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Fed moves to halt market meltdown
By Nick Beams
18 August 2007
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If a week is a long time in politics, then two days in the
financial markets can be even longer. Last Wednesday, William
Poole, president of the St Louis Federal Reserve Bank, told Bloomberg
TV that the subprime mortgage rout did not threaten US economic
growth and that only a calamity would justify an interest
rate cut.
It was premature, he said, to suggest that this upset
in the market is changing the course of the economy in any fundamental
way and no one had called up and said the sky is falling.
It seems that the Federal Reserve Board and its chairman Ben
Bernanke had different information. In a hastily summoned video
conference on Thursday night they decided to cut the discount
rate that banks have to pay on overnight loans. While the federal
funds rate remains at 5.25 percent, the discount rate was reduced
by 50 basis points from 6.25 percent to 5.75 percent.
Announcing the decision before the stock market opened on Friday,
the Fed said that the deterioration in market conditions and tighter
credit, coupled with increased uncertainty, had the potential
to restrain economic growth in the future. It judged that
the downside risks to growth have increased appreciably.
Inflation, which, up to now the Fed had insisted was the main
problem facing the economy, did not rate a mentionpointing
to the strong possibility of a cut in the federal funds rate when
the Feds open market committee meets on September 18.
The Fed maintained it was taking the action to promote
the restoration of orderly conditions in financial markets
and that the changes would remain in place until the Federal
Reserve determines that market liquidity has improved materially.
It would continue to accept a broad range of collateral for discount
window loans, including home mortgage and related assets.
One of the chief causes for the drying up of credit has been the
inability of financial companies holding such assets to obtain
short-term funds through the normal operations of financial markets.
The Fed intervention came after a wild day on Thursday, in
which stocks fell by as much as 343 points. Had the plunge continued,
the market would have dropped more than10 percent from its previous
high, giving rise to concerns that, rather than a correction,
something more serious was occurring.
With barely half an hour to go, a seemingly miraculous turnaround
occurred. The market gained more than 200 points and, at one stage,
entered positive territory, before closing just 15.69 points down.
The sudden turnaround suggests an organised intervention, possibly
orchestrated by the Presidents Working Group on Financial
Institutions, sometimes known colloquially as the Plunge Protection
Team.
Last Monday the Wall Street Journal reported that the
group had already initiated action in response to growing instability:
The market turmoil prompted the Presidents Working
Group on Financial Marketsthe Treasury, the Fed, the SEC
and the Commodities Futures Trading Commissionto trigger
protocols established by Mr. Paulson shortly after he took office
last year. They include a detailed list of who is going to call
financial institutions, risk managers, traders and chief executives
to keep tabs, how often they should call and the like. When he
first joined Treasury from Goldman Sachs, Mr. Paulson instructed
Emil Henry, then the Treasury official in charge of financial
institutions, to craft guidelines for five or six meltdown
scenarios. One was a catch-all General Withdrawal from Risk
Taking. Others include a liquidity crisis, stock-market
meltdown and oil shock. The Working Group has held conference
calls, principally among staff, at least once a day in recent
days.
Whether or not there was a direct intervention, it was clear
that Thursdays revival would not be sustained, and that
unless immediate action were taken, the market would fall rapidly
when trading opened on Friday. This was the immediate impetus
for the Feds decision.
The necessity for action was underlined by Fridays developments
in Asian markets. Steady falls were recorded across the region
in the morning and, in the afternoon, the Japanese share market
plunged.
The benchmark Nikkei 225 index fell by 5.4 percent, its most
rapid decline since the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks.
The chief cause of the slide was the 10 percent fall in the shares
of export-oriented companies in the wake of a rise in the value
of the yen.
Komatsu, the construction equipment manufacturer, which obtains
most of its revenue from abroad, dropped 11.6 percent, Nippon
Yusen, the countrys biggest shipbuilder, fell 10.4 percent
and Toyota, the worlds biggest carmaker, fell 7.2 percent.
The increase in the yens value has been precipitated
by the unwinding of the so-called carry trades, in which money
borrowed in Japanese markets, where interest rates are relatively
low, is invested in markets where the interest rate is higher.
With credit tightening across world markets, investors moved out
of riskier assets funded by loans in the Japanese currency, causing
the yens value to rise.
In a bid to stabilise the situation, the Bank of Japan added
1.2 trillion yen ($10.7 billion) to money markets on Friday, making
it the tenth time this year it has intervened to provide liquidity
to the banks.
At Fridays market closure, the Dow Jones index was 233
points up, no doubt bringing a sigh of relief from central bankers
and government officials. But no serious observer believes the
Feds intervention has solved the underlying problems in
credit markets that are responsible for the crisis. It was, at
best, a holding measureuntil further problems bubble to
the surface.
See Also:
Wild gyrations on world markets
[17 August 2007]
Worldwide market panic compels central
banks to intervene
[13 August 2007]
Credit fears spark stock market plunge
[10 August 2007]
Bursting of credit bubble underlies stock
market turbulence
[2 August 2007]
Global credit crisis fuels
stock market turmoil
[31 July 2007]
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