The U.S. Federal Reserve reduced the benchmark U.S. lending rate by a quarter
point - from 2.25% to 2% - yesterday (Wednesday), and then hinted that it will
take a break from one of its most-aggressive rate-cutting campaigns in
decades.
"The substantial easing of monetary policy to date, combined with ongoing
measures to foster market liquidity, should help to promote moderate growth over
time and to mitigate risks to economic activity," the policymaking Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) said in the
statement announcing the interest-rate move. Central bank policymakers also
said that "recent information indicates that economic activity remains weak"
before going on to say "uncertainty about the inflation outlook remains high"
and noted that the Fed would continue to monitor both economic growth and
inflation closely.
The Fed launched this rate-cutting campaign on Sept. 18, not long after it
became clear that the U.S. subprime mortgage meltdown was having a global
impact. The reason: Banks in Germany and France had - for whatever reason -
invested in debt obligations that were backed by subprime mortgages. And when
the subprime market blew up, so did the holdings at those foreign banks.
Before the crisis broke, and even in its early weeks, Fed Chairman Ben S.
Bernanke and other U.S. leaders repeatedly maintained that the problem was
limited in scope and that no real "crisis" would evolve. Today, an estimated
$312 billion in write-downs and credit losses later, the central bank has
slashed interest rates seven times and helped engineer the bailout of The Bear
Stearns Cos. (BSC) by JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM).
Yesterday marked the seventh time since mid-September that the U.S. central
bank reduced the Federal Funds rate, the interest rate that banks with excess
reserves charge one another for overnight loans. The Fed Funds rate also serves
as the benchmark for the Prime Rate, the base rate that commercial banks use to
price loans to their best and most-credit-worthy customers. Wachovia Corp. (WB) and other
lenders pared their Prime Rates by a similar quarter point - reaching 5% -
shortly after yesterday’s Fed action.
Stocks soared in early trading. But then the markets shed those gains
following the announcement of the expected quarter-point cut and ended mostly
flat. The blue-chip Dow Jones Industrial Average Index was down 11.81 points
(-0.09%), to trade at 12,820.13. The tech-laden Nasdaq
Composite Index shed 13.30 points (-0.55%), to reach 2,412.80. And the
broader Standard & Poor’s 500 Index decreased 5.35 points (-0.38%),
to hit 1,385.59.
"The markets pretty much knew what was coming and what we wanted to see were
the changes in the statement," said Joel Naroff, president and chief economist
of Naroff Economic
Advisors, in a note to clients. "There were some, but the Fed still left
itself plenty of wriggle room to do what it pleased."
Central bank
policymakers have slashed the Fed Funds rate by a total of 3.25 percentage
points from its starting point of 5.25% level in mid-September, and the comments
that accompanied yesterday’s announcement seemed to indicate the committee was
content to step back and allow rate reductions to work their way through the
U.S. economy.
The committee also reduced the lesser-known Discount rate (the rate charged
at the Fed’s discount window) by a quarter point to 2.25%.
A Look to the Future
The committee did leave some room for future cuts by stating it "will act as
needed to promote sustainable economic growth and price stability."
Some analysts took the statement as a clear signal the Fed plans to
pause.
"We do not expect to see a rate cut at the next few meetings without a
substantial contraction of the economy," Christopher Rupkey, chief financial
economist at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ Ltd. in New York, told Bloomberg News.