Fed Rates Headed Close To Zero

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December 14, 2008 03:38 PM EST | AP

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Chart shows changes in the Fed interest rate; 1 c x 3 in; 46.5 mm x 76.2 mm

WASHINGTON — With the country spiraling deeper into recession, the Federal Reserve is ready to slash its key interest rate _ perhaps to an all-time low_ in hopes of cushioning some of the economic fallout felt by many struggling Americans.

To battle the worst financial crisis since the 1930s, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke and his colleagues already have ratcheted down their main lever for influencing the economy _ the federal funds rate _ to 1 percent, a level seen only once before in the last half-century.

The Fed opens a two-day meeting Monday to assess to economy and decide its next move on rates. Another reduction to the funds rate, the interest banks charge each other on overnight loans, is all but certain to be announced Tuesday.

Many economists predict the Fed will cut its rate in half _ to just 0.50 percent. A few think the Fed could opt for an even more forceful action _ lowering rates by a whopping three-quarters percentage point or more. If that larger cut occurs, it would be the lowest on records that track the monthly average of the targeted funds rate going back to 1954.

Even an aggressive rate reduction won't turn the economy around, analysts said.

"It is not so much going to give the economy a big push forward. It's more a case of trying to help the economy from being pushed further backward by all these negative events," said Stuart Hoffman, chief economist at PNC Financial Services Group.

However deeply the Fed decides to cut rates, the prime rate _ now at 4 percent _ for many consumer and small-business loans would drop by a corresponding amount. The prime lending rate is used to peg rates on home equity loans, certain credit cards and other consumer loans. Cheaper rates could give pinched borrowers a dose of relief.

The goal of lower borrowing costs is to entice people and businesses to spend more, which would revive the flat-lined economy. So far, though, the Fed's aggressive rate reductions have failed to lift the country out of a recession that started last December.

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Clobbered by the financial crisis, worried banks have hoarded their cash and been extremely reluctant to lend money to customers. Fearful consumers, watching jobs vanish and their investments tank, have sharply cut back their spending, including big-ticket purchases like homes and cars that typically involve financing.

The negative forces have fed off each other, creating a vicious cycle that Bernanke and Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson have been desperately trying to break.

To unlock lending and get financial markets to operate more normally, the U.S. has resorted to a string of radical actions, including a $700 billion financial bailout where the government is making cash injections in banks in return for partial ownership stakes.

In terms of rate cuts, the Fed is getting ever closer to running out of ammunition.

It can lower the funds rate only so far _ to zero. Even if that were to happen _ a point of debate among economists _ the prime rate would fall to 3 percent but no lower.

Against that backdrop, Bernanke says the central bank is exploring other ways to stimulate the economy.

The Fed could buy longer-term Treasury or agency securities on the open market in substantial quantities, Bernanke says. This might lower rates on these securities and help spur buying appetites.

Another option the Fed has mulled: issuing its own debt, which would give the central bank cash and more flexibility to battle the financial crisis. To do that, however, the Fed would need new powers from Congress.

"The Fed wants to show that it has tools and options and is not out of tricks because interest rates are very low," said Michael Feroli, economist at JPMorgan Economics. "The problems holding back the economy are fairly long lived in nature."

To combat the financial crisis, the Fed already has created first-of-its-kind programs, such as getting cash directly to companies by buying up mounds of "commercial paper," the short-term debt firms use to pay everyday expenses such as payroll and supplies.

It also recently launched massive programs to boost the availability of consumer credit, including that for cars, student loans, homes and credit cards. The Fed also is making loans to banks, is providing a financial backstop to the mutual fund industry, and has injected billions of dollars in financial markets here and abroad.

The Fed could opt to expand programs by enlarging loans it's now making, providing loans to other types of companies, or buying more and different types of debt. The Fed's balance sheet has ballooned to $2.2 trillion, from close to $900 billion in September, reflecting some of those other activities to get credit flowing again.

Even with all the bold moves, the economy continues to sink deeper into despair.

Skittish employers axed 533,000 jobs in November alone. That drove the unemployment rate up to 6.7 percent, a 15-year high.

Since the start of the recession, the economy has shed nearly 2 million jobs. Analysts predict another 3 million more will be lost between now and the spring of 2010.

Last week alone, Bank of America Corp., tool maker Stanley Works and Sara Lee Corp., known for food brands such as Jimmy Dean and Hillshire Farm, announced job cuts.

General Motors Corp., Chrysler LLC and Ford Motor Co., meanwhile, are fighting for their survival. GM and Chrysler have said they're in danger of running out of money within weeks. The White House is exploring new ways to help Detroit after rescue efforts collapsed in Congress.

With the employment market eroding and consumers retrenching, the economy could stagger backward at a shocking 6 percent rate in the current October-December quarter, analysts predict. It shrank at a 0.5 percent pace in the third quarter.

President-elect Barack Obama is advocating an economic recovery plan that includes spending on big public works projects to bolster jobs. His plan also includes tax cuts to spur consumers to spend more and businesses to step up investment and hiring.

Americans are sorely feeling the toll of the housing, credit and financial crises.

Households' net worth fell 4.7 percent in the third quarter to $56.5 trillion as people watched the value of their homes and investments tank. It marked the fourth straight quarterly decline, the Fed said.

WASHINGTON — With the country spiraling deeper into recession, the Federal Reserve is ready to slash its key interest rate _ perhaps to an all-time low_ in hopes of cushioning some of the econom...
WASHINGTON — With the country spiraling deeper into recession, the Federal Reserve is ready to slash its key interest rate _ perhaps to an all-time low_ in hopes of cushioning some of the econom...
 
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- Carolab I'm a Fan of Carolab 359 fans permalink
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Treasury Benefits from 'Massive Paranoia' as Bailout Cost Falls

By Matthew Benjamin and Liz Capo McCormick
Bloomberg News
Monday, December 15, 2008

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=a3p7GCBgAnho&refer=h...

Bill Clinton was forced to abandon spending initiatives to boost the economy at the start of his presidency when advisors warned him that the borrowing needed to fund the programs would push interest rates higher. President-elect Barack Obama may not have the same problem.

While the total amount of U.S. government debt outstanding rose to $10.7 trillion in November from $9.15 trillion a year earlier, the amount of interest paid in the last two months fell by $10 billion, according to the Treasury Department.

The potential for massive deficits has done nothing to damp demand for government debt as the U.S. prepares to spend $8.5 trillion to bailout financial institutions, homeowners and the economy. The biggest deficit as a percentage of the economy was 6 percent in 1983. A trillion-dollar 2009 gap would top that.

Policy makers may also cut interest rates again, which may keep bond yields low. The Federal Open Market Committee will reduce its target rate for overnight loans between banks by a half-percentage point, to a record 0.50 percent, when it meets Dec. 15-16, according to the majority of economists surveyed by Bloomberg News.

http://www.gata.org/node/6999

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:23 AM on 12/15/2008
- Carolab I'm a Fan of Carolab 359 fans permalink
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The Bloomberg News story about U.S. Treasury borrowing costs that is appended here evokes GATA's longtime suspicion that the gold-price suppression scheme and the gold-carry trade it underwrote were the Clinton administration's mechanisms for deceiving the bond market. Note particularly the comments in the Bloomberg story by Clinton adviser James Carville, and compare them to the observations in the summary of GATA's work:

http://www.gata.org/node/6519

While the gold price long has been at least "managed" by Western central banks -- as with the gold standard itself, and then the London Gold Pool of the 1960s -- the current arrangement, largely surreptitious, may have originated with an academic paper co-written in 1988 by Lawrence Summers, then a professor at Harvard, later deputy to Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin and then his successor. The paper was titled "Gibson's Paradox and the Gold Standard", linked here:

http://www.gata.org/files/gibson.pdf

It's very dense but GATA consultant Reginald H. Howe, a lawyer and gold mining company investor in Massachusetts, the first litigator against the gold price suppression scheme and a Harvard grad himself, put it in context in 2001 with his essay "Gibson's Paradox Revisited: Professor Summers Analyzes Gold Prices," which you can find in the "Essays" section here:

http://www.goldensextant.com/

Essentially, the scheme as implied by Summers' paper is to keep interest rates down and government bond prices up by rigging the gold market, gold and interest rates ordinarily being inversely correlated.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:29 AM on 12/15/2008

now if the banks will lend us the money I will pay off some debts and put money into my retirement accounts (couldn't do it this year for the first time in a couple of decades)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:24 AM on 12/15/2008
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Yea, same thing happened to the car companies.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:13 AM on 12/16/2008
- nogimmicks I'm a Fan of nogimmicks 28 fans permalink

Bloody Fed. Greenspan and Bernanke served the Fed well. Unfortunately, that translated into a great damage to everything else. The money issuing power must be taken away from the Fed. It must become a transparent branch of the government, not an opaque private entity printing dollars for themselves, devaluing dollar, and creating instabilities.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:23 AM on 12/15/2008
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I agree. End this shadow government.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:09 AM on 12/16/2008

Greenspan should be Time's Man of the Year -- it is his policies and philosophies which have caused the worldwide financial meltdown

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:38 PM on 12/14/2008
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To add to my prevous post...

IF their home doesn't have way more owed on it than it is worth.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:24 PM on 12/14/2008
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IF there are families who's payments have skyrocketed due to an ARM. IF they still have a decent enough income to qualify to refinance. And IF the banks start lending money again. This COULD help help a few families to stay in their homes instead of being foreclosed upon. Notice the IFs here though.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:22 PM on 12/14/2008
- AnnArky I'm a Fan of AnnArky 35 fans permalink
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A man with a beard like Bernanke's is truly a narcissist first (a major trait in most of Bush's administration) and an economist second.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:43 PM on 12/14/2008
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Somebody said absolve all debt. I thought he was out there for a minute, but the more that I think about it, it might not be a bad idea. We absolved the Marshall plan. Germany's debt for WW1 was absolved. We absolved the debt for the third world twice. I have absolved loans to family members and friends and I have had people do it for me. This saved our relationship. Can't the same be said of society. If all loans were paid off, things would go on as business as usual for everybody, except the bankers. they would have no business. They would have to get back to work loaning money again, but with more oversight and regulation, perhaps, even nationalization or partial nationalization.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:33 PM on 12/14/2008
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"Even an aggressive rate reduction won't turn the economy around, analysts said."

Of course not. If the economy is not "turning around" with rates down to 1%, taking it down further won't make much of a difference at all.

It will however make the Banksters a little bit richer... and that seems to be the point anyway.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:02 PM on 12/14/2008

This is why the Fed is starting to move from a strategy of pegging the Federal Funds rate to a strategy of quantitative easing. Look it up in Expedia if you do not know what it is.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:15 PM on 12/14/2008
- Pearlman I'm a Fan of Pearlman 3 fans permalink

The Fed Fund Rate is a market driven rate based on supply and demand of interbank lending. The Fed sets a "target" rate and tries to manage that rate via Open Market Operations. When interbank lending is at a stoppage, lower rates has little effect at moving the market for funds.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:45 PM on 12/14/2008
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only stimulus or debt relief, but how and what kind?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:49 PM on 12/14/2008
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This is why banks should be nationalized or be made into non-profits of sort. It should be more important that legitimate businesses make money than for banks to make money. Making money from lending is the usury that Jesus warned about and is forbidden in Islam. I am agnostic, but about this, I think they were on to something. It should also considered social usury when profiting from giving medical care; nobody should be able to reap profit when that money could be better used to take care of people. That is why single payer systems work better than other systems. No middle man. When bankers are getting paid as much as they do, it is too much of a tax on society, one that we get no representation for. Banking is just not a job that is productive for society: sitting on money, giving it out, owning through credit the worker's product or service. All a banker does is collection after the loan is made. There should be a limited amount loaned not to flood the market, but would give people of diverse backgrounds with good business and employment ideas opportunities. If there are losses, people should not be loaned money again. It should work like the loans that have worked so well in the third world that that guy won the Nobel prize for. This can be the beginning of a stimulus plans.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:01 PM on 12/14/2008
- darthdarcy I'm a Fan of darthdarcy 48 fans permalink
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Hey Benny; I got an idea why don't you issue the differential to cover a reset of these toxic mortgages at 5-6%..?

"Earmarked", specifically for that purpose so those these thieves on Wall St. don't add it in with the calculation of their bonuses or horde it...

Then maybe with this crucial aspect of the cause to these bundles, now almost untouchable, you might accomplish something even if it is "only" humanitarian and for the best interest of the country, avoiding 8 million plus more houses fall to foreclosure and millions more put in the already inflated limited rental market....and further driving down the remaining value of housing..and thus the dollar..?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:49 PM on 12/14/2008
- stunsitfel I'm a Fan of stunsitfel 34 fans permalink
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Oh but keep on with more bailouts, print more money and see what happens. Throw in some national health care. The good stuff like Canada.

Idiots.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:49 PM on 12/14/2008
- Earl I'm a Fan of Earl 90 fans permalink
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Canada is doing just fine.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:51 PM on 12/14/2008

canadian banks are rated number 1........in the world

and free health care is great......i wish we were more like canada

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:56 PM on 12/14/2008
- stunsitfel I'm a Fan of stunsitfel 34 fans permalink
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You really are living in a fairy tale world. I worked in a hospital in Detroit and let me tell you any Canadian that was sick and could afford it came across the bridge to get treatment in MI. Time after time I heard the complaints about their socialized program.

It stunk.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:58 PM on 12/14/2008

"print more money and see what happens"

The recession will be less serious and the unemployment will be less bad.

The Fed at this point needs to move from a policy of pegging the federal funds rate to a strategy of quantitative easing.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:54 PM on 12/14/2008

your saying they should print more money???

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:57 PM on 12/14/2008
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good point

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:08 PM on 12/14/2008

Lovely...they already got 0% with the 700 billion bailout.
In the same day, with this sweetheart of a deal, the banks/credit card cos. still want to jack up interest to the consumer because they are getting stiffer rules regarding late fees and cycle scheduling, etc.

Can we all say GREEDY BASTARDS?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:47 PM on 12/14/2008
- research I'm a Fan of research 257 fans permalink

We the Bankers for the GOP Have ALL the Trillions.

We bankers have bought gold and are stashing it in Dubai.

The dollar adn all the worlds currencies will collapse.

We bankers will OWN THE WORLD.

get used to kneeling.

5 trillion http://www.forbes.com/2008/11/12/paulson-bernanke-fed-biz-wall-cx_lm_1112bailout.html

7.8T$ http://www.ritholtz.com/blog/2008/11/78-trillion-bailout/

Not just 700B

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:43 PM on 12/14/2008

your right its now at 8.5 trillion ..bloomberg.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:50 PM on 12/14/2008
- 000Jade000 I'm a Fan of 000Jade000 67 fans permalink

It's $8.4 Trillion according to this:

http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=11236

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:52 PM on 12/14/2008

tell captain stubing.......he thinks its still 700 billion......

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:53 PM on 12/14/2008
- Earl I'm a Fan of Earl 90 fans permalink
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This is excellent news. Now we will be service our debt to China with cheaper dollars - SUCKAS!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:43 PM on 12/14/2008
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