A pedestrian passes in front of the
Federal Reserve Building in Washington Jan. 22, 2008. The U.S. Federal
Reserve decided Wednesday to cut a key interest rate by an additional half
percentage point to 3 percent in order to prevent the economy from
slipping into recession.(Xinhua/Reuters Photo) Photo Gallery>>>
WASHINGTON, March 11 (Xinhua) -- The U.S. Federal
Reserve along with other central banks on Tuesday announced that they will pump
more liquidity into the global financial system to ease the credit crunch.
The Federal Reserve said it will lend up to 200
billion U.S. dollars of Treasury securities to cash-strapped financial
institutions with term of 28 days instead of overnight under an existing
program.
"Since the coordinated actions taken in December
2007, the G-10 central banks have continued to work together closely and to
consult regularly on liquidity pressures in funding markets," said the Fed in a
statement.
"Pressures in some of these markets have recently
increased again," the Fed noted. "We all continue to work together and will take
appropriate steps to address those liquidity pressures."
The other banks involved are the Bank of Canada, the
Bank of England, the European Central Bank (ECB), and the Swiss National Bank
(SNB).
Each of the central banks "are announcing specific
measures" to ease the credit crunch, according to the Federal Reserve.
The Fed's lending initiative, called "Term Securities
Lending Facility (TSLF)", is intended to "promote liquidity in the financing
markets for Treasury and other collateral and thus to foster the functioning of
financial markets more generally," said the Fed in the statement.
The loans would be made available through an auction
process. Auctions will be held on a weekly basis, beginning on March 27, 2008.
The Federal Reserve said it will consult with primary dealers on technical
design features of the TSLF.
In addition, the Fed also said it has authorized
increases in its existing temporary reciprocal currency arrangements, called
"swap lines" with the European Central Bank and the Swiss National Bank.
These arrangements will now provide up to 30 billion
dollars and 6 billion dollars to the ECB and the SNB 2 billion dollars. The Fed
extended the term of these swap lines through September 30,2008.
The ECB said Tuesday it would continue to offer U.S.
dollar funding to eurozone banks, the third time it had done so in conjunction
with the U.S. Federal Reserve.
The operation, which had a value of 15 billion
dollars was "intended to continue the provision of dollar liquidity for as long
as the (ECB) governing council considers it to be needed in view of the
prevailing market conditions," a statement said.
The SNB declared that it would inject 6.0 billion
dollars into the global financial system. "The SNB intends to continue the
provision of US dollar liquidity for as long as it deems necessary," the bank
said in a statement.
The Bank of Canada and the Bank of England announced
similar actions, while the Bank of Japan said it welcomed these measures and
hopes that they will contribute to maintaining the functioning of the
international financial markets.
"Amidst the turmoil in international financial
markets, Japan's money markets continue to function relatively well thus far,"
said the Japanese central bank in a statement, noting it will "continue to
conduct money market operations so appropriately as to maintain market
stability, including supplying sufficient fund."
Analysts also welcomes the joint actions by the
central banks, believing the moves could help get cash to institutions that need
it.
"It is a highly significant move. The Fed is
innovating in a way that is going to push liquidity directly into the mortgage
markets, where it is most needed," said David Jones, president of DJM Advisors.
On Wall Street, the Dow Jones industrial average
jumped more than 400 points, the biggest one-day point gain since July, 2002.
But Goldman Sachs economist Jan Hatzius speculated
that the latest steps from the Fed make a more aggressive cut less likely.
"This announcement makes clear that Fed officials are
pulling out all the stops they can think of to deal with financial stress
through the increased provision of liquidity into the system," he wrote in a
note to clients.
"To the extent they see this as substituting for rate
cuts, this should reduce the probability of a 75 basis point rate cut next
Tuesday," he added.