Wall Street Swings Day After Meltdown
(CBS/ AP) Wall Street’s numbers swung back and forth Thursday despite a boost from the Federal Reserve which, along with central banks in Europe, Canada and Asia, pumped as much as $180 billion into money markets to combat shock waves from the worst financial upheaval since the Great Depression of the 1930s.
Wall Street initially rallied, but trimmed gains as the morning wore on, after plunging 450 points Wednesday when a government bailout of American International Group Inc., one of the world’s largest insurers, failed to settle the markets’ frayed nerves.
In the first hour of trading, the Dow Jones industrial average rose 135.65, or 1.28 percent, to 10,745.31, but by the afternoon had dropped more than 100 points, before inching upward again.
The Fed’s move was aimed at boosting waning confidence that governments can stop the crisis from spinning out of control and at getting banks around the world to open their ever-tightening purse strings. Banks have been increasingly reluctant to lend to each other as distrust spread throughout the financial system.
As the market fluctuated, speculation swirled about the futures of such major players as thrift bank Washington Mutual Inc. and investment bank Morgan Stanley. Media reports have been saying that Wells Fargo & Co. and Citigroup Inc. are interested in a possible takeover of Washington Mutual, and that Morgan Stanley and Wachovia Corp. are in talks about a possible combination.
CBS News correspondent Jeff Glor reports investors Thursday morning have expressed lots of frustration here this over the so-called snowball effect on U.S. banks and wondering just when it will end.
Asian markets closed lower, but the Fed action helped send European stocks higher after three days of losses.
Worries that other financial companies could fail and further upend the economic system may cast a pall on the central banks’ step, which spread billions of dollars around the world in exchange for foreign currencies.
President George W. Bush, who canceled a Republican fundraising trip to Florida and Alabama to focus on the crisis, said the markets are adjusting to the “extraordinary measures” that have been taken in recent days.
“Our financial markets continue to deal with serious challenges,” Mr. Bush said in two minutes of remarks – his first on the turmoil since Monday. “As our recent actions demonstrate, my administration is focused on meeting these challenges.”
He did not specify what additional actions would be taken. The president was to meet with economic advisers over much of the day, and was seeing Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson at the White House later Thursday.
For more than a year, investors have watched with growing alarm as the U.S. economy, the world’s largest, has struggled to right itself before being tipped over the edge by massive foreclosures, shrinking consumer spending and rising inflation.
The turmoil has swallowed some of the most storied names on Wall Street. Three of its five major investment banks – Bear Stearns, Lehman Brothers and Merrill Lynch – have either gone out of business or been driven into the arms of another bank.
The two remaining – Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Morgan Stanley – were under siege.
A sharp rise in borrowing costs has worsened. The total amount of commercial paper fell by $52.1 billion for the week that ended Wednesday, as banks cut back the short-term loans companies from small garment factories to General Electric Co. depend on for their daily operations. At the same time, the interest rate on those short-term loans more than doubled, with rates for seven-day paper jumping to 4.5 percent from 2.5 percent.
Russia closed its stock exchanges for a second day Thursday as President Dmitry Medvedev pledged a 500 billion ruble ($20 billion) injection into financial markets to stem a dizzying plummet in share prices – and quash fears of a repeat of the country’s 1998 financial collapse.
In a statement Thursday, the Fed said it had authorized the expansion of swap lines, or reciprocal currency arrangements, with the other central banks, including amounts up to $110 billion by the European Central Bank and up to $27 million by the Swiss National Bank.
The Fed also said new swap facilities had been authorized with the Bank of Japan for as much as $60 billion; $40 billion for the Bank of England and $10 billion for the Bank of Canada.
All told, Fed action increased lines of cash to central banks by $180 billion to $247 billion.
Shares of the largest U.S. thrift, Washington Mutual Inc., fell 13 percent amid reports that the government was trying to find a buyer for the bank, which has been battered by bad home loans. It lost $3.3 billion in the second quarter.
And, demand for super-safe Treasurys surged Wednesday, sending the yield on the 3-month Treasury bill briefly into negative territory for the first time since 1940, as investors rushed for the closest thing to cash.
After the government bailed out AIG and a money fund “broke the buck,” investors were worried about the risk of most assets.
It was the fourth consecutive day of extraordinary turmoil for the American financial system, beginning with news on Sunday that Lehman Brothers, would be forced to file for bankruptcy.
The 4 percent drop Wednesday in the Dow reflected the stock market’s first chance to digest the Fed’s decision to rescue AIG with an $85 billion taxpayer loan that effectively gives it a majority stake in the company. AIG is important because it has essentially become a primary source of insurance for the entire financial industry.
Mortgage rates, which had fallen after the U.S. government’s takeover of mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, rose again, removing a glimmer of hope that the housing crisis, the kindling for the broader financial meltdown, was hitting bottom.
And new statistics showed that construction of new homes and apartments fell a surprising 6.2 percent in August to the weakest pace in 17 years.
The Treasury Department, for the first time in its history, said it would begin selling bonds for the Federal Reserve in an effort to help the central bank deal with its unprecedented borrowing needs.
Treasury officials said the action did not mean that the Fed was running short of cash, but simply was a way for the government to better manage its financing needs.
Separately, the Securities and Exchange Commission tightened rules on short selling, the practice of betting that a stock will fall.
A $62 billion money market fund – Primary Fund from Reserve – on Tuesday saw its holdings fall below its total deposits, a condition known as “breaking the buck” that hasn’t happened to a money market fund since 1994, Rosenberg said. Money market funds are supposed to be conservatively invested and almost as safe as cash.
Withdrawals from money market funds have become one factor in the global tightening of credit, as investors and banks hoard their cash.
Source: cbs.com