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US stocks plunge following Fed Chairman Bernankes testimony
before Congress
By Barry Grey
1 March 2008
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Share prices on US stock markets fell sharply Thursday and
Friday following congressional testimony by Federal Reserve Board
Chairman Ben Bernanke.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average declined 112 points (0.9 percent)
on Thursday and plummeted another 315 points (2.5 percent) on
Friday, wiping out gains from the four previous trading days and
leaving the stock index with four consecutive monthly losses.
The other major stock indexes also fell sharply on Friday,
with the Standard & Poors 500 index falling 37 points
(2.7 percent) and the Nasdaq Composite index down 60 points (2.6
percent). With Fridays close, the S&P 500 index has
suffered its worst start to a year since 1941.
Bernanke appeared Wednesday before the Financial Services Committee
of the House of Representatives and Thursday before the Senate
Banking Committee to deliver the Federal Reserve Boards
semi-annual report to Congress. While saying he believed the US
could still avert a recession, he presented a grim picture of
an economy reeling from a housing collapse, a credit and banking
crisis, a slowdown in consumer spending, growing unemployment
and virtually zero economic growth, combined with accelerating
inflation and a weakening dollar.
Bernanke made it clear he intended to slash interest rates
again when the Feds policy-making board, the Federal Open
Market Committee, meets next on March 18. The Fed is expected
to cut its federal funds rate by another 0.5 points, or even 0.75
points, which would be the sixth rate cut since last September.
A 0.5 point reduction would bring the benchmark short-term rate
down to 2.5 percent from its level of 5.25 percent last August,
when the collapse of the US subprime mortgage market all but froze
credit markets in the US and much of the world.
While Bernankes signals in regard to interest rates reassured
Wall Street banks and investors, who have been pushing for rate
cuts to pump liquidity into financial markets and aid banks facing
billions in subprime-related losses, the gloomy substance of his
testimony, combined with new recessionary indicators and record-high
crude oil prices, sparked the sell-off of stocks.
In opening his remarks to the House committee, Bernanke said
the economic situation had become distinctly less favorable
since his previous report to Congress in July. He then cited persistent
strains in financial markets, turmoil in credit markets
leading to tighter credit for many households and businesses,
a sharp contraction in economic growth, a decline in job creation
and growth of unemployment.
He indicated that the collapse in the housing market would
continue to weigh on the economy for at least another year and
noted that consumer spending had slackened markedly since the
end of 2007. He predicted that business investment would slow
in the first half of 2008, and that nonresidential construction
would decelerate sharply.
He projected a rise in the unemployment rate from the present
4.9 percent to 5.2 percent or 5.3 percent by the fourth quarter
of this year.
He then warned that the reality could turn out considerably
worse than his projections, citing the possibility that the housing
market or the labor market could deteriorate more dramatically
and that the credit crunch could worsen.
He took note of rising inflation and soaring energy and commodity
prices and said the Fed would monitor closely inflation
and inflation expectations. But he clearly placed the emphasis
on the dangers of recession, saying the Fed would act in
a timely manner as needed to support growth and to provide adequate
insurance against downside risksa euphemistic way
of saying the Fed was prepared to cut interest rates further.
In his appearance the following day before the Senate Banking
Committee, Bernanke said that the US economy faced a more difficult
situation than in the aftermath of the dotcom stock market crash
in 2001. He noted that the US was then running a budget surplus,
that the US dollar was strong, and that inflation was low. He
pointed out that in 2001, crude oil was selling at $20 a barrel,
as compared to $100 a barrel today.
Today, the federal government is running huge budget deficits
and the US dollar is weak and growing weaker. As a result, he
said, Congress and the Fed have less freedom to combat economic
weakness...
He added, in a remark that reverberated through both US and
international markets, that there will probably be some
bank failures. He said he had confidence that none of the
major banks would collapse, but suggested that some smaller banks
would inevitably fail.
Bernankes testimony had an immediate impact on global
currency and commodity markets. His virtual pledge to continue
cutting US interest rates, as well as his gloomy assessment of
economic conditions, produced a sharp fall in the dollar. On Thursday,
the dollar hit a record low against the euro, closing at $1.52
per euro. It also fell to a record low against the Swiss franc
and a three-year low against the Japanese yen.
Over the past six years, the dollar has fallen more than 40
percent against the euro and more than 20 percent against a basket
of currencies. With its decline this week, it fell to its lowest
level since the US allowed the dollar to float freely in 1973.
The sinking dollar led Thursday to a $2.95 jump in the price
of crude oil, which is traded in dollars, with the price-per-barrel
settling at a record-high $102.59 on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
Gold, corn and soybeans also hit or approached new highs, with
gold closing at $970.74 an ounce.
The decline in the dollar, the worlds preeminent reserve
and trading currency, has led to a sharp increase in commodities
speculation, contributing to an upsurge in basic commodity prices.
So far this year, natural gas prices have risen by 26 percent,
coal has increased by 56 percent, platinum is up by 41 percent,
wheat prices have jumped 32 percent, and cocoa has gone up by
38 percent.
The upward spiral in world commodity prices is increasingly
hitting consumers in the US in the form of sharply higher costs
for gasoline, home heating and food. Last week, the US Labor Department
reported that the Consumer Price Index had risen in January by
4.3 percent over a year ago, and this week government figures
showed a jump in producer, or wholesale, prices for the month
of 7.4 percent compared with a year ago. This was the worst year-to-year
increase in producer price inflation since 1981.
The signs of growing inflation coincided with a series of economic
indicators suggesting an existing or imminent recession:
* The Labor Department reported that first-time unemployment
claims rose last week by 19,000, to 373,000, the highest level
since late January. Economists had expected an increase of only
4,000.
* The government confirmed that the gross domestic product
rose by only 0.6 percent in the fourth quarter of 2007. The GDP
for all of 2007 rose by only 2.2 percent, the weakest performance
since 2002.
* The National Association of Realtors reported that sales
of previously owned homes fell for the sixth consecutive month
in January, dropping 0.4 percent. Median home prices also continued
to fall, declining by 4.6 percent from a year ago.
A different index of home prices, the Standard & Poors/Case-Shiller
index, which measures home prices in twenty metropolitan areas,
reported a decline in December of 9.1 percent from a year ago,
and projected an annual rate of home price declines of 20 percent.
* Two reports on consumer confidence showed sharp declines
in January.
* Other reports showed consumer spending barely keeping pace
with inflation and a sharp decline in business activity in the
Chicago region.
Markets were further shaken by reports of more losses from
the collapse of the mortgage market and the resulting banking
crisis. Fannie Mae, the government-chartered mortgage-financing
giant, reported a fourth quarter loss of $3.56 billion. The next
day its smaller rival, Freddie Mac, reported its own fourth quarter
loss of $2.5 billion and warned that it expected to lose billions
more.
Financial analysts on Friday predicted that US and European
banks stood to lose an additional $350 billion from the collapse
of subprime-linked securities. On the same day, American International
Group, the worlds largest insurance company, reported a
record fourth-quarter loss of $5.29 billion, resulting mainly
from a write-down of $11.12 billion in insurance contracts tied
to mortgages.
An additional factor in the sell-off of financial stocks was
a statement by Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, seconded by President
Bush at his Thursday press conference, rejecting proposals being
worked out between Wall Street banks and Democratic legislators
for a government-funded bailout of mortgage lenders, banks and
financial institutions that are holding tens of billions in bad
investments linked to subprime and other shaky mortgages.
See Also:
US Federal reserve downgrades
economic growth forecast for 2008
[26 February 2008]
Slumping sales signal US recession;
slowdown spreads to Europe
[8 February 2008]
US home foreclosures rise
by 75 percent in 2007
[30 January 2008]
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