails, and as a result I can't type worth a damn.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:23 PM on 02/27/2008
- Pdubya See Profile I'm a Fan of Pdubya

watch bennie get pwned!

http://youtube.com/watch?v=yybFGh1sUcQ

wake up folks. this isn't about congress. it isn't about republicans or democrats. it isn't about a stock bubble or housing burst.

it is about the New World Order.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:49 PM on 02/27/2008
- studlyguy See Profile I'm a Fan of studlyguy

basically Burnusnanke is saying to the American people f**k you ,i'm going to try and pacify wall street and f**k INFLATION just read is really secretly at 7.1 % now, NOT SO SECRET if i found out i guess the true #'s ,and if he keeps doing what he threatens to do a lower rates,will have hyperinflation, economy no matter how low he lowers interest rates is in the toilet sorry everybody hears and reads about jobs losses and what jobs that are left going to cheap labor countries overseas,so no good paying jobs ,housing implosion ,and INFLATION ,no amount of rate cuts is going to stop ,the damage is done and no turning back ,all the FED thinking is let's go back to what started this disaster in the first place ,sorry no one is going to fall for this time ,inflation is eating up more a lot more money along with uncertainty with job losses and do you really think anyone is going to even be thinking of buying such a big commitment as a home in this environment i don't think so, the FED action will only pacify wall street until wall street sees it isn't doing anything,cause lets examine this the interest rates have been cut but credit interest rates haven't budge and interst rates haven't reflected these cuts so who is this benefiting the Banks that's who, not the average American citizen,cause the banks get cheap money and keep the rates to Americans for credit cards and other credit the banks give interest stay the same interesting isn't it, so they can try and save their asses ,but the American people have wised up ,so he can lower it to 1% with the INFLATION that is going to insue for this action can we talk DEPRESSION i think were already there though just wall street and FED are in denial

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:47 PM on 02/27/2008
- Pdubya See Profile I'm a Fan of Pdubya

watch helicopter ben get pwned!

http://youtube.com/watch?v=yybFGh1sUcQ

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:42 PM on 02/27/2008
- WIpatriot See Profile I'm a Fan of WIpatriot

Ben has been served!

I have pic of Ben rubbing his closed eyes as my wallpaper. Priceless.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:52 PM on 02/27/2008
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