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US Fed cuts rates by half point to combat crisis

TimePublished on Thu, Oct 30, 2008 at 10:33, Updated on Thu, Oct 30, 2008 at 11:03 in Business section

FED CUTES RATES: A woman walks in front of Federal Reserve Building while the Fed is in meeting inside.

FED CUTES RATES: A woman walks in front of Federal Reserve Building while the Fed is in meeting inside.


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Washington: The Federal Reserve cut US interest rates by a half-percentage point on Wednesday to the lowest level since June 2004 as it tried to stave off a prolonged recession, and left the door open to further reductions if needed.

The Fed's unanimous decision takes its target for overnight bank lending to 1.0 per cent. Wall Street was united in believing the Fed would lower rates, although views were split on the likely size of the move.

"The pace of economic activity appears to have slowed markedly, owing importantly to a decline in consumer expenditures," the Fed said.

"Moreover, the intensification of financial market turmoil is likely to exert additional restraint on spending." The Fed has fought the credit crisis with a series of measures aimed at pumping liquid funds into markets that had become largely frozen and risk averse.

Policy-makers highlighted those steps in their statement and said they should help "over time." Nonetheless, they concluded that "downside risks to growth remain," keeping in play the option of further rate cuts.

A Reuters poll of top bond firms found an even split on whether the Central Bank would cut rates further, but futures markets pointed to one more quarter-point reduction by year end. The Fed also toned down its language on inflation, saying only that it expected it to moderate in coming quarters, citing declines in energy and other commodity prices and "the weaker prospects for economic activity."

After an emergency interest rate cut earlier this month the Fed had suggested it still saw some risk inflation could flare. "The Fed appears to have buried its upside inflation risks," Michael Gregory, an economist with BMO Capital Markets in Toronto, wrote to clients. "Bottom line: No upside inflation risk, plus persistent downside growth risk, equals a policy bias to ease further."

Fears of an acute recession pushed US stock prices to five-year lows this month. Stocks see-sawed after the Fed's move but ended lower as a news report raised questions about General Electric's earnings outlook, taking the wind out of a late rally.

The US dollar posted its biggest one-day drop in 23 years, while prices for US Government bonds were little changed. The US Central Bank has cut benchmark overnight rates from 5.25 per cent in nine steps over the past 13 months to counter a financial crisis that started with the collapse of the US mortgage market and spread around the world.

China and Norway also lowered interest rates on Wednesday, and the Bank of Japan, the European Central Bank and the Bank of England are all expected to follow suit in coming days.

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