Fed and central banks team up to unstick markets 
By Glenn Somerville and Emily Kaiser 23 minutes ago 
The U.S. Federal Reserve and other central banks on Tuesday teamed up to
get hundreds of billions of dollars in fresh funds to cash-starved
credit markets, allowing financial firms to use securities backed by
home mortgages as collateral for central bank loans.
Stocks surged, bonds fell and the long-suffering U.S. dollar rose in
reaction to the moves, a sign financial markets saw the plan as a viable
remedy to ease a crisis that has threatened world economic growth. The
Dow Jones industrials were up 1.5 percent in trading just after midday
(1600 GMT).
In the latest effort to ease a credit contraction that has disrupted
global finance, the Fed, Bank of Canada, Bank of England, European
Central Bank and Swiss National Bank announced a series of aggressive
measures to boost liquidity. It was the second time in three months that
central banks from around the globe had launched coordinated efforts.
"In the near term, the Fed and global central banks have provided the
thing everyone needed, and that's cash," said Martin Blum, head of
emerging markets research at UniCredit in Vienna. "The actions ... deal
with this issue by making it easier for banks to get cash, and that's
important."
The Fed expanded its securities lending program, offering up to $200
billion of highly-liquid U.S. Treasuries to primary dealers, secured for
28 days. It also significantly expanded the types of securities that can
be used as collateral for loans. In effect, the plan allows banks to
exchange unwanted mortgage notes for easy-to-sell government securities.
However, the U.S. central bank also said it would not accept private
mortgage-backed securities that credit ratings agencies had put under
review for possible downgrades.
That takes a bite out of the eligible debt, although the Fed said there
may be as much as $1 trillion that would qualify for the auctions.
The Fed's moves came after some huge holders of mortgage-linked debt
received demands for more cash as the value of the securities they held
plunged. Investors, paralyzed by fears of a market shutdown, have
shunned large sectors of the debt market, causing prices to tumble and
leaving many offers for sales unfilled.
The action came on the back of an announcement from the Fed on Friday
that it would expand auctions of short-term cash to $100 billion in
March and launch a series of repurchase agreements expected to be worth
$100 billion, bringing the total of recently announced actions to a
hefty $400 billion. 
SMALLER RATE CUT?
The Fed has shaved 2.25 percentage points from benchmark interest rates
since mid-September in an effort to offset the impact of the credit
tightening. Economists widely expect at least another half-point
reduction when the Fed's policy-setting committee meets next week.
But Goldman Sachs economist Jan Hatzius said the latest steps from the
Fed make a more aggressive cut less likely.
"This announcement makes clear that Fed officials are pulling out all
the stops they can think of to deal with financial stress through the
increased provision of liquidity into the system," he wrote in a note to
clients. "To the extent they see this as substituting for rate cuts,
this should reduce the probability of a 75 basis point rate cut next
Tuesday."
As part of the latest effort, the European Central Bank said it would
auction up to $15 billion for a term of 28 days, the Swiss National Bank
said it would auction $6 billion and the Bank of Canada said it would it
provide about $4 billion.
Despite the positive market reaction, some analysts questioned whether
the latest round of central bank efforts would have much staying power.
Earlier efforts by the Fed and its counterparts were successful in
reviving markets for a short time, only to see them unravel again when
the next bout of credit turmoil emerged.
"This Fed action is good for a day or two," said Michael Cheah, senior
portfolio manager at AIG SunAmerica Asset Management in Jersey City, New
Jersey.
"There are three problems in the market. One is the price of money, then
liquidity and counterparty risk. The Fed can do all it can in the first
two areas by trying to reduce (interest rates) and the price of money.
However, these moves are not going to mitigate the counterparty risk,"
he said.
Banks have essentially lost faith in each other after seven months of
market unrest, making them reluctant to lend money to one another and
driving up borrowing costs for the consumers and companies that power
the world economy. 
The Fed said its new lending facility will operate through weekly
auctions that will start on March 27. It also said it was increasing
existing currency swap lines with the ECB and SNB, allowing those two
central banks to offer more U.S. dollars in their respective markets. 
(Additional reporting by Al Yoon in New York; writing by Emily Kaiser;
editing by Gary Crosse)

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