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Wednesday,
Oct. 8
Posted
8 a.m. Eastern
Fed, other
central banks cut rates
The Federal Reserve
announced a half-point interest
rate cut in a coordinated move
with other central banks in
Europe. The move was widely
expected, particularly following
Chairman Bernanke's remarks
yesterday, which gave the green
light to an intermeeting interest
rate cut.
The Fed has been
working to ease the stalemate
in interbank lending in two
ways: making additional credit
available, and now reducing
the cost of that credit. Will
it work? The jury is still out.
As for us consumers,
I wish there was better news
to share. Savers will see their
interest income undercut --
again -- with retirees living
on fixed incomes being particularly
hard hit. With the stock market
taking a beating, many financials
cutting dividends, and interest
income on the downswing versus
one year ago, many retirees
will be forced to dip further
into their principal to make
ends meet. Not a pretty sight.
On the borrowing
side, the impact on credit card
rates will be limited. We're
already seeing credit cards
at their floor rates, a point
where rates will hold regardless
of how far the Fed cuts benchmark
rates. Only consumers with top-notch
credit will benefit through
lower credit card rates, with
marginal borrowers not as likely
to see such a reduction. Issuers
have been boosting margins for
riskier consumers, but not so
on their best credit consumers.
Rates for home
equity lines will retreat, but
with lenders freezing lines
of credit, the cut won't entice
additional consumer borrowing
and spending. That's just as
well, considering how we got
into this mess.
This may reverse
some of the sharp jump in LIBOR
seen in the last month, but
make no mistake -- homeowners
with LIBOR-based ARMs need to
brace themselves for sharply
higher payments on the next
reset. LIBOR is up 150 basis
points in the past month and
that won't go away overnight.
One final note,
the coordinated nature of the
rate cut likely prevents undercutting
the dollar. With the dollar
having rebounded from $1.60
per Euro over the summer to
$1.37 now, there was concern
that additional rate cuts would
undermine that progress. Since
the European Central Bank also
cut interest rates, that should
prevent a decline in the dollar
that would otherwise have been
much likelier. And brace yourselves,
because this isn't the last
of the rate cuts. Expect the
Fed to cut again at their month-end
meeting on Oct. 30.
Tuesday,
Sept. 23
Posted
4 p.m. Eastern
Readers sound
off on financial turmoil
Here are a few
reader e-mails touching on Treasury
bailouts and the Fed.
"How is
it that only one, two, three
or four megabusinesses (consolidations,
etc.) are allowed to take place
that, if only one to four fail,
the results can affect the entire
U.S. economy? This seems extremely
ridiculous and dangerous. Example:
Now the airlines are consolidating
even more (Northwest-Delta talks
of consolidating). If we reach
a point where there are only
one to three airlines, isn't
there a danger that a union
strike, management decisions
or strategy issues could conceivably
pretty much paralyze our entire
travel industry in the U.S.,
etc. These circumstances are
disturbing to me and I would
think others would be similarly
concerned. But I haven't seen
anything in the media that raises
concern about the potential
(and real) risks that lie with
putting all of our eggs in one
basket by allowing megabusinesses
to develop rather than spreading
risks among many smaller private
businesses who, if some of them
failed, would not have the same
devastating "crisis mode"
we are currently facing with
the financial institutions,
banks, insurance firms, brokerages,
etc. How can the federal government
continue to rescue private businesses
that exercise poor judgement,
unwisely delve into high-risk
practices, get burned, and yet
do not need to bear the consequences
-- which are left to taxpayers
and others who use more prudent
judgement. The quick answer
by others is that "if these
firms are allowed to fail, the
results would be even more devastating
to the economy" just doesn't
seem to make a lot of sense,
because they set a precedent
for other firms that could carelessly
get themselves into similar
predicaments with relative impunity.
The world is not only "flat,"
it is getting turned upside
down."
Your point about
companies getting too large
and jeopardizing the health
of the entire economy and financial
system is well taken. As many
others have said, it smacks
of a lack of regulation and
oversight of those that are
considered "too big to
fail." However, the word
"bailout" is used
way too loosely. Example: AIG
received a 2-year loan at more
than 11 percent interest and
secured by the assets of its
subsdiaries, while the government
took an 80 percent stake in
the company, threw out the management,
nearly wiped out the common
shareholders and has veto power
over the company's financial
decisions. Not what I consider
a gift.
"Here
we go again Greg, the great
bailout. You know, it's sad
that the taxpayers of this country
will again be saddled with debt
they are not responsible for.
What sickens me is how Congress,
Bernake and Paulson try to justify
it by arguing that if they didn't
bailout the finacial market,
banks, investment companies,
mortgage companies, etc., we
would be so much worse off than
if they didn't. So please tell
me how in the world we got into
this mess in the first place.
I put it squarely on the shoulders
of Congress, the Fed, the Treasury
and the White House for not
doing their jobs, along with
deregulation. If that is not
enough, now we are saddled with
an additional $3,625 per person
in the U.S."
And here is a
comment regarding the question
I asked last week about whether
additional interest rate cuts
by the Federal Reserve accomplish
anything.
"The Fed
started this whole mess with
Greenspan's 1 percent money
for over a year. Rate cuts just
give fuel to the greedy who
squander it.
"More rate cuts won't
fix things.
"Put a few of the guilty
in jail. No more multi-million
dollar bonus for fired and failed
CEOs.
"Censure the congressmen
who supported Fannie Mae while
they burned down the barn."
My sincere thanks
to all those who took the time
to write in.
Tuesday,
Sept. 16
Posted
4 p.m. Eastern
Fed leaves
rate unchanged
It's hard to imagine
that just a few days ago, this
appeared to be a ho-hum Fed
meeting. But the events of the
weekend put the Fed at center
stage and had Wall Street clamoring
for an interest rate cut. They
didn't get it.
I, for one, am
greatly relieved. And if you
are a saver, you should be, too.
Since the Fed moved to the sidelines
at the end of April, we've seen
some tidy improvement in CD
yields. With the oil price-bubble
popping (remember all those
who said oil at $140 per barrel
was justified based on demand
from China and India?), there
is hope that inflation pressures
will indeed moderate as the
Fed has long predicted. So with
the horizon looking just a bit
brighter for savers, the notion
that the Fed would undermine
that by cutting interest rates
again had to get under your
skin. Fortunately, savers won't
be doing any more bailouts
either.
The first seven
interest rate cuts did nothing
- NOTHING - to vanquish the
credit crunch. What would No. 8
have done that the first seven
didn't? I'll tell you what another
rate cut would have done (or
will do, in the event we eventually
get a rate cut): undercut the
dollar, lead to a rise in oil
prices and further stoke inflation.
How does that benefit anyone?
Be glad the Fed resisted the
urge.
The statement
issued by the Fed is now very
balanced instead of leaning
toward inflation concerns, as
was the case one month ago.
Fair enough, given the ugliness
of the ongoing credit crunch,
which at 13 months and counting
is much like a baseball game
in extra innings that shows
no signs of ending.
The key problem
is the condition of financial
markets, not the economy. The
economy is limping along, but
credit markets are hospitalized
in intensive care. Pumping another
$70 billion in liquidity into
the markets and expanding the
list of accepted collateral
at the discount window are the
steps needed to combat the credit
crunch, not another interest
rate cut.
Please send me
an e-mail
to let me know how the credit
crunch and the economic downturn
are affecting you. Also, weigh
in on whether you think the
Fed should have cut interest
rates more or not.
Here are a few
e-mails that have come in recently.
I've interspersed some of my
own comments.
"Always
enjoy reading your columns.
I have one point that is really
sticking with me. With the demise
of "stated" programs,
what is the small-business (owner)
to do? We have alienated a
significant segment of our society.
I agree that stated programs
were abused, but the complete
dismissal of them is going to
come back and bite us again.
I have been approached by so
many small-business owners
looking to refi out of their
ARMs, and because they have
a good accountant, they can't.
I have always thought that the
entrepreneur is the backbone
of this Country. What do you
think will come of this?"
While the pendulum
swung way too far to the side
of easy credit during the housing
boom, this is an indicator that
it has swung too far in the
other direction toward restrictive
credit. Not something that will
be alleviated soon, but a point
well taken. Consider a small-business owner that has started
a business within the past year
or so and lacks two years of
tax returns as proof of income.
Even with deep pockets and excellent
credit, that still might not
be enough to qualify.
"The economy!
It is a dice-rolling situation
right now ... jobs, and any financial
matter, has become a plague.
Some are itching worse than
others. But the plague has
been felt by all.
"I have
a couple of friends that rolled
the dice and found jobs; some
are even working overtime at
their newly acquired jobs! While
others are hard pressed to barely
break 40 hours or even worse,
are unemployed. The same gamble
is with the mortgage situation.
Some folks are sitting pretty,
while others will spend the
next seven to 10 years rebuilding
their FICO due to Bank owned,
foreclosed or Bankruptcy situations.
I think that with proper information,
rolling the dice and taking
chances can prove to be rewarding.
(It is hoped) the economy will
be cured of this plague and
we can all roll the dice without
as much fear."
The next question deals with
maximizing deposit insurance
coverage.
"I am
interested in the correct way
for married couples to title
accounts to shield up to $1.1M.
I have been having significant
heartburn knowing my wife and
I are exposed at our banks due
to the size of deposits. Can
you advise?"
I was quoted in
The New York Times on this subject
last week and have since fielded
a few such inquiries. Here's
an excerpt from a fine story
by my colleague Laura Bruce
that details the subject thoroughly.
If
FDIC coverage is inadequate
for your general or retirement
account, there are ways to increase
coverage by setting up deposits
in different categories of legal
ownership. These categories
are insured separately up to
the maximum allowed. Here's
an example of how a married
couple could insure $1.1 million
at one bank when the new reform
legislation begins.
Husband and
wife each have $100,000 in an
individual account.
The couple has $200,000 in a
joint account.
Each has $250,000 in an individual
retirement account.
Each sets up a $100,000 revocable
trust account, payable on death,
naming each other as beneficiaries.
For more information on setting
up these accounts and checking
to see if your money is covered,
visit the FDIC's Web site.
And our final
contestant of the day.
"Are financial
commentators and the public
being too pessimistic? Your
point is valid about jobs being
shed. The data says so. But
the data also says that the
economy is growing. Is it possible
that the U.S. economy is transforming
to grab a larger share of the
world export market and that
new jobs will come from this
area to replace the job losses
that are occurring in other areas.
This takes time ... "
My thanks to all
those who wrote in.
Fed
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