Fed to use all tools to ease woes
Thursday, August 23, 2007
A US senator said on Tuesday that Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke pledged to use "all tools available" to avert a worsening of the housing and credit problems roiling financial markets.
Democratic Senator Christopher Dodd made the comments after meeting with Bernanke and Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson on Capitol Hill where they discussed the market turmoil.
Dodd, the chairman of the powerful Senate Banking and Housing Committee, told reporters after the meeting that Bernanke and Paulson had both assured him they were ready to act to keep markets functioning.
The senator said Bernanke, a former academic, did not make any specific pledges to him regarding a potential cut in the fed funds rate which would lower borrowing costs for millions of consumers.
The fed funds rate has been anchored at 5.25 per cent since June 2006, but economists say the central bank is coming under increasing pressure to cut the rate. Its next policy meeting is scheduled for September 18.
Rising home foreclosures have sparked a sharp drop in demand for mortgage-backed securities on Wall Street. The housing downturn has also triggered multibillion-dollar losses for investors and led some big banks to tighten lending standards.
The credit jitters have played havoc with the stock markets, spurring volatile price swings and heavy losses in some stocks, particularly mortgage and financial firms.
The Fed chairman met Paulson, a former chief executive of investment banking giant Goldman Sachs, and Dodd as a report revealed more woes for overstretched homeowners.
A monthly survey by RealtyTrac, a private firm that monitors foreclosure activity, showed foreclosure filings running at over 1.1 million in the January-July period, marking a jump of 60 per cent from the same period of 2006.
Dodd, who is also a 2008 presidential contender, said he was pleased Paulson had stressed the administration of Bush is assessing ways for people threatened with foreclosure to keep their homes.
"We're at a 37-year high of the rate of foreclosures in this country. We may have as many as one million and (up to) three million people who could lose their homes ... because they got bad deals on mortgages," Dodd said.AFP
Democratic Senator Christopher Dodd made the comments after meeting with Bernanke and Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson on Capitol Hill where they discussed the market turmoil.
Dodd, the chairman of the powerful Senate Banking and Housing Committee, told reporters after the meeting that Bernanke and Paulson had both assured him they were ready to act to keep markets functioning.
The senator said Bernanke, a former academic, did not make any specific pledges to him regarding a potential cut in the fed funds rate which would lower borrowing costs for millions of consumers.
The fed funds rate has been anchored at 5.25 per cent since June 2006, but economists say the central bank is coming under increasing pressure to cut the rate. Its next policy meeting is scheduled for September 18.
Rising home foreclosures have sparked a sharp drop in demand for mortgage-backed securities on Wall Street. The housing downturn has also triggered multibillion-dollar losses for investors and led some big banks to tighten lending standards.
The credit jitters have played havoc with the stock markets, spurring volatile price swings and heavy losses in some stocks, particularly mortgage and financial firms.
The Fed chairman met Paulson, a former chief executive of investment banking giant Goldman Sachs, and Dodd as a report revealed more woes for overstretched homeowners.
A monthly survey by RealtyTrac, a private firm that monitors foreclosure activity, showed foreclosure filings running at over 1.1 million in the January-July period, marking a jump of 60 per cent from the same period of 2006.
Dodd, who is also a 2008 presidential contender, said he was pleased Paulson had stressed the administration of Bush is assessing ways for people threatened with foreclosure to keep their homes.
"We're at a 37-year high of the rate of foreclosures in this country. We may have as many as one million and (up to) three million people who could lose their homes ... because they got bad deals on mortgages," Dodd said.AFP


