|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
US stocks plunge on Federal Reserve rate cut announcement
By Barry Grey
12 December 2007
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
US stocks plummeted Tuesday after the Federal Reserve Board
announced a quarter-point cut in short-term interest rates and
indicated in an accompanying statement that it remained concerned
over the potential for an inflationary surge.
The sharply negative reaction on Wall Street, which was looking
for a half-point cut in interest rates and a statement clearly
giving primacy to the risks of recession and a meltdown on financial
markets above inflation concerns, is a measure of the near-panic
gripping big investors and some of the largest banks in the US
and Europe over the implosion of the US housing market and resulting
crisis on credit markets.
Immediately after the Federal Reserve Boards Federal
Open Market Committee announced its decision, at 2:15 PM Eastern
Standard Time, all of the major New York stock indexes began to
plunge. By the end of trading, the Dow Jones Industrial Average
had fallen 294.26 points, a drop of 2.1 percent. The Nasdaq Composite
Index declined by 66.60 points, down 2.5 percent, and the Standard
& Poors 500 Index fell 38.31 points, a 2.5 percent decline.
The sharp fall on the markets came despite the fact that Tuesdays
rate cuts marked the third consecutive reduction in interest rates
by the Fed since the credit crisis erupted last August. Since
then, the US central bank has slashed rates by a full point, the
greatest easing of borrowing costs since the recession of 2001.
The Fed cut its target federal funds rate, the overnight rate
at which banks lend money to one another, from 4.5 percent to
4.25 percent. At the same time, it reduced the so-called discount
rate, at which the Fed directly lends money to banks, from 5.0
percent to 4.75 percent.
These moves are aimed at cheapening the cost of loans and pumping
liquidity into the credit markets. They come at a time when major
banks and investment houses in both the US and Europe are reeling
from massive losses resulting from the collapse of assets linked
to US subprime home loans.
The depression in US home sales and prices and soaring mortgage
delinquencies and foreclosures of homes purchased with high-interest
subprime loans have undermined the stability of banking giants
that leveraged such loans into a multi-trillion-dollar edifice
of highly profitable securities that were sold to banks and other
investors around the world.
According to an article in Mondays Wall Street Journal,
Over the past decade, Wall Street built a market for more
than $2 trillion in securities sold globally and backed by loans
to US homeowners. That market has come crashing downas
it was destined to do, since it was built on the most speculative
and unstable of foundations.
Facing huge losses from the collapse of these investments,
and unable to determine the real value of exotic securities derived
from dividing up, bundling, repackaging and reselling loansmany
to subprime borrowers with shaky creditto other investors
and financial institutions, the banks have sharply cut back their
lending to consumers and businesses. Lending is down, its cost
is rising and the result is a credit crunch that is driving the
US economy into recession, with dire consequences for the global
economy.
This crisis is an expression of the increasingly parasitic
and speculative character of American and world capitalism. It
effects are rapidly spreading throughout the US economy, with
job growth slowing, consumer spending falling off, US corporate
profits tending downward and rising delinquencies on all forms
of consumer creditfrom home loans to auto loans and credit
card payments.
Most analysts are now forecasting minimal or negative economic
growth in the US for the current quarter, and some are predicting
the economy will fall into recession in 2008. On Monday, Morgan
Stanley became the first major Wall Street bank to predict a US
recession next year.
Last week, the Bush administration announced a scheme for mortgage
lenders, servicers and investors to voluntarily agree to freeze
interest rates for a small minority of the estimated 2 million
subprime borrowers whose adjustable-rate loans are scheduled to
reset sharply higher over the next 18 months.
The plan, which will do little to relieve the suffering of
millions of Americans who fell victim to predatory lending practices
during the housing boom, is above all aimed at buying time for
the big banks and mortgage companies and reassuring financial
markets that a full-scale collapse will be averted. There is,
however, little likelihood that it will prevent a deepening of
the credit crunch and stave off an economic downturn that could
prove severe and protracted.
The Wall Street Journal carried a front-page article
Monday headlined US Mortgage Crisis Rivals S&L Meltdown,
referring to the US savings and loans collapse of the late 1980s
and early 1990s that ended with a multi-billion-dollar government
bailout of Wall Street. The article had a sub-headline that read:
Toll of Economic Shocks May Linger for Years; A Global Credit
Crunch.
The Journal wrote that an examination of the current
crisis shows that it is comparable to some of the biggest
financial disasters of the past half-century.
Developments this week appear to vindicate that prognosis.
The Zurich-based banking giant UBS, the worlds largest provider
of banking services to the wealthy, announced Monday that it was
writing down the value of its subprime assets by an additional
$10 billion. The bank had already taken a $4.4 billion third-quarter
write-down. It issued a statement that the ultimate value
of our subprime holdings... remains unknowable.
UBS said it would post a loss for the fourth quarter and possibly
for the year as a whole. It further said it had received an $11.5
billion investment from a fund owned by Singapore and an unnamed
Middle Eastern investor, equivalent to selling as much as 12.4
percent of the company in return for a cash bailout.
With the announcement, UBS became the biggest casualty outside
of the US of the American housing slump, but banks in other countries,
such as Britain and Germany, have also been hit by the fallout
from the US housing and credit crisis.
That UBS, long known as a conservative lender, could
take such a financial hit suggests that the wave of industry write-downs,
which so far total about $50 billion, may be far from over,
wrote the Wall Street Journal.
Just two weeks ago, Citigroup, the largest US bank, agreed
to sell a $7.5 billion stake, 4.9 percent of the company, to the
Abu Dhabi Investment Authority in order to shore up its capital
base, after announcing write-downs of $8 billion to $11 billion
related to bad subprime investments. The bank had already disclosed
$5.9 billion in write-downs.
Merrill Lynch, which has $20.9 billion in remaining exposure
to subprime-linked investments, may also need to take a further
write-down, as could Morgan Stanley, according to analysts. Merrill
already disclosed a third quarter write-down of $7.9 billion.
Morgan Stanley has announced subprime-linked losses of $3.7 billion
in the first two months of the fourth quarter, which could increase,
based on its $6 billion in remaining subprime exposure.
Washington Mutual, the largest US savings and loan bank, this
week widened its expected fourth quarter loss to $1.5-$1.6 billion
due to deteriorating credit and mortgage markets. The S&L
said it would abandon subprime lending entirely, close 190 of
its 336 home loan center and sales offices as well as 9 loan and
processing call centers, and cut 3,150 jobs. It also announced
it would cut its dividend 73 percent to 15 cents a share.
Bank of America announced it was liquidating a money market
fund for institutional investors that was worth $40 billion only
a few months ago but now has only some $12 billion in assets.
The bank said the losses were related to the subprime mortgage
crisis.
Meanwhile, Fannie Mae, the US government-sponsored mortgage
company, predicted house prices would continue to fall for two
or three more years, with no normalization until 2010.
Wall Street is clamoring for a bailout by the Fed, in the form
of drastic interest rate cuts, with scant concern for the medium-
and longer-term implications for the status of the dollar and
the position of American capitalism in the global economy. The
Fed is attempting to balance the threat of a US banking collapse
with the dangers arising from soaring energy, food and commodity
prices and the relentless fall of the dollar on world currency
markets.
The dollar has already lost a quarter of its value against
all other currencies since 2002 and 40 percent against the euro,
and further interest rate cuts can only push the US currency lower.
The position of the dollar, which has been further undermined
by the current US housing and credit crisis, is a barometer of
the declining relative strength of American capitalism on the
world market.
Gerard Lyons, chief economist at Standard Chartered in London,
published a column in the December 7 Financial Times entitled
The Middle East Must Loosen its Ties to the Dollar.
In the article, he recommended that the oil-rich Persian Gulf
regimes sharply revalue their currencies and cease pegging them
to the dollar. He wrote: The region should shift from the
dollar peg to managing exchange rates against a basket of currencies
of the countries with which they trade. The dollar would form
a big part of this basket, but so too would the euro and Asian
currencies. Over time, the dollars weight would fall.
Commenting Tuesday on the bailout of UBS by Singapore and a
Middle East investor, he said it was a reflection of the
current fragile state of the financial sector in the West
and a further sign of how the balance of the world economy
is changing.
See Also:
US employment report shows recessionary
impact of housing and credit crisis
[8 December 2007]
Bush unveils subprime mortgage scheme
to bail out banks
[7 December 2007]
US recession fears grow as
bank losses mount
[21 November 2007]
Near-panic atmosphere as US
Federal Reserve chairman testifies before Congress
[9 November 2007]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |