Fed provides $50 billion to European banks in US. The NY Fed moves to
NJ. FOMC to reduce interest rates again on Oct 2 or before.

Thursday September 13 10:59 AM ET
Fed Gives $50B to Support Europe Banks
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By MARTIN CRUTSINGER, AP Economics Writer

WASHINGTON (AP)- The Federal Reserve (news - web sites) said Thursday
it was making $50 billion available to stabilize the operations of
European banks in the United States. It also announced that because of
the terrorist attack it was moving its New York operations to New
Jersey.

The Fed said it was providing up to $50 billion ``to facilitate the
functioning of financial markets and provide liquidity in dollars,''
supplying dollars to the subsidiaries of European banks operating in
the United States.

Private economists said the unusual move could be an indication that
the terrorist attack at the World Trade Center on Tuesday was having a
significant impact on financial operations in New York, a major
operating point for the world's largest banks.

Steve Barrow, a currency strategist in London, said the Fed's move
could indicate that U.S. banks in New York were having trouble
performing their normal function of providing dollars to European
operations and ``the Fed's plugging the gap.''

The Fed also announced Thursday that it was temporarily moving
operations of the New York Federal Reserve, which performs the key
operations involved in implementing the Fed's interest rate decisions,
to a branch location in East Rutherford, N.J.

A Fed official said the relocation decision was made because of the
logistical problems of getting to the New York offices, which are
located only blocks from the destroyed World Trade Center.

The Fed's decision to make the $50 billion available to European banks
followed by one day a joint statement from the world's seven richest
countries pledging that their central banks would coordinate activities
to make sure emergency withdrawals did not destabilize any of their
banking systems.

The Fed's action Thursday appeared to be an effort to demonstrate
strongly to financial markets that the United States was prepared to
back up the G-7 pledge of support with hard cash where necessary.

The money will be provided in a swap arrangement with the European
Central Bank, the overall central bank for the 12 European countries
that have adopted the euro as their common currency. The Fed will make
up to $50 billion available to be deposited in ECB accounts at the New
York Fed and the ECB will deposit an equivalent amount of euros,
Europe's new currency, at the Fed's New York regional bank.

The Fed's three-paragraph announcement did not explain how the figure
of $50 billion was arrived at, but private economists said the action
indicated the Fed was worried about disruptions to normal bank
operations in the wake of the terrorist attack.

``A number of foreign financial institutions may be having difficulty
transferring funds from their U.S. operations to European operations,''
said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Economy.com, a private forecasting
firm. ``The Fed is providing this money to ensure that the whole
payments process doesn't shut down.''

The Fed made its announcement after the ECB said in Frankfurt, Germany,
that it had decided to keep its main interest rate unchanged at 4.25
percent as it waited to see how the terrorist attacks in the United
States affected the global economy.

The Fed announcement was one a series of U.S. moves to shore up
confidence in financial markets following Tuesday's attack. The assault
leveled the World Trade Center, grounded the U.S. aviation system and
forced the longest suspension of trading on the New York Stock Exchange
(news - web sites) since the Great Depression. Officials said stock
trading will not reopen until Friday at the earliest.

The president's working group on financial markets - an interagency
group that convenes during periods of market turmoil - has been closely
monitoring global developments and working with officials of the major
stock exchanges in New York to provide support for reopening trading.

Both Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan (news - web sites) and
Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill returned to Washington Wednesday from
overseas trips.

In its joint statement Wednesday, the G-7 countries - the United
States, Japan, Germany, France, Britain, Italy and Canada - said they
were ``committed to ensuring that this tragedy will not be compounded
by disruption to the global economy.''

The Fed had announced hours after the bombing on Tuesday that it was
supplying additional money to the U.S. banking system and officials
said there had been a substantially elevated demand for direct Fed
loans to commercial banks this week.

Private economists predicted the Fed's efforts to supply additional
money to banks would soon be followed by further interest rate cuts,
possibly before the next Fed meeting on Oc
2.

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