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Fed cuts key interest rate half-point to 1 percent

MARTIN CRUTSINGER | October 29, 2008 03:45 PM EST | AP

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Chart shows monthly change in the Fed interest rate;
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WASHINGTON — The Federal Reserve has slashed a key interest rate by half a percentage point as it seeks to revive an economy hit by a long list of maladies stemming from the most severe financial crisis in decades.

The central bank on Wednesday reduced its target for the federal funds rate, the interest banks charge on overnight loans, to 1 percent, a low last seen in 2003-2004. The funds rate has not been lower since 1958, when Dwight Eisenhower was president.

The cut marked the second half-point reduction in the funds rate this month. The Fed slashed the rate by that amount in a coordinated move with foreign central banks on Oct. 8.

In a brief statement explaining Wednesday's action, the Fed said that the "intensification of financial market turmoil is likely to exert additional restraint on spending, partly by further reducing the ability of households and business to obtain credit."

The central bank said that "downside risks to growth remain" holding out the promise of further rate cuts if needed. The rate-cut decision was unanimous.

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke and his colleagues pledged that they would "monitor economic and financial developments carefully and will act as needed to promote sustainable economic growth and price stability."

Wall Street had staged its second biggest point surge ever on Tuesday with the Dow Jones industrial average climbing by 889 points in anticipation of the Fed's action. Trading was more subdued on Wednesday with the Dow actually slipping into negative territory immediately after the announcement, but surged up by about 200 points in late-afternoon trading.

Many analysts said they believe the Fed will not stop at 1 percent if officials see the need to cut rates further. Some are forecasting another half-point move at the Fed's last meeting of the year on Dec. 16.

But other economists said with rates already so low, the Fed may decide to hold at 1 percent, leaving some room for a further reduction if needed next year should the country's economic troubles intensify.

David Jones, chief economist at DMJ Advisors, said the Fed's rate cut will be followed over the next week by similar action in other major countries as they grow more concerned that the recession that began in the United States is spreading to their regions.

But he said a section of the Fed's statement where it listed all the efforts taken so far to battle the slowdown was a signal the central bank believes it has done enough for now.

Other economists disagreed, saying the Fed clearly lowered its worries about inflation while raising concerns about economic growth.

Sung Won Sohn, an economist at the Smith School of Business at California State University, said he believed the Fed will make the "momentous decision" to move the funds rate to zero if events in coming months show such an action is needed to battle the global credit crisis.

In its statement, the Fed indicated it had room to lower rates because the spreading economic weakness was lowering the risks that inflation would get out of control. Indeed, the weakness has caused dramatic declines in the price of oil and other commodities.

While many economists believe the country has already fallen into a recession, they think the aggressive efforts by the Fed to cut rates and take other actions to unfreeze credit markets will keep the country from plunging into a prolonged and deep downturn.

The Fed's action was expected to be quickly followed by a reduction by commercial banks in their prime lending rate, the benchmark for millions of consumer and business loans, by a similar half-point.

The central bank also announced that it was lowering its discount rate, the interest it charges to make direct loans to banks, by a half-point to 1.25 percent. This rate has become increasingly important as the central bank has dramatically increased direct loans to banks in an effort to break the grip of the credit crisis.

Bernanke pledged in a speech earlier this month that the Fed "will not stand down until we have achieved our goals of repairing and reforming our financial system and restoring prosperity."

In addition to the rate cuts, the Fed has been moving to pump billions of dollars into the banking system to help unfreeze markets that seized up in dramatic fashion last month. The ensuing meltdown of financial markets caused the Bush administration to successfully lobby Congress to pass on Oct. 3 a $700 billion rescue package to make direct purchases of bank stock and buy up bad assets as a way of getting financial institutions to start lending again.

That money started flowing earlier this week with $125 billion going to nine of the nation's biggest banks. Other industries, including automakers and insurance companies, are in talks with the administration to get a share of the bailout funds.

And there is pressure from lawmakers to deploy some of the bailout resources to provide mortgage guarantees to encourage more banks to rework home loans to stem a record tide of foreclosures.

WASHINGTON — The Federal Reserve has slashed a key interest rate by half a percentage point as it seeks to revive an economy hit by a long list of maladies stemming from the most severe financia...
WASHINGTON — The Federal Reserve has slashed a key interest rate by half a percentage point as it seeks to revive an economy hit by a long list of maladies stemming from the most severe financia...
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Pdubya
11:05 AM on 10/30/2008
please retitle:

FEDERAL RESERVE CONTINUES TO DEVALUE THE CURRENCY IN AN EFFORT TO DESTROY THE DOLLAR SO THAT THEIR INTERNATIO­NAL BUDDIES CAN SWALLOW UP ASSETS AND BRING FORTH A GLOBAL CURRENCY TO CONTROL THE WORLD.
11:28 PM on 10/29/2008
CONGRESS IS FULL OF LAWYERS, SO WHY DID THEY ALL FORGET TO INCLUDE SOME CRITICAL FINE PRINT IN THE BAILOUT PACKAGE?

More abuse of the taxpayer is coming.

http://pac­ificgatepo­st.blogspo­t.com/2008­/10/what-t­hey-didnt-­tell-us-ab­out-bailou­t.html

Congress didn't do its job, ... again.
10:38 PM on 10/29/2008
I have not heard a bank help a single person whose mortgage is in danger. As far as I know, the banks have kept all the money for their profits
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
NABNYC
08:46 PM on 10/29/2008
A more truthful headline would be that the federal government cuts interest rates so they can steal more money from the citizens of this country. Targeting the senior citizens.

Let's see: the U.S. government borrows money from China at what? 5% interest/y­ear, then "loans" that money to the boys on Wall Street for 1%? Exactly who is going to be taking the loss on that deal? That's right: the citizens. More transfer of wealth to the elite.

And then the banks will pay what interest to citizens on their deposits? Less than 1%, that's for sure. Seniors saved a certain amount of money so they could live on the interest and keep the principal. But by cutting rates like this, Greenspan and his co-conspir­ators have forced seniors to eat up their principal or, in other words, have stolen money from old people to transfer it to the scum running Wall Street.

What a con. The only good thing I can imagine is that these people should be gone within months. I hope Obama doesn't bring in new scum to run the same con, because I think our country is almost broke now that the financial boys have stolen everything­.
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TAIsabel
Suffer no fools.
08:10 PM on 10/29/2008
However, credit card interest rates remain high, ARM's continue to choke people out of their homes, jobs are being lost and Bush,Wall Street and the fat cats have yet to be held accountabl­e.
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TAIsabel
Suffer no fools.
07:58 PM on 10/29/2008
Turns out Wall Street is still getting bonuses this year since the bailout and the job cuts have increased the pie for them. The top producers will get the same bonuses as last year. Almost 200,000 jobs have been lost, $700 billion in bailout money and they refuse to give up their lifestyle!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
handyallen1
bleeding heart
06:55 PM on 10/29/2008
we dont need to borrow more money we cant pay off the debts we have how about some jobs so we can pay off the debts we have
06:40 PM on 10/29/2008
So do we all like the idea of spending beyond our means to drive the consumer driven economy?
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Pdubya
11:08 AM on 10/30/2008
nailed it.

it won't be any different with an obama nation. it will "feel good" at first, but mark my words....w­e will see hyperinfla­tion. why?....

"Allow me to issue and control a nation's money and I care not who writes its laws!" Amshell Rothschild

We will continue our military industrial complex, healthcare complex and banking complex until the dollar collapses and the New World Order elites have our sovereignt­y and economic freedom by the balls.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Americatortures
05:25 PM on 10/29/2008
Fed cuts rate-Dow down over 80 points??? WTF??? Nice economy,GO­P!! thanks for nothing!!!
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Pdubya
11:09 AM on 10/30/2008
very naive finger pointing. its a plutocracy­.

silly partisan, tricks are for kids!
05:00 PM on 10/29/2008
Is this roller coaster making anyone else sick? It is time we move towards new leadership all around!

-LoOK
http://las­tofourkind­.blogspot.­com
05:34 PM on 10/29/2008
We're gonna have this nauseating theme park ride on the market for a while, no matter WHO is elected. stock up on Dramamine.
04:55 PM on 10/29/2008
That is totally what happens when you have 8 years of a crazy republican president.

http://www­.votesmart­er2008.com

(Please spread them like butter...I talked to the producers and they've said they've had so many people tell them that they learned so much from the site, that they're trying to make it go viral ...)
04:38 PM on 10/29/2008
so bernanke..­.

what's next?

rate down to ZERO? Below?

you will soon actually pay the banks to borrow from fed?

anymore anything stupid and upside down is possible, huh?

BTW... are the banks lending again? you know with the trillion bailout-he­ist help?

the answer is NO...

just hoarding cash and M&A each other...

WOW !

Hey America... Bamboozled again !

The problem is not lack of liquidity but...

INSOLVENCY !

GAME OVER.
04:33 PM on 10/29/2008
"But other economists said with rates already so low, the Fed may decide to hold at 1 percent, leaving some room for a further reduction if needed next year should the country's economic troubles intensify.­"

That's a lot of room!
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
MsDoc
04:32 PM on 10/29/2008
Will some please explain what good this does me...using words of one syllable or less...
04:39 PM on 10/29/2008
No damn good at all. (There, all words of one syllable.)
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
MsDoc
04:50 PM on 10/29/2008
sighhhhh. Thanks for the truth. Time to stock up on pasta...
edva
Capitalism vs Humanity
04:09 PM on 10/29/2008
Yep, cut the rate, thus penalizing responsibl­e people who save their money, and always, always take care of the speculator­s and gambling wall streeters first, right? This sucks so bad.......­.......
04:28 PM on 10/29/2008
Exactly. Savers will get less, there will be the same trickle of credit available, and the banks will charge responsibl­e borrowers more than ever in order to rebuild banks' capital and earnings. Then we get to participat­e as taxpayers underwriti­ng the bailout. Seems we all get to pay coming and going and going and going...
04:45 PM on 10/29/2008
As a saver myself, I feel your pain.