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AP
Fed cuts rates as
economy slumps, hoping to stop
recession
Wednesday
April 30, 6:46 pm ET
By
Jeannine Aversa, AP
Economics Writer
Fed
cuts interest rates to lowest level
in 4 years to prop up economy on edge
of
recession
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Scrambling to shore up
the faltering economy, the Federal Reserve
cut interest rates to the lowest point in
nearly four years Wednesday as the nation
teetered on the edge of
recession.
Wall
Street rallied at first but then pulled
back, concerned that the reduction might be
the last for a while.
In
fact, the Fed's trim was smaller than those
of recent months amid indications the
central bank might pause to see if months
of powerful rate-cutting medicine and
billions of dollars in stimulus checks will
be enough to lift the country out of its
slump.
Chairman
Ben Bernanke led a divided Fed, in an 8-2
vote, in slicing its key rate by
one-quarter percentage point to 2
percent.
In
turn, the prime lending rate for millions
of consumers and businesses fell by a
corresponding amount, to 5 percent. The
prime rate applies to certain credit cards,
home equity lines of credit and other
loans. Both rates are the lowest since late
2004.
The
Federal Reserve, which has been dropping
rates since last September, turned much
more forceful early this year when housing,
credit and financial problems worsened.
Rate reductions in January and March alone
marked the most aggressive intervention in
a quarter-century in an effort to
re-energize consumers and
businesses.
"The
substantial easing of monetary policy to
date ... should help to promote moderate
growth over time and to mitigate risks to
economic activity," the Fed said, strongly
hinting that more cuts may not be
needed.
Enthusiastic
Wall Street investors
drove the Dow Jones industrial average up
more than 178 points -- lifting it above
13,000 for the first time since early
January -- right after the Fed action. Then
traders' caution returned, and the index
ended the day 11.81 points below where it
started.
Although
the Fed didn't take another reduction off
the table, a growing number of economists
believe the central bank is winding down
its rate-cutting campaign. Barring another
hit to economic growth, they believe rates
probably will stay where they are --
perhaps through the rest of this year -- in
part because the Federal Reserve is
concerned that further cuts could join with
galloping energy and food prices and spread
inflation dangerously higher.
By
all accounts, the country's economic health
is fragile.
The
economy crawled ahead at a pace of just 0.6
percent from January through March as
housing and credit problems forced people
and businesses to hunker down, the Commerce
Department reported hours before the Fed's
action. Growth had been just as feeble in
the prior quarter.
Job
losses for the first three months of the
year neared the staggering quarter-million
mark, and a government report on Friday is
expected to show that employers shed jobs
again in April. The unemployment rate, now
at 5.1 percent, also could creep higher in
April and hit 6 percent early next year,
analysts say.
"Recent
information indicates that economic
activity remains weak," the Fed said.
"Household and business spending has been
subdued, and labor markets have softened
further. Financial markets remain under
considerable stress, and tight credit
conditions and the deepening housing
contraction are likely to weigh on economic
growth over the next few
quarters."
Two
members -- Charles Plosser, president of
the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia,
and Richard Fisher, president of the
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas -- opposed
cutting rates Wednesday, a crack in the
usually unified front the Fed often shows
the public.
Both
men have a reputation for being especially
vigilant about fighting inflation. At the
Fed's previous meeting in March, they
opposed cutting rates by a whopping
three-quarters point and preferred a
smaller reduction.
"The
Fed didn't completely shut the door on rate
cuts but they closed it part way," said
Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's
Economy.com. "I think the overall message
was they've done a lot already to help the
economy and think this will be enough. But
they stand ready to do more if that is
needed."
Bernanke's
juggling act is getting harder. Fed
policymakers are trying to bolster economic
growth, and at the same time they are
mindful that they can't let inflation get
out of hand. The very rate reductions the
Fed depends on to energize the economy can
also sow the seeds of inflation down the
road.
At
the same time, many economists believe the
economy already is declining.
Under
one rough rule, if the economy contracts
for six straight months it is considered to
be in recession. However, that didn't
happen in the last recession -- in 2001. A
panel of experts at the National Bureau of
Economic Research that determines when U.S.
recessions begin and end uses a broader
definition, taking into account income,
employment and other barometers. The
bureau's finding is usually made well after
the fact.
The
Fed's previous rate reductions, which take
months to work their way through the
economy, should help lift growth in the
second half of this year. The government's
$168 billion economic-stimulus package --
including tax rebates that started flowing
to bank accounts on Monday -- also should
help energize activity, the Bush
administration, Bernanke and private
economists have said.
The
biggest weight on the economy is the
housing crisis, which has pushed
foreclosures to record highs and caused
financial institutions to rack up billions
of dollars in losses.
For
mortgage rates, the Fed's latest cut
probably won't have much, if any,
impact.
Rates
on longer-term 30-year and 15-year
mortgages, which are linked to the 10-year
Treasury notes, actually could see rates
rise in the weeks ahead in part because of
concerns about higher inflation. Rates on
shorter-term mortgages probably won't drop
either because investors already had
factored in the latest Federal Reserve
action.
Still,
people with adjustable-rate home loans have
been helped by the Fed's series of rate
reductions; they would have been socked
with much higher rates when their mortgages
reset if not for the Federal Reserve cuts,
analysts said. "Going forward, if the Fed
holds rate steady, resets in the pipeline
would benefit in a similar fashion as
still-low interest rates would mean very
manageable mortgage-rate resets," said Greg
McBride, senior financial analyst at
Bankrate.com.
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