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Message: Bernanke

Bernanke

posted on Oct 24, 2008 04:32AM

But, will it be enough to devalue the US$.


Bernanke likely to seek fresh tactics to ease credit as Fed rate nears 1%

Bloomberg
Published: October 23, 2008, 23:55

Washington: Federal Reserve officials are likely to bring interest rates down so aggressively over the next few months that they will have to search for fresh tactics to continue easing credit.

The Fed's Open Market Committee will probably reduce the benchmark federal funds rate by half a point next week to 1 per cent, the lowest since May 2004, according to futures trading.

The official rate has never been lower since the Fed made it an explicit target in the late 1980s.

Securities

Further cuts below 1 per cent could turn Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke's focus away from the main rate and toward more use of alternative tools. Those might include increasing its holdings of mortgage bonds to lower costs for homebuyers and purchasing securities directly from the Treasury in order to pump more cash into the economy, Fed watchers said.

http://gulfnews.advertserve.com/serv...

"If there is need for more stimulus, the Fed will buy up government debt" to keep borrowing costs low, said Adam Posen, deputy director at the Peterson Institute for International Economics and a co-author with Bernanke. That's tantamount to "turning government debt, as it is issued, into money".'

Bernanke, 54, has already thrown the central bank's balance sheet into action in unprecedented ways. Working with the New York Fed, the Board of Governors has rolled out 11 new programmes aimed at absorbing risk or making dollars available when banks don't want to loan.

The result: The central bank's assets, which include a loan to insurer American International Group Inc. and a pool of investments once held by Bear Stearns Cos., more than doubled to $1.772 trillion last week from a year-earlier total of $873 billion that comprised mostly Treasuries. The latest weekly figures were scheduled for release at 4:30pm yesterday in Washington.

Mutual funds

There's more to come. The Fed announced this week a backstop for money-market mutual funds to which it will commit another $540 billion. A commercial-paper programme approved on October 7 could buy up to $1.8 trillion of securities.

"The net effect of these facilities has been a truly staggering pace of growth in the Fed's balance sheet," said Jan Hatzius, chief US economist for Goldman Sachs Group Inc.


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