Dow Futures Are Down More Than 100

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Dow Futures Are Down More Than 100

Aug 17, 8:03 AM (ET)

By LAUREN VILLAGRAN

(AP) Specialist Gerard Petti, right, directs trading at his post on the floor of the New York Stock...

NEW YORK (AP) - U.S. stock futures faltered Friday, indicating a lower opening on Wall Street as investors nervously eyed declines on overseas markets.

Although stocks had a late recovery to finish mixed Thursday, there is no conviction in the market that could allow it to build on that momentum. The Dow Jones industrial average has lost 3 percent of its value since last Friday amid intensifying concerns about credit problems. The Federal Reserve on Thursday injected another $17 billion into the banking system, but the shot did little to ameliorate the market's unease.

http://apnews.myway.com/article/20070817/D8R2OU180.html

What does it really mean when thye speak of the federal reserve injecting money ?
 
Fed cuts discount rate to 5.75% to ease credit crunch

By Mike Maynard & Rex Nutting, MarketWatch
Last Update: 9:18 AM ET Aug 17, 2007Print E-mail Subscribe to RSS Disable Live Quotes WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) -- In a move wildly applauded by financial markets on both sides of the Atlantic, the Federal Reserve announced Friday that it's cut the discount rate to 5.75%.

Fed policymakers acknowledged the precarious state of credit markets in making the move.
"Financial market conditions have deteriorated, and tighter credit conditions and increased uncertainty have the potential to restrain economic growth," the policy-setting Federal Open Market Committee said in a statement. See text.
Accordingly, the FOMC, led by Fed chairman Ben Bernanke, said it "judges that the downside risks to growth have increased appreciably." Fed officials are "monitoring the situation" and are "prepared to act as needed to mitigate the adverse effects on the economy arising from the disruptions in financial markets," the FOMC said.
While the timing of the FOMC's action was a surprise, many investors and analysts had been expecting a rate cut since early August, when growing insolvencies in subprime mortgages sparked fears among investors that other types of credit could also default.
In response, investors began to sell risky securities such as mortgage-backed securities, commercial paper and corporate equities to seek the safety of Treasurys. Even the most qualified borrowers found it difficult and expensive to obtain credit.
The Fed took the "large and unusual" move because of "the plunge in commercial paper" market" and the "increased threat difficult financing conditions pose for viable businesses," wrote Stephen Gallagher, economist for Societe Generale. The Fed's action could provide a temporary alternative to the market for short-term financing needs, Gallagher said.
The discount rate is the interest rate charged to commercial banks and other depository institutions on loans they receive from regional Federal Reserve lending facilities. It differs from the key federal funds rate, which is the rate at which private institutions lend to other depository institutions overnight.
The discount window is rarely used; only an average of $87 million is borrowed on an average day, said Tony Crescenzi, chief bond market strategist for Miller Tabak & Co.
"It is imperative that the Fed validate this largely symbolic but important action with a cut in the fed funds rate," Crescenzi said.
The target for federal funds remains 5.25%.
Many economists expect the Fed to cut the federal funds rate at the Sept. 18 meeting.
By cutting the discount rate instead of the federal funds rate, the Fed signaled that it believes problems are mainly confined to the financial system, not to the economy. It provides funds to banks, but does little to change consumer and commercial interest rates, as a cut in the federal funds rate would do.
The discount rate stood at 6.25% previously; it's been set at 1 percentage point above the federal funds rate.
Cutting the rate -- something that financial commentators have been agitating for in recent days -- was seen as aimed at narrowing the gap between the discount and fed-funds rates.
Stock futures, which had been broadly lower before the Fed's announcement, turned high almost immediately. See Indications.
The Fed has been providing extra liquidity to the markets on a temporary basis through its open market operations, but had vowed to keep the federal funds targeted at 5.25%.
Since the housing and credit bubble began to unwind, dozens of lenders have gone out of business, several hedge funds have failed and thousands of homes have gone into foreclosure.
The U.S. central bank also announced a change to the Federal Reserve Banks' usual practices designed to allow the provision of term financing for as long as 30 days, renewable by the borrower.
In this way, the Fed said it will be able to keep tabs on market liquidity.
These changes, the Fed said, are expected to afford banks and financial institutions "greater assurance about the cost and availability of funding."
In addition, the Fed will continue to accept a broad range of collateral for discount-window loans, including securities backed by home mortgages and related assets, in line with requests by the boards of directors of the New York Fed and the San Francisco Fed. Existing collateral margins will be maintained as well.
 
The lowering of the prime rate seems to have done its work.
I have a question:

Reference lowering of the prime rate. OK, so the Banks cn now borrow at a lower rate.

But from whom? the federal government? (do they just issue more paper figuratively?) or from each other?, or foreign govs?, or what?.
 
I have a question:

Reference lowering of the prime rate. OK, so the Banks cn now borrow at a lower rate.

But from whom? the federal government? (do they just issue more paper figuratively?) or from each other?, or foreign govs?, or what?.
From each other.

The prime rate sets the rate banks can charge each other. Most loans are also attached to this rate. So your loan rate, at opening or if it is adjustable, would be linked to the Prime Rate set by the Feds.
 
From each other.

The prime rate sets the rate banks can charge each other. Most loans are also attached to this rate. So your loan rate, at opening or if it is adjustable, would be linked to the Prime Rate set by the Feds.

Next question: How can that help? Just moral support that they "COULD" if the wanted to?? sounds akin to "robbing Peter to pay Paul"
 
Next question: How can that help? Just moral support that they "COULD" if the wanted to?? sounds akin to "robbing Peter to pay Paul"
Short term loans for stock purchases are also based on the prime rate. When it lowers people buy more as they can get the loans for cheaper.

The truth is, in the US especially, the economy is built on debt and it interlinks so much that too low a rate will create inflation as many will purchase outside their limits, supply and demand is effected.
 
Short term loans for stock purchases are also based on the prime rate. When it lowers people buy more as they can get the loans for cheaper.

The truth is, in the US especially, the economy is built on debt and it interlinks so much that too low a rate will create inflation as many will purchase outside their limits, supply and demand is effected.
Oh, that I understand. but it is the Bank loans to other banks that I don't get. or how it helps. The money is scarce everywhere.
 
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maybe it worked.

I was affraid it would all sell back off.

Its going to get hard to control when the rest of the subprimes come due over the next few months.
 
So we are borrowing our way out of a crisis caused by borrowing ?

hmm do they charge less interest than they pay ?
 
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