World's central banks in joint action to halt carnage

Update The Federal Reserve, European Central Bank and four other
central banks lowered interest rates in an unprecedented coordinated
effort to ease the economic effects of the worst financial crisis
since the Great Depression.

The Fed, ECB, Bank of England, Bank of Canada and Sweden's Riksbank
each reduced their benchmark rates by half apercentage point. The Bank
of Japan, which didn't participate in the move, said it supported the
action. Switzerland also took part. China's central bank separately
cut its key rate 0.27 percentage point.

``We are now looking at the first page of the global-depression
playbook,'' said Carl Weinberg, chief economist at High Frequency
Economics in Valhalla, New York. ``The only solution is to cut rates
as close to zero as you dare,'' pump money into the banking system
``hand over fist'' and increase government spending, he said.

The overnight move follows a global meltdown that sent US stock
indexes heading for their biggest annual decline since 1937; Japan's
benchmark today had the worst drop in two decades. Policy makers are
also aiming to unfreeze credit markets after the premium on the three-
month London interbank offered rate over the Fed's main rate doubled
in two weeks to a record.

Rate levels

The Fed reduced its benchmark rate to 1.5%. The ECB's main rate is now
3.75%; Canada's fell to 2.5%; the UK's rate dropped to 4.5%; and
Sweden's rate declined to 4.25%. China cut interest rates for the
second time in three weeks, reducing the main rate to 6.93%.

Stocks at first rallied after the announcement, then turned lower.
Some analysts said the central banks should have lowered rates by
more, and predicted further reductions. Economists at Goldman Sachs
Group Inc. and Morgan Stanley now project another half-point move by
the Fed at its Oct. 28-29 meeting.

The Standard & Poor's 500 Stock Index fell 1.1% to 984.94 at the close
in New York, capping a 16% loss in six trading days. Europe's Dow
Jones Stoxx 600 Index slumped 6%. Japan's Nikkei 225 Stock Average
lost 9.4% to 9,203.32 earlier today, before the announcement.

``The recent intensification of the financial crisis has augmented the
downside risks to growth and thus has diminished further the upside
risks to price stability,'' the central banks said in a joint
statement today. ``Some easing of global monetary conditions is
therefore warranted.''



World recession

Global policy makers are reducing rates as economies weaken around the
world. The International Monetary Fund said the global economy is
heading for a recession in 2009 and increased its estimate of losses
from the financial crisis to $US1.4 trillion.

The crisis already prompted the US to enact a $US700 billion program
to buy troubled assets from banks in an effort to prop them up. UK
banks will get a 50 billion-pound ($122 billion) government bailout,
while Spain will spend as much as 50 billion euros to buy bank assets.
European governments have also moved to rescue banks Fortis, Dexia SA
and Hypo Real Estate Holding AG.

The US Treasury said today it sees ``severe dislocations'' in the
government bond market and plans to sell more debt to address
shortages. The market problems ``are across the Treasury market
curve'' and are primarily affecting medium- and long-term debt, from
two-year notes through 30-year bonds, a Treasury official told
reporters.

The Fed's Open Market Committee, which voted unanimously for today's
move, said in its statement that ``incoming economic data suggest that
the pace of economic activity has slowed markedly in recent months.
Moreover, the intensification of financial-market turmoil is likely to
exert additional restraint on spending.''

Europe's reversal

European policy makers were forced into action after the collapse of
Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. last month roiled world financial
markets and caught them off guard. The ECB raised rates in July and
Bank of England Governor Mervyn King warned the government as recently
as Sept. 16 that inflation was set to accelerate.

The decision to let Lehman go ``had enormous, very unfortunate
consequences,'' European Central Bank President Jean- Claude Trichet
said Oct. 2. On the same day, he signaled the ECB was ready to cut
rates.

ECB council member Ewald Nowotny said in an interview that Wednesday's
rate reduction ``should not be seen as a first step in a possible
series'' by the ECB. ``The situation has to be assessed as we go
along,'' and the current rate level ``will ensure that inflation
expectations remain anchored,'' said Nowotny, chief of Austria's
central bank.

Deteriorating economy

The action comes a day after Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke failed to
assuage investors' concerns about the deteriorating economy by
signaling he was ready to lower borrowing costs.


Fed officials, who have kept their benchmark rate at 2% since April,
may have wanted time for their record loans to the financial industry
and new programs, including purchases of commercial paper, to bear
fruit before lowering rates. Investors instead perceive the economic
outlook deteriorating more rapidly, necessitating rate reductions.

The declines in US shares the past two days followed pre- market
opening announcements of fresh actions by the Fed to unblock credit
markets. On Oct. 6, the US central bank doubled its planned auctions
of cash to banks to as much as $US900 billion. Yesterday, it unveiled
a unit to buy commercial paper, debt used by companies for short-term
funding.

Central bankers acted two days before they gather with finance
ministers from the Group of Seven industrial nations in Washington.
The timing suggests the central banks sought to avoid any appearance
of being influenced by governments, said Ted Truman, former chief of
the Fed's international-finance division.

`Before Friday'

``It was clear that if they wanted to do it, they had to do it before
Friday,'' said Truman, now a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute
for International Economics in Washington. ``they don't want to see as
being coordinated by their finance ministers into doing this.''

Both US presidential candidates said they backed the Fed's rate cut.
Democrat Barack Obama said more was needed and said he hoped the
global coordinated response to the crisis continued at the G-7 meeting
of finance leaders in Washington this week. Both he and Republican
John McCain said the Fed action had to be accompanied by further moves
to help homeowners.

Obama has surged in polls in the past three weeks as the credit freeze
worsened and global equity markets plunged, with respondents saying he
would do a better job managing the economy. An NBC-Wall Street Journal
poll conducted Oct. 4-5 found Obama supported by 49% of registered
voters, a 6-point margin over McCain. Two weeks ago an NBC-Journal
poll put Obama's lead at 2 points.

Bernanke message

Bernanke said in a speech yesterday that an intensifying credit crunch
means officials must ``consider'' lowering borrowing costs.

In more typical market conditions, stocks rally when a Fed chief
indicates he'll reduce rates. Now, Bernanke's message may have less
power because traders already anticipated for weeks that policy makers
would need to make that move, and because of rising concern even rate
cuts may do little to immediately help banks scrambling to reduce
their vulnerability to loan losses.

``This is an extraordinary circumstance,'' said Former Fed Governor
Laurence Meyer, now vice chairman of Macroeconomic Advisers LLC. ``If
markets are totally frozen it doesn't help. It certainly builds
confidence psychologically.''

Bloomberg News

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