WASHINGTON, Sept. 18, 2007

Stocks Soar On Fed's Half-Point Rate Cut

Central Bank's First Cut In Four Years Allays Investor Fears Of Recession

  • Play CBS Video Video Rate Cut Boosts Wall Street

    High hopes on Wall Street and on Main Street after the federal interest rate is cut one-half point. The Dow made a 300-point gain while mortgages become more affordable. Anthony Mason reports.

  • Video Credit Crunch Hurts Businesses

    Without home refinancing and faced with shrinking consumer confidence, small business owners are getting the short ends of the stick. Michelle Miller reports.

    • Trader Christopher Alegre, right, uses his handheld device as he works in the crowd on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange, Tuesday, Sept. 18, 2007. Stocks rose Tuesday as Wall Street, heartened by upbeat earnings, awaited the Federal Reserve's meeting on interest rates.

      Trader Christopher Alegre, right, uses his handheld device as he works in the crowd on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange, Tuesday, Sept. 18, 2007. Stocks rose Tuesday as Wall Street, heartened by upbeat earnings, awaited the Federal Reserve's meeting on interest rates.  (AP)

    • Many economists are predicting a string of three or more rate cuts as the central bank works to calm financial markets and keep the worst slump in housing in 16 years from pushing the country into a recession.

      Many economists are predicting a string of three or more rate cuts as the central bank works to calm financial markets and keep the worst slump in housing in 16 years from pushing the country into a recession.  (AP Photo/Richard Drew)

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  • Interactive Inside The Fed

    A history of the Federal Reserve, glossary of terms and a look at changing interest rates.

  • Photo Essay Greenspan-ing The Decades

    Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan, 79, retires after 18½ years as head of the central bank.

(CBS/AP)  A jubilant Wall Street barreled higher Wednesday after the Federal Reserve cut its benchmark interest rate by a larger-than-expected half a percentage point. The Dow Jones industrial average surged more than 330 points after the Fed announced that it was reducing its target for the federal funds rate, the interest that banks charge each other, from 5.25 percent to 4.75 percent.

Although some investors hoped for a rate cut of that magnitude, most were betting on a smaller, quarter-point cut in the federal funds rate. The Fed responded to the spreading impact of credit market problems on the rest of the economy by saying, "the tightening of credit conditions has the potential to intensify the housing (market) correction and to restrain economic growth more generally."

The Fed cut the benchmark fed funds rate after keeping it unchanged for more than a year. It has not lowered this rate since 2003. It also reduced the discount rate - what it charges banks borrowing from its discount window - by half a percentage point to 5.25 percent. On Aug. 17, the central bank lowered the discount rate by a half-point to help keep cash moving in the U.S. banking system.

The central bank's decision and the wording of its accompanying economic assessment gratified a market that plunged during August amid fears that credit market tightness, spawned by a continuum of mortgage defaults and delinquencies, would send the economy toward recession.

"I think we'll need a series of cuts to insure this economy doesn't unravel in to recession," Moody's Economy.com's Mark Zandi told CBS News correspondent Anthony Mason.

Brian Bethune, an economist at Global Insight, agrees that this will not be the last rate cut of the year, "The Fed has rolled out the heavy artillery here", he said. "Bernanke is not being timid. The Fed has seen the problems. It is not trying to put out a forest fire with a bucket of water," he said.

He predicts that the central bank will lower rates again - probably by a more modest one-quarter percentage point - at its next meeting in October. Another rate reduction could come in December, the last meeting of this year, if the economy were to falter.

There was no direct signal in the Fed's statement that it would make further rate cuts. It said "some inflation risks remain" and that it will keep monitoring inflation developments. Still, it did not call inflation its "predominant policy concern" as it did after holding rates steady in early August.

"What it says to me is you had a major shift in the last couple of months from a Fed that was very concerned about inflation to one that is concerned about the health of the financial markets, the availability of liquidity," said Jerry Webman, chief economist at Oppenheimer Funds Inc.

The Dow soared 335.97, or 2.51 percent, to 13,739.39. The last time it rose more than 300 points in one session was Oct. 15, 2002, when it gained 378 points, and Tuesday's percent increase was the biggest since April 2, 2003. The blue-chip index is now only about 1.9 percent below its record close of 14,000.41, reached in mid-July.

The Fed's aggressive rate cut also prompted crude-oil futures to catapult even further into record terrain, rising 94 cents to $81.51 a barrel.

Though Wall Street's reaction to the rate cut was clearly positive, some analysts said the Fed's reaction to the summer's market tumult may eventually lead investors to worry more about how bad the current credit climate might be, and how vulnerable the U.S. economy is.

"The market's initial response is 'Thank you, Ben,'" Webman said. "But we also know that when people stop and look at this, people might say, 'Could this house of cards be shaky, more than even we thought it was?"'

A CBS News Poll out today show that for the first time since 2001, a majority of Americans, 51 percent, say the economy is getting worse. And Mason reported that there was another bad omen today when industry analyst RealtyTrac Inc. announced in its monthly report that foreclosures were up 115 percent from a year ago.

These factors could add up to trouble for the consumer - though the Fed tends to measure inflation with volatile food and energy prices stripped out, these high commodity costs trickle down to average Americans and can dampen their spending power.

Most in the market were expecting at least a quarter percentage point cut in the benchmark federal funds rate, given last month's decline in jobs and weakening retail sales.

Continued



© MMVII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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by tylenol6 September 19, 2007 1:17 AM EDT
It is time to abolish the ILLEGAL FEDERAL RESERVE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! THEY HAVE STOLEN FROM THE
AMERICAN TAXPAYERS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Reply to this comment
by nyckate September 19, 2007 1:14 AM EDT
clew37 - OMG - that''s just awful - it''s scary that these so seriously disturbed persons are masquerading as normal human beings.
Reply to this comment
by nyckate September 19, 2007 1:03 AM EDT
Seriously - serious question.

I know that this cut made ''bargain hunters'' on Wall Street happy - but for Middle America is this really that much of a help? Many of the Sub-prime mortgages are already at their ''turn-rate'' meaning that their year or two of low interest rate has expired - so it goes up anyway.

So are Middle Class Americans going to feel comforted by this? I don''t - I think its a needed bailout to try and keep the US out of recession - but am unsure if it can work in the long-run or is it just another stop-gap quick-fix?
Reply to this comment
by Joe posey September 19, 2007 12:46 AM EDT
ooooops john atchison, your to late, O.J.''s done got micheal jackson''s attorney!! and yes CBS why are you not informing us about this??
Reply to this comment
by clew37 September 19, 2007 12:35 AM EDT
How come there is no comment or story anywhere on the CBS news site about the states attorney of Florida, John D.R. Atchison, crossing state lines to have "relations"with a 5-year-old?! He was caught in a sting though, instead of the real thing he wanted. He did bring the girl he thought he was going to meet a doll, some earrings, and oh yes, the was kind and brought his own petroleum jelly. Why isn''t this being reported on CBS? I can find it all over the US independent new sites. Even the Guardian in Britain has the story on this perv. Where are you?
Reply to this comment
by wogerwabbit September 19, 2007 12:33 AM EDT
*
Now ''sevenpesos'' will not have to buy confederate flag toilet paper much longer. He can just use green-backs.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Posted by FeelFree1 at 03:58 PM : Sep 18, 2007
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ROFL!!!!!!!!
Reply to this comment
by thetruth073 September 19, 2007 12:01 AM EDT
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Reply to this comment
by standlee5 September 18, 2007 10:53 PM EDT
Woo Hoo they''re partying on Wall Street tonight.
Reply to this comment
by missingamerica September 18, 2007 10:41 PM EDT
How long do you think it will be before another nation takes advantage of our ever weaker dollar and starts buying up land around America?

Or around our military bases, or along our borders?

Ya know the Republicans would support it, as would those Democrats who are controlled by Business; after all, its just "free trade" and capitalism.

Heck, that''s what China should do with all that money we give them...buy up all of our farmland, let what they don''t need to feed themselves go fallow, and after we start starving offer us Communism as a passport to getting fed.

World War III, started with greed and ended with a whimper.
Reply to this comment
by tnt1954 September 18, 2007 10:15 PM EDT
good. low-interest rates for the under 50.
over 50 tightening their belts, sacrificing
for the under 50. billions in capital gains
today. good. means more collected in capital
gains taxes. thus national debt will be paid
off in no time. keep on speculating. may the
market continue to be manic-depressive(bi-polar),
up and down like a yo-yo or a teeter totter.
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