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WSWS : News
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US Federal Reserve accedes to Wall Street demands with another
interest rate cut
By Barry Grey
1 November 2007
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The Federal Reserve Board, the nominally independent US central
bank, bowed to pressure from Wall Street banks and major investors
on Wednesday by lowering short-term interest rates for the second
time in two months.
The Feds Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC), which
consists of the heads of five Federal Reserve banks in Washington
and twelve regional banks, announced a quarter-point cut in the
key federal funds rate, the rate charged for overnight loans between
banks, to 4.5 percent. It also cut the discount rate, at which
the Fed loans money to major banks, by a quarter-point, to 5 percent.
Wall Street celebrated the announcement by driving up share
prices on all three major US stock indexes. The Dow Jones Industrial
Average rose 137.5 points to 13,903, a 1 percent increase; the
Standard & Poors 500 index climbed 18.4 points to 1,549,
a 1.2 percent rise; and the Nasdaq Composite Index went up 42.4
points to 2,859, an increase of 1.5 percent.
Particularly significant were the large gains registered by
the major US investment banks. Lehman Brothers stock rose
3.2 percent, Goldman Sachs gained 3.2 percent and Morgan Stanley
added 2.7 percent. Bear Stearns stock rose 0.7 percent and Merrill
Lynch gained 1.2 percent.
Just six weeks ago, following a freeze in credit markets and
stock market plunge resulting from the meltdown in the housing
market and the collapse of securities linked to subprime mortgages,
the Fed took the unusual step of cutting the federal funds rate
by half a percentage point.
Since then, the crisis in the housing and banking sectors has
intensified, with home sales and prices plunging, foreclosures
soaring and Wall Street banks announcing tens of billions of dollars
in write-downs of speculative mortgage-based investments. The
US dollar has declined to record lows on major world currency
markets and crude oil prices have climbed above $90 a barrel.
The dollar slide and explosive rise in oil pricesup nearly
40 percent since early summerportend a sharp rise in inflation
and a major financial crisis in the US and internationally, with
the potential for a severe and protracted recession.
Despite these ominous developments, stocks are up nearly 11
percent this year and continue to rise. A major factor in the
ongoing stock market boom is the assumption among big investors,
banks, hedge funds and other financial institutions that the Fed
will continue to provide easy credit to bail out those who have
been caught in various forms of highly risky and speculative investments.
Just last week Merrill Lynch announced that in the third quarter
it lost $2.2 billion and wrote off $8.4 billion in assets linked
to subprime mortgage debt. It is estimated that banks in the US
and around the world wrote off $30 billion in bad investments
in the third quarter.
Earlier this month it was announced that the US Treasury Department,
with the official blessings of the Fed, had engineered a scheme
to raise $80 billion-$100 billion in capital to prevent a collapse
of so-called structured investment vehicles (SIVs)off-balance-sheet
entities set up by major banks to engage in highly risky investment
bets. Citigroup, the largest US bank, faces the greatest exposure
from the SIV crisis.
By cutting interest rates again, the Fed added further fuel
to both the dollar decline and the related rise in oil and other
commodity prices. Both the British pound, at $2.0788, and the
euro, at $1.4485, hit new highs against the US currency.
In a cautious statement issued by the Federal Open Market Committee,
the Fed attempted to dampen expectations on Wall Street of a further
rate cut when the Fed meets again in December. The FOMC said:
The Committee judges that after this action, the upside
risks to inflation roughly balance the downside risks to growth.
The Committee will continue to assess the effects of financial
and other developments on economic growth prospects and will act
as needed to foster price stability and sustainable economic growth.
Disappointment among many on Wall Street that the Fed did not
cut interest rates by half a percentage point, combined with the
FOMCs elevation of the danger of inflation to an equal level
with the threat of recessionand the implied preference for
a pause in further rate cutsinitially prompted a downward
slide on the stock market. But the market rebounded, taking comfort
in that days cut and the belief that continuing distress
in the housing and credit markets will sway the Fed to continue
to open the sluices of cheap credit.
On Tuesday, the Conference Board issued its report on US consumer
confidence, showing a decline for Octoberthe third straight
monthly fall. The previous Friday, another report on consumer
sentiment showed a decrease to the lowest level in 17 months.
However, on Wednesday morning, prior to the Feds announcement,
the Commerce Department reported a bigger-than-expected increase
in the US gross domestic product of 3.9 percent for the third
quarter. This relatively high figure, following a second quarter
GDP growth report of 3.8 percent, made all the more remarkable
the Feds decision to make a further cut in interest rates.
The Commerce Department report showed a sharp 20 percent decline
in housing investment, but this was offset by a continuing surge
in US exports. The export rise is due to the steep decline in
the dollar, which makes US exports to Europe and Asia cheaper
and imports from these regions more costly.
The US government and the Fed are pursuing a highly risky policy
of allowing the dollar to plummet in order to gain short-term
advantage over Americas trading rivalsin effect, conducting
a trade war by dint of the dollars devaluation. This has
potentially disastrous longer-term implications for American capitalism,
which is ultimately dependent on the strength of its currency.
It also encourages overseas investors and governments to disinvest
from dollar-denominated holdings and shift to regions with higher
interest rates and stronger currencies, such as Europe and Asia.
Given that the US economy, with its massive trade and current
account deficits, is dependent on huge inflows of capital from
abroad, the continued decline in the dollar increases the likelihood
of a withdrawal of foreign capital and a resulting worsening of
the financial crisis in the US.
The controversial nature of the Feds decision to cut
interest rates was reflected in the dissenting vote of one of
the ten voting members of the FOMC. Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas
President Thomas Hoenig voted against the cut, saying he preferred
no reduction in interest rates. In addition, six of the twelve
regional banks opposed the rate cut.
The Wall Street banks, financial institutions and speculators
engaged in the equivalent of a high-stakes game of chicken, letting
it be known they would respond to a decision against cutting interest
rates with a massive sell-off on the stock market, which could,
in turn, precipitate a new collapse in the credit markets.
As the International Herald Tribune put it: Fed
officials were under very heavy pressure from financial markets.
Prices of Fed-funds futures, which provide a way of betting on
the Feds fund rate, showed that investors placed the odds
of a rate cut Wednesday at 96 percent.
Had the central bank decided to leave interest rates
unchanged, without any advance warnings from policy makers, markets
would likely have plunged in panic.
Thomas D. Higgins of the firm Payden and Rygel put it more
bluntly: The financial markets have been like a playground
bully, sitting on the Feds chest waiting for [Federal Reserve
Chairman] Ben Bernanke to hand over his Holloween candy. Well,
today they got their wish.
The web site Street.com cited James Bianco, president
of Chicago-based Bianco Research, as saying, We should just
change Bernankes title to chief investment officer of the
United States, and adding that the markets are never
going to relinquish their hope for more rate cuts.
There are no suggestions from the government, the Fed or either
of the two big business parties that the banks and investment
houses should be reined in and held accountable for the hundreds
of billions squandered in various forms of speculation and financial
swindlesor that small investors, pensioners and workers
hit by wage cuts and layoffs should be recompensed for the social
impact of this orgy of self-enrichment on the part of the financial
elite.
Rather, the Feds open subordination to those layers of
the corporate-financial elite most directly involved in such financial
manipulations underscores the degree to which the operations of
American capitalism have become wedded to the most parasitic and
socially-destructive forms of profit-making.
See Also:
Merrill Lynch reports billions
in losses amidst growing signs of US recession
[26 October 2007]
US government brokers scheme
to bail out Wall Street banks
[18 October 2007]
Wall Street hides impact of
subprime mortgage meltdown
[4 September 2007]
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