Federal Reserve plows $30 billion into money markets overseas to ease credit stresses



                      The Bank of England pumped another 40 billion dollars (28 billion ...

AFP/File
Tue Sep 23, 5:36 AM ET

The Bank of England pumped another 40 billion dollars (28 billion euros) into money markets in a bid to ease credit-crunch pressures.

(AFP/File/Shaun Curry)


Fed plows $30 billion in money markets overseas
Wednesday September 24, 1:42 am ET
By Jeannine Aversa, AP Economics Writer


Federal Reserve plows $30 billion into money markets overseas to ease credit stresses

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Federal Reserve, in coordinated action with foreign central banks, plowed $30 billion into money markets overseas Wednesday, part of an ongoing effort to fight a global credit crisis.

The Fed's action -- taken at 1 a.m. EDT -- sets up temporary "swap" arrangements to supply dollars to the central banks of Australia, Denmark, Norway and Sweden in exchange for their currencies.

"These facilities, like those already in place with other central banks, are designed to improve liquidity conditions in global financial markets," the Fed said in a brief statement.

"Central banks continue to work together during this period of market stress and are prepared to take further steps as the need arises," the Fed added.

The new swap arrangements will provide up to $10 billion each to the central banks of Australia and Sweden and $5 billion apiece to the central banks of Denmark and Norway.

Last week, the Fed and other foreign central banks pumped as much as $180 billion into money markets overseas. The European Central Bank, the Bank of Japan, the Bank of England, the Swiss National Bank and the Bank of Canada participated in that maneuver.

The global credit crisis poses a danger not only to the U.S. economy but also the world economy.

Finance officials from the world's major economic powers pledged this week to do all they can to provide relief.

The Group of Seven countries said they welcomed the extraordinary steps by the United States to stem the crisis, including a plan for the Treasury Department to buy $700 billion in bad mortgages and other toxic assets held by banks and other financial institutions. Those dodgy debts are at the heart of the crisis. Besides the United States, the Group of Seven is made up of Japan, Germany, France, Britain, Italy and Canada.



Article: HERE




File photo shows signboards for local Japanese banks lining ...
AFP/File
Wed Sep 24, 2:33 AM ET

File photo shows signboards for local Japanese banks lining a street in Tokyo's business district. The country's central bank has stepped up efforts to calm financial turmoil, injecting more emergency funds into the banking system and offering dollars to the money market for the first time.

(AFP/File/Toru Yamanaka)

 

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