The Federal reserve today cut interest rates by three quarters of a point to take interest rates to 3.5%, 90 minutes before US trading opened. The dramatic cut was drastic action taken by the FED in order to stop markets falling after Europe and Asia recorded record losses on Monday, when US markets were closed.

The cut failed to work however with US markets recording sharp falls when Wall Street opened for Tuesday trading. Throughout the course of Tuesday trading other markets had closed even further down on yesterday, indicating the US would too open down. The FTSE 100 briefly rallied upon news of the FEDs actions after falling 3% early on, only to fall back again later on.

The actions of the FED are a clear indication of its concern, and weren’t meant to meet until next week, making this cut something of a panic move.

The underlying factor is that the real economy has not changed much in the last week, and as such the FED would not have to act now to make a decision on interest rates. What has ushered this move is financial market developments that are threatening to impact the real economy.

In essence if financial markets panic about what is going on in the real economy it can affect the real economy, leading to a nightmare for economy policy makers, which is a feedback mechanism of the markets being spooked by the economy, feeding back into the economy, sending everything into a tail spin.

Therefore the rate cut by the FED is designed to prevent this tail spin, but at the same time destroys confidence.

For mechanical reasons rate cuts will make it easier to borrow money and buy shares, and therefore can be used to prop up stock markets, but when market is determined to fall it is difficult to stop it. This is a similar pattern to drastic rises what a quarter point rise tends not to have an effect on growth, another cut wont solve the current downturn, but this downward phase for many is seen as a correction of the upward phase seen over recent years.

It is hard to steer and control financial markets, and central banks will say it is there doctrine not to control stock markets but to stop the economy going into a spin and if that means further rate cuts then so be it.

The implications of the FEDs cut on the UK are expected to be minimal. The UK are based in sterling and the Bank of England shouldn’t feel any pressure by the Fed to cut UK interest rates accordingly. Central banks are however looking to perceive that they understand and are in control, which in turn does put some pressure on the Bank of England to act, making the expected cut next month even more of a certainty. A FED style out of hours meeting is unlikely though unless further chaos continues in the market.

In terms of the global volatility of markets witnessed over the past two days many do expect a bumpy year although not on the same levels, and as such many experts expect markets to settle down.

But it is important to understand that this market downturn is not like 9/11, this market downturn has an economic underpinning where world markets are trying to adapt their view of the American economy. World markets have been late in understanding the crisis facing the American economy and its decline over the past year. At the moment world markets are correcting itself in a sense, a process which can be messy. The Economy will settle down and markets will learn to live with where the economy will settle down, which in turn will bring an element of stability back.

                    

One Response to “FED issues 3/4 point cut to ease stock market downturn”

  1. Financial Market » Blog Archive » Bank of England cuts interest rates but says not a publishing vote Says:

    [...] economic slowdown. The quarter point reduction was widely tipped following the decision of the FED to cut rates by three quarters of a percent in January in an attempt to stave of economic [...]

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