Japan, Australia Pump $11 Billion Into Markets as Rates Climb
By Garfield Reynolds

Oct. 7 (Bloomberg) -- Japan and Australia's central banks pumped more
than $11 billion into the financial system seeking to ease money-
market rates that were close to record highs as banks hoard cash on
concern about a global recession.
The Bank of Japan injected 1 trillion yen ($9.8 billion) and the
Reserve Bank of Australia added A$1.815 billion ($1.3 billion). The
London interbank offered rate, or Libor, that banks charge each other
for three-month dollar loans stayed near a nine-month high. The
Japanese Libor-OIS spread, a gauge of cash scarcity among banks, rose
to a record.
``There's a massive asset bubble deflating and it just encompasses
everything,'' said Adam Carr, senior economist in Sydney at ICAP
Australia Ltd., part of the world's largest inter-bank broker. ``We've
been living in a dreamland and that dream has ended.''
Interbank rates have jumped as banks store cash to bolster balance
sheets as share and commodity prices plunge after governments in
Europe and the U.S. arranged rescues for six financial institutions in
the past two weeks. The Nikkei 225 Stock Average sank below 10,000 for
the first time since December 2003 as Asian stocks slumped for a
fourth day, extending an equities rout that erased about $2.5 trillion
from global shares yesterday.
Banks increased deposits held at the Reserve Bank of Australia by A$92
million to A$9.493 billion yesterday, after those holdings reached a
record A$11.04 billion on Sept. 30, the RBA said today on its Web
site. Those deposits averaged A$1.7 billion last year.
Borrowing Costs
Australian banks' borrowing costs were little changed after the
injection, according to a gauge that measures the availability of
funds in the market. The difference between the rate banks charge each
other for three-month loans and the overnight indexed swap rate stood
at 86 basis points, or 0.86 percentage point, from 88.3 before the RBA
operation. The gap has averaged 45 points this year.
Banks hold cash in RBA exchange settlement accounts, on- call deposits
at the central bank that receive interest at 0.25 percentage point
below the central bank's benchmark rate.
RBA Governor Glenn Stevens will lower the cash target rate to 6.5
percent from 7 percent, according to 16 of 21 economists surveyed by
Bloomberg before the decision due at 2:30 p.m. today in Sydney.
Credit Crunch
The cost of protecting investors from Australian corporate bond
defaults increased to a record.
The Markit iTraxx Australia index rose 34 basis points to 245,
according to prices from Citigroup Inc. The price of the contracts,
tied to the debt of 25 companies including Qantas Airways Ltd. and BHP
Billiton Ltd., is the highest since the iTraxx benchmarks started in
2004. Sydney trading desks were closed yesterday for a holiday.
The Markit iTraxx Japan index rose 9 basis points to 207, Morgan
Stanley prices show.
``Credit markets remain extremely weak and fragile,'' Gus Medeiros, a
credit analyst at Deutsche Bank AG in Sydney, wrote in a research note
today. ``We expect the market to remain very volatile and thin in the
next few days.''
Damage from the credit crunch accelerated over the past month as
Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. and Washington Mutual Inc. collapsed,
the U.S. government took control of Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and
American International Group Inc., and Merrill Lynch & Co. and
Wachovia Corp. were purchased by rivals.
U.S. Bailout
The U.S. dollar Libor-OIS spread, the difference between the three-
month dollar rate and the overnight indexed swap rate, stood at 287
basis points today, after touching 298 points yesterday. It was at 129
basis points two weeks ago and 81 basis points a month ago. The
Japanese Libor-OIS spread widened to a record 61.05 basis points.
BNP Paribas, France's biggest bank, agreed to take control of Fortis
in Belgium and Luxembourg, completing a breakup of the lender after a
government rescue failed. UniCredit SpA Chief Executive Officer
Alessandro Profumo said Italy's biggest bank underestimated the
severity of the global financial crisis, forcing him to cut profit
forecasts and propose raising capital.
The Federal Reserve will double its auctions of cash to banks to as
much as $900 billion and is considering further steps, the central
bank said today in a statement. The Fed will increase its auctions
under the 28-day and 84-day Term Auction Facility operations to $150
billion each. The two forward TAF auctions in November will be
increased to $150 billion each. The central bank will also begin
paying interest on bank reserves.
Ted Spread
President George W. Bush signed a $700 billion U.S. bailout bill into
law last week to help stem the crisis. The legislation enables the
government to purchase tainted assets from institutions. European
leaders meeting in Paris two days ago pledged to bail out their own
nations' banks, while stopping short of a regional rescue effort.
Yields on overnight U.S. commercial paper jumped 0.94 percentage point
to 3.68 percent yesterday, according to data compiled by Bloomberg
that date back to January 1996. That's the highest since Sept. 30, the
day after the U.S. House of Representatives rejected an earlier
version of the rescue plan.
The difference between what banks and the Treasury pay to borrow money
for three months, the so-called TED spread, was 379 basis points,
after yesterday touching 393 points, the widest since Bloomberg began
compiling the data in 1984. Writedowns and losses worldwide tied to
the U.S. mortgage market have reached $585 billion since the start of
last year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
To contact the reporters on this story: Garfield Reynolds in Sydney at
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Last Updated: October 6, 2008 21:35 EDT


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