sorry, in the header I tried to mean "...without swap limits". I do
not know how to change it.

:(

On Oct 13, 7:19 pm, "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> My comment: Impressive !  I got shocked !   "The Federal Reserve led
> an unprecedented push by central banks to flood the financial system
> with as many dollars as (some European) banks want".
>
> http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=a_5OrlUxIIYM&refe...
>
> Oct. 13 (Bloomberg) -- The Federal Reserve led an unprecedented push
> by central banks to flood the financial system with as many dollars as
> banks want, backing up government efforts to revive confidence and
> helping to reduce money-market rates.
>
> The European Central Bank, the Bank of England and the Swiss National
> Bank will offer European banks unlimited dollar funds with maturities
> of seven, 28 and 84 days at fixed interest rates against ``appropriate
> collateral,'' the Washington-based Fed said today. The Fed had capped
> at $380 billion the currency it would swap with the three central
> banks.
>
> Global economic leaders have redoubled efforts to unfreeze credit
> markets and avert the worst worldwide recession in thirty years after
> last week's 20 percent slide in the MSCI World Index. Policy makers
> from the Group of Seven nations are committed to taking ``all
> necessary steps'' to stem a market panic, and European and U.S.
> governments today outlined plans to avoid banks failing.
>
> ``Like high waves that have gathered tremendous pace, global policy
> initiatives are coming to crash on the markets' shores,'' said Alex
> Patelis, chief international economist at Merrill Lynch & Co. in
> London. ``A turning point could be reached.''
>
> The cost of borrowing in dollars for three months today fell to 4.75
> percent from 4.82 percent, the highest this year. The rate for euros
> over the same timeframe declined to 5.32 percent from 5.38 percent.
>
> `Funding Stresses'
>
> On foreign exchange markets, the euro rose as much as 2 percent
> against the dollar. Equities rallied worldwide and the MSCI World
> Index climbed 2 percent. Morgan Stanley soared 56 percent, while Bank
> of America Corp. and Citigroup Inc. jumped more than 10 percent.
>
> ``Taken together, the latest moves increase the chances that we will
> begin to see some relaxation of the intense funding stresses,''
> Dominic Wilson and other economists at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. wrote
> in a note today. ``This is because bank solvency risk should decline
> as the government offers protection.''
>
> As well as slashing interest rates in concert last week, global
> central banks are expanding their toolkits to push down money-market
> rates. The Fed on Oct. 7 said it will create a special fund to buy
> U.S. commercial paper and the ECB last week said it would offer
> financial firms unlimited euro funds. The Bank of England is scheduled
> to revamp its own money-market operations later this week.
>
> Until now, central banks and governments have failed to gain traction
> in markets, with investors criticizing them for adopting a scattershot
> and uncoordinated approach.
>
> `Work Together'
>
> The ECB, the BOE and the Swiss National Bank ``can provide U.S. dollar
> funding in quantities sufficient to meet their demand'' into 2009, the
> Fed said today. The Bank of Japan may introduce ``similar measures.''
>
> The aim is to keep the financial system flowing with the world's
> reserve currency. Banks are hoarding cash for fear they will lose the
> money if it's loaned or held elsewhere, or because they need it for
> their own funding needs.
>
> ``Central banks will continue to work together and are prepared to
> take whatever measures are necessary to provide sufficient liquidity
> in short-term funding markets,'' the Fed's statement said.
>
> What began last December as a $24 billion arrangement between the Fed,
> the ECB and Swiss central bank was boosted over the past year to $620
> billion and broadened to additional countries. The Fed didn't announce
> changes to the $240 billion of swap lines with six other central
> banks, including those in Japan, Canada, Denmark, Norway, Sweden and
> Australia.
>
> `More Important'
>
> Today's ``action is unprecedented,'' said Neil Mackinnon, chief
> economist at ECU Plc in London and a former U.K Treasury official.
> Andrew Milligan, who helps oversee about $260 billion as head of
> global strategy at Standard Life, said it's a ``much more important''
> move than the coordinated rate cut.
>
> G-7 finance chiefs pledged Oct. 10 to take ``urgent and exceptional
> action'' after stocks plunged and as a global recession looms.
>
> France, Germany and Spain today committed 960 billion euros ($1.3
> trillion) to guarantee lending between banks and take stakes in them.
> That followed a summit of European leaders in Paris yesterday focused
> on achieving a more united front to battle the crisis.
>
> Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc, HBOS Plc, and Lloyds TSB Group will
> get an unprecedented 37 billion-pound ($64 billion) bailout from the
> U.K. government. The U.K. stole a march on its counterparts by saying
> last week it would guarantee lending between banks and invest in
> lenders.
>
> In a New York Times column published today before the announcement
> that he had won the Nobel Prize in economics, Paul Krugman said the
> U.K.'s ``combination of clarity and decisiveness hasn't been matched
> by any Western government.''
>
> U.S. Proposal
>
> The U.S. Treasury today fleshed out its new proposal to buy stakes in
> financial firms. The program will be optional and aimed at ``healthy
> firms,'' Treasury Assistant Secretary Neel Kashkari, who oversees the
> $700 billion rescue package, said in a speech in Washington. U.S.
> Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson has identified purchasing stocks as
> his top priority.
>
> The U.S. may now have to match Europe in guaranteeing interbank loans,
> said Win Thin, an economist at Brown Brothers Harriman & Co. in New
> York. ``It would appear that it has no choice but to follow suit,'' he
> said.
>
> The collapse of New York-based Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.
> precipitated the latest chapter of the 14-month crisis, causing banks
> to stop lending to each other out of concern they may not get their
> money back. The world's largest financial companies have posted more
> than $635 billion in writedowns and credit losses since the start of
> last year after the U.S. housing market slumped.
>
> Today's move by central banks is ``another welcome measure,'' said
> Ross Walker, an economist at Royal Bank of Scotland in London. ``We'll
> have to see what comes out of it. We all expect more rate cuts,
> whether they're coordinated or not is another matter.''
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