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Fed faces day of reckoning as markets clamour for rate cut

September 19, 2007 00:00:00


WASHINGTON, Sept 18 (AFP): Federal Reserve policymakers face a moment of truth today as they meet on interest rates amid a sputtering economy, but with some arguing against a return to easy-money conditions blamed for the problems.
The Federal Open Market Committee, set to announce a decision at 1815 GMT Tuesday, is widely expected to cut interest rates in a bid to ease stress in the housing and credit markets, and head off a potential recession.
Most analysts say they expect the FOMC, which has held its federal funds rate at 5.25 per cent since June 2006, to cut the benchmark rate by 25 or 50 basis points, which could lead to lower borrowing costs for many consumers and businesses.
A rate cut "would reflect an effort to contain the downside risks to growth associated with the swift tightening in financial conditions this summer in an already subpar economy," said Citigroup economist Robert DiClemente, who predicts a half-point cut.
DiClemente says the current rate of 5.25 per cent is "higher than neutral," or holding back economic growth, and that a failure to cut rates "could risk an undesirable breach in investor confidence and broader damage to the expansion."
"The sooner we get to 4.5 per cent or thereabouts, the better the chances of stabilising the economic outlook and the financial system that supports it," DiClemente said.
Some analysts say that if the Fed fails to take bold action such as a half-point cut, it could trigger more turmoil in financial markets, causing more failures of home lenders and mortgage defaults and prompting a freezing up of broader credit markets.
"We strongly believe that if the Fed only cuts rates by 25 basis points even with a strongly worded FOMC statement to commit to more easing if need be, there could be a significant disappointment trade in the financial markets, especially in stocks," said Deutsche Bank economists Joseph LaVorgna and Carl Riccadonna in a note to clients.
"If policymakers move too slowly now, they run the risk that more considerable damage will be inflicted on the financial markets and the real economy, and resultantly they will have to cut rates more aggressively in the long run."
Others claim that economic conditions do not warrant a rate cut, and that such a move would simply be providing more of the easy money that fueled the boom-and-bust cycle.
"The US economy is not booming ... However, the economy is not collapsing either," argued Eugenio Aleman, senior economist at Wells Fargo, who says it would be wrong for the Fed to buckle to market pressure.
"A fed funds cut will not bring back the US housing market. A fed funds cut will not bring back the commercial paper market," he said.

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