April 30, 2008
Fed cuts key rate by quarter-point, says
economy remains weak
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Federal Reserve
cut a key interest rate by a quarter-point Wednesday, a smaller move
than the aggressive easing it undertook earlier this year. There
were signs the Fed may believe it has done enough to prevent a deep
recession.
The Fed action, after a two-day
meeting, pushed the federal funds rate down to 2 percent, the lowest
level since late 2004. It marked the seventh rate cut by the central
bank since it began easing credit conditions last September to
combat the growing threat of a recession brought on by a severe
housing slump and credit crisis.
Commercial banks immediately announced
that they were cutting their prime lending rate to 5 percent. That
will mean cheaper credit for the millions of business and consumer
loans tied to the prime.
The Fed move, which was in line with
expectations, sent the Dow Jones industrial average momentarily
soaring above 13,000 for the first time since January. But the Dow
quickly gave up those gains as traders began to wonder whether the
Fed was closing the door to further rate cuts.
Many private economists said they
believed a Fed statement was signaling that the central bank may be
through cutting rates unless the economy weakens much more than now
expected.
“They are saying that unless we are
surprised by further weakness, this is it,” said David Jones, chief
economist at DMJ Advisors.
Sung Won Sohn, an economics professor
at California State University, said, “The Fed is telling us that
this easing cycle is coming to an end fairly soon.”
Analysts said the central bank seemed
to be balanced between worries about economic weakness and concerns
that inflation pressures are increasing. The Fed noted that it had
done quite a bit already.
“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,” Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke and his colleagues said in their statement.
There were two dissents from the move.
Richard Fisher, president of the Dallas regional Fed bank, and
Charles Plosser, head of the Philadelphia Fed, argued for no change
in rates. Both officials had also dissented at the March 18 meeting
when the Fed cut rates by three-fourths point.
The central bank is walking a
tightrope, trying to jump-start economic growth while also
confronting the risk that if it overdoes the credit easing it could
make inflation worse down the road.
Many economists believe the country has
fallen into a recession. However, the government reported Wednesday
that the overall economy, as measured by the gross domestic product,
managed to eke out a 0.6 percent growth rate in the January-March
quarter, barely in positive territory.
On the overall economy, the Fed’s
statement said, “Financial markets remain under considerable stress
and tight credit conditions and deepening housing contractions are
likely to weigh on economic growth over the next few quarters.”
While officials said they expected
inflation to moderate in coming months, they also said “uncertainty
about the inflation outlook remains high.”
The quarter-point move followed a
string of more aggressive rate cuts ranging from a half-point to
three-fourths-point in the first three months of this year as the
central bank was battling to stabilize financial markets roiled by
multibillion-dollar losses caused by rising mortgage defaults.
That turmoil claimed its biggest victim
on March 16 when Bear Stearns came to the brink of bankruptcy and
the Fed stepped forward with a $30 billion line of credit to
facilitate a sale of the nation’s fifth largest investment bank to
JP Morgan Chase.
Credit markets, while not back to
normal, have stabilized and many analysts believe the worst may be
over - although they caution that this forecast could prove too
optimistic if the housing slump deepens, causing even more mortgage
defaults than now expected.
Before the Fed made its first rate cut
in September, the funds rate had stood at 5.25 percent.
By MARTIN CRUTSINGER source: ap.org