WASHINGTON, Oct. 7, 2008

Fed Takes Radical Step To Unthaw Credit

Will Buy Unsecured Short-Term Debts So Large Companies Can Resume Borrowing

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(CBS/ AP)  The Federal Reserve announced Tuesday a radical plan to buy massive amounts of short-term debts in a dramatic effort to break through a credit clog that is imperiling the U.S. economy.

The Federal Reserve will buy "commercial paper," a short-term financing mechanism that many companies rely on to finance their day-to-day operations, such as purchasing supplies or making payrolls.

The $99.4 billion daily market for this crucial financing, which relies on investors rather than banks, has virtually dried up. That has made it increasingly difficult and expensive for companies to raise money to fund their operations. Commercial paper is a way of borrowing money for short periods, typically ranging from overnight to less than a week.

The unstable situation has left many companies vulnerable. The notion under the plan is for the government to provide a "backstop" that would give companies a new place to get cash, the U.S. central bank, known as the Fed, said. The action makes the Fed a source of credit for nonfinancial businesses in addition to commercial banks and investment firms.

The Fed said it is creating a new entity to buy three-month unsecured and asset-backed commercial paper directly from eligible companies.

"The commercial paper market has been under considerable strain in recent weeks as money market mutual funds and other investors" have become increasingly reluctant to buy commercial paper, especially longer-dated maturities.

The Treasury Department, which worked with the Fed on the program, said the action is "necessary to prevent substantial disruptions to the financial markets and the economy." The Treasury will provide money to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York to support the new program, the Fed said.

If a company's commercial paper is not backed by assets or other forms of security acceptable to the Fed, the company could pay an upfront fee, the central bank said.

The Fed said it hoped its effort would jolt the commercial paper market back to life.

"This facility should encourage investors to once again engage in term lending in the commercial paper market," the Fed said. That should eventually spur financial companies to lend to each other and to their customers, including consumers, the Fed said.

To help ease credit stresses, the Fed announced Monday it will provide as much as $900 billion in cash loans to squeezed banks. It said 28-day and 84-day cash loans being made available to banks will be boosted to $150 billion apiece. Those increases will eventually bring the amounts outstanding under the program to $600 billion.

"I think we're in a very serious situation, that's clear," Julia Coronado, an economist with the investment bank Barclays, told CBS' The Early Show.

Coronado added that while a recession seems imminent, a depression is unlikely. "We have to believe when the U.S. Treasury and the Federal Reserve and central banks around the world are throwing their weight behind this, that is will have some effect," she said.

Loans that will be made available in November to banks also will be increased to $150 billion each. That makes a total of $900 billion in credit potentially outstanding over year-end, the Fed said.

The Fed also said it will begin paying interest on commercial banks' reserves, another way to expand the central bank's resources to battle the credit crisis.

In the $700 billion bailout bill President George W. Bush signed Friday, Congress gave the Fed the power to pay interest on those reserves for the first time. The law accelerated the effective date to Oct. 9 of this year, rather than October 2011.

The move also will encourage banks to keep excess reserves at the central bank because they will now be earning interest on the money. That will help give the Fed more control over interest rates and more leverage to battle the credit debacle. Under the current formula, the Fed would pay interest of roughly 1.25 percent on excess reserves. A different rate would be paid for required reserves.

"Together these actions should encourage term lending across a range of financial markets in a manner that eases pressures and promotes the ability of firms and households to obtain credit," the Fed said.

A growing number of economists and investors believe the Fed will be forced to do an about-face and lower its key interest rate, now at 2 percent, on or before its next meeting on Oct. 28-29.

Such a move would revive the central bank's rate-cutting campaign, which had been halted in June out of concerns that those low rates would worsen inflation. Since then, however, economic and financial conditions have dangerously deteriorated, while inflation pressures have calmed a bit.

Any reduction to the Fed's key rate would cause a corresponding drop in commercial banks' prime lending rate, now at 5 percent. The prime rate is used to peg loans to millions of consumers and businesses.

© MMVIII, 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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Add a Comment See all 26 Comments
by riddelup October 7, 2008 11:18 AM EDT
OMG I totally did not see this coming. Who would have imagined the banks would ask for more money except this time they do not call it a bailout. Listen I loaned some money to my deadbeat brother in law, could I get in on this? The bankers just play and play we just pay and pay. I am tired of this game.
Reply to this comment
by xjscave October 7, 2008 11:42 AM EDT
CBS Editorial Staff - Obviously, you failed basic grammar and vocabulary. "Unthaw"??? Are you kidding me? Unthaw technically means "to freeze". The proper title to the piece should have used the word "Thaw". For pity''s sake! My dog can write better copy than this! No wonder we''re raising a nation of morons!
Reply to this comment
by cruzn66 October 7, 2008 12:04 PM EDT
At this rate, why not just close up all the banks and let Uncle Sam become everyone''s bank? Cut out the middleman skimming millions of taxpayer dollars!
Reply to this comment
by txgrouch2006 October 7, 2008 12:46 PM EDT
"the Fed announced Monday it will provide as much as $900 billion in cash loans to squeezed banks. "

In case you missed it, that said

THE FED WILL PROVIDE UP TO

NINE

HUNDRED

BILLION

DOLLARS

in short-term debt.

Yes, that''s

NINE

HUNDRED

BILLION

DOLLARS

Didn''t we just write a check for $700 billion which grew to $850 billion just yesterday???

And now they''re coming back for $900 BILLION in fast-lane unsecured untrackable shell games with NINE HUNDRED BILLION DOLLARS

aww SHUCKS let''s just call it an EVEN TRILLION and have it done with.

HOW MUCH WILL THEY WANT TOMORROW - $2 TRILLION? $5 TRILLION???

HOW MUCH OF OUR MONEY WILL BE REAL MONEY ANYMORE and how much will be imaginary money issued on the spot by the Fed in response to an "emergency??"

HEY, GUESS WHAT. The Fed abruptly releasing TRILLIONS OF DOLLARS OF IMAGINARY MONEY in less than a week

THAT *IS* AN EMERGENCY!!!!!!

Reply to this comment
by txgrouch2006 October 7, 2008 12:48 PM EDT
Has anyone noticed that these fat-cat bailouts keep getting BIGGER AND BIGGER and MORE AND MORE OFTEN?????

This is like the day the dam burst. It started with a trickle of only a few tens of billions of dollars in a month. Now it''s A TRILLION DOLLARS A DAY.

THIS *IS* THE DAY THE DAM BURST.
Reply to this comment
by txgrouch2006 October 7, 2008 12:52 PM EDT
It''s time for an EMERGENCY ORDER to SHUT DOWN THE FED.

It''s time for a MORATORIUM ON GOVERNMENT INTERVENTION into the disaster that, well, THEY CREATED.

Let all businesses fail. Shut down the economy. Let the fat cats SUCK EGGS.

We ordinary folks were going to go broke anyway.

LET''S LET THE FAT CATS JOIN US IN THE SOUP LINES, instead of us standing there without them.
Reply to this comment
by txgrouch2006 October 7, 2008 12:54 PM EDT
My dog can write better copy than this!
Posted by xjscave at 08:42 AM : Oct 07, 2008

My dog could have done a better job of regulating the banks.

CBS is just following the trend of mass dereliction of duty.
Reply to this comment
by txgrouch2006 October 7, 2008 12:55 PM EDT
Isn''t this how Rome fell?
Reply to this comment
by txgrouch2006 October 7, 2008 12:59 PM EDT
THIS IS AN EMERGENCY

The economic meltdown has reached critical mass. This is it. Take shelter immediately.

THIS IS NOT A DRILL. THIS IS NOT A JOKE.

THIS IS A GENUINE EMERGENCY

OUR COUNTRY IS OUT OF CONTROL, AND IT IS CRASHING

TAKE COVER, EVERYONE

AND MAY GOD BE WITH US
Reply to this comment
by oscarez October 7, 2008 1:14 PM EDT
My company is going after $5 million of this money. We are going to use it to pay $2.5 million reward to the CEO (me) and CFO (me) for a job well done. Now I can go bankrupt and retire. Happy days are here again.
Reply to this comment
by oscarez October 7, 2008 1:23 PM EDT
But seriously folks, looks like Bush and company have learned that putting the bailouts through the congress is almost imposable. Why bother with the congress when the Federal Reserve can do it all. What I cannot believe is how many companies are living from hand to mouth one day at a time. We, the working class, are in BIG trouble.
Reply to this comment
by legacyabq October 7, 2008 1:23 PM EDT
..a new republic, founded BY THE CORPORATION,
FOR the CORPORATION, founded on the principle that MONEY and PEOPLE are NOT created equal..
MONEY COMES FIRST!!
Reply to this comment
by jackp32 October 7, 2008 1:30 PM EDT
Where is my bailout check?
Reply to this comment
by cbshoveit October 7, 2008 1:32 PM EDT
Lees hear it for McCain Gram rewritung th banking laws in 1998! Welcome to the New Great Depression!
Vote Republican! I love being out of work!
Reply to this comment
by renonv5 October 7, 2008 1:47 PM EDT
I wonder what it will take for the American people to say enough is enough. This administration has made us so completely vulnerable to a takeover by another country (thanks Bush/Cheney) and all we do is vent by posting all these angry, but useless, complaints. It is an extremely sad day in the USA.
Reply to this comment
by gwjackie October 7, 2008 1:48 PM EDT
JackP i they think forgot me and you.
Reply to this comment
by txgrouch2006 October 7, 2008 1:49 PM EDT
I wonder what it will take for the American people to say enough is enough. This administration has made us so completely vulnerable to a takeover by another country (thanks Bush/Cheney) and all we do is vent by posting all these angry, but useless, complaints. It is an extremely sad day in the USA.
Posted by renonv5 at 10:47 AM : Oct 07, 2008

So what do YOU think we SHOULD do?

I''m VOTING AGAINST ALL INCUMBENTS next month. That''s what I''m doing.
Reply to this comment
by gwjackie October 7, 2008 1:54 PM EDT
If a company needs to borrow money pay its workers something is wrong it is time for them to close. someone is giving the CEO to much its time to take a look at where the money is going.
Reply to this comment
by renonv5 October 7, 2008 1:55 PM EDT
I''''m VOTING AGAINST ALL INCUMBENTS next month. That''''s what I''''m doing.Posted by txgrouch2006

I am with you 100%. That is at least a start. It just makes me so sad that the corruption runs so deep and the greed is incomprehensible.
Reply to this comment
by txgrouch2006 October 7, 2008 2:01 PM EDT
the corruption runs so deep and the greed is incomprehensible.
Posted by renonv5 at 10:55 AM : Oct 07, 2008

That spells BABY BOOMER.

60% of Congress is Boomers. Clinton and Bush were both born in 1946 - the kings of the Boomers. Joseph Hazelwood and Bill Gates are Boomers.

THIS IS THE RESULT OF SIXTEEN YEARS OF BABY BOOMERS RUNNING OUR COUNTRY.

No more BOOMERS!
Reply to this comment
by gwjackie October 7, 2008 2:05 PM EDT
Lets put old Nute over this mess he would love this.
Reply to this comment
by riddelup October 7, 2008 2:08 PM EDT
OMG I totally did not see this coming. Who would have imagined the banks would ask for more money except this time they do not call it a bailout. Listen I loaned some money to my deadbeat brother in law, could I get in on this? The bankers just play and play we just pay and pay. I am tired of this game.
Reply to this comment
by random_radar October 7, 2008 3:21 PM EDT
The Fed tried to help banks make loans, but the banks are still insolvent so that didn''t work.

Now the Fed is making the loans directly to businesses instead. But the businesses are insolvent, so that isn''t going to work either.

Soon the Fed will simply start making loans directly to consumers. You will simply sign a contract giving up your freedom, your arm and leg, your first born child, and your eternal soul in exchange for a car loan or a mortgage.

Problem solved!
Reply to this comment
by zietzke-2009 October 7, 2008 9:38 PM EDT
Fed Takes Radical Step To Unthaw Credit.

They should also report in this story that the large companies can also further fund their "GOLDEN PARACHUTES" at the tax payers expense for this federal give a way, corporate welfare plan!

That''s what''s happening !...And America''s middle class is paying for it ! So much for free enterprise.

If our so called "concerned" Government ever really had any intention of helping America, they would be putting financial assistance in the hands of the PEOPLE, who are the real economic engines of the U.S. economy.

The American people buy the goods and services and do most of the work required to run this country. THEY MUST BE PROTECTED AND GIVEN THE TOOLS NEEDED.

So far, the PEOPLE have received NOTHING...Except a
$ 700 Billion dollar bail out debt, and television reports detailing how over 4000 of their children have been killed in a war that was started as a result of a lie.

WMD ? Mission Accomplished ? What''s next ?

Remember, "WE THE PEOPLE" ? Its a novel concept that the U.S. Constitution spoke about a long time ago...

During the last 8 years of this administration, The U.S. Constitution has been basically shreaded into a worthless piece paper that has been discarded.

Wake up America and be sure to vote on Nov 4th !

Its our country....Its time to take our country back and send McSame back to one of his many Arizona Ranches and his side kick, Ms. Barky Failin back to her kennel in Wasilla, AK
Reply to this comment
by swingset4u October 8, 2008 12:51 AM EDT
I don''t need credit! I need lower food and heating bills! Curious on how this will affect me and my family. I don''t need to borrow on my house. I drive a car that is paid off, I work three miles from home, I don''t need gas for my car.. I can ride a bike or even walk. Why the h e l l should I be struggling????
Reply to this comment
by jensublime2 October 9, 2008 11:50 AM EDT
***QUIT blaming the people buying houses they can''t afford.**** Mortgages were EASIER to get than a credit card. Daily I received someting in the mail about refinancing or let my home work for you Just send in you name social and see if you qualify that was the only work i needed to do. CAN you believe a couple of weeks later I had 80,000 eighty thousand dollar loan along with a check for 65,000 that home equity loan cost me 16,000 SIXTEEN THOUSAND DOLLARS: PROFIT for the mortage brokers at 9% to me. THE KICKER...I HAD NO JOB and They did not take the repayment check I sent them sent it back penality for early repayment.... they did not process the double payment automatic withdrawal that I signed up for during the deal....
so what''s the mortgage crunch all about greed..Greed and more GREED predatory lending with a big payday

They got their money 16K and that my uninformed people was what was and is really happening...

I have kept a file folder of the daily multiple offers i received...
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