WFLA News Channel 8 The Tampa Tribune CentroTampa.com

TBO.com - Tampa Bay Online

Print This Print Bookmark and Share XML Feed For This Channel

TBO > News

Bailout No Quick Fix For Tight Credit Market

ADVERTISEMENT

Published: October 4, 2008

NEW YORK - The stranglehold on the credit markets remained tight Friday after the House approved a revised $700 billion financial bailout, with investors nervous that the plan is at most a first step in repairing the faltering U.S. economy.

Anxiety among investors kept Treasury bill demand high; the yield on the 3-month bill slipped below half a percent.

Most market participants have been regarding the rescue plan approved by Congress this week as a medicine for what's ailing the financial system, but not as a cure-all.

"At best, we can hope that it stems some of the more intense risk from the credit crisis, it prevents things from spiraling out of hand here," said JPMorgan Chase economist Michael Feroli.

Some are worried the plan will not work at all.

"Nobody knows how it's going to succeed," said Howard Simons, strategist with Bianco Research in Chicago. "It seems the American public had better sense than Wall Street and Washington - the American public said, don't throw good money after bad."

The Treasury will buy banks' risky mortgage-backed assets in an effort to alleviate investors' worries about the institutions' solvency and free them up to do more lending. But even if those efforts succeed, the effects will be far from instantaneous.

And borrowing could remain very expensive for some time. With the economy in such a weak state, lending to consumers and businesses will still appear risky until certain factors - particularly employment and the housing market - improve.

The Labor Department said employers cut payrolls by 159,000 in September, the largest loss in more than five years, while unemployment remained at 6.1 percent.

Layoffs are likely to keep piling up if it remains tough to find credit. Spectrum Yarns Inc., a North Carolina textile company, said it closed two plants and laid off 200 workers this week because it got turned down by a North Carolina bank, a New York finance company and several private lenders.

It's also going to get even harder for individuals to get home loans. Banks have gotten more stringent in their mortgage underwriting, and Wisconsin's affordable-housing agency recently suspended new loans for single-family homes because it was unable to sell tax-exempt mortgage revenue bonds and raise capital.

On Friday, the London Interbank Offered Rate, or LIBOR, for three-month dollar loans rose to 4.33 percent from 4.21 percent Thursday. That bank-to-bank lending rate has been rising all week, showing that banks are growing less and less willing to lend their cash for longer than overnight.

LIBOR is tied to many consumer rates like adjustable-rate mortgages.

In one promising sign, overnight lending has gotten significantly cheaper - LIBOR for overnight dollar loans plunged to a hair below 2 percent on Friday, the lowest rate in nearly four years, from 2.67 percent Thursday.

That overnight rate is now below the Fed's key bank-to-bank overnight lending rate, known as the target fed funds rate, of 2 percent. It appears that central banks' decision to ramp up their lending to financial institutions over the past couple weeks is having a positive effect.

But that's little solace to borrowers who need a loan for longer than overnight.

Over the past week, the amount of short-term corporate debt known as commercial paper has plunged. Banks and investment firms have borrowed in record amounts from the Federal Reserve's emergency lending facility.

Money market mutual funds, usually the biggest buyers of commercial paper, have run for safety after a money market fund "broke the buck" two weeks ago because of its exposure to Lehman. When a fund breaks the buck, it does not have enough assets to cover every dollar invested in it. Instead of commercial paper, they've been investing in Treasury bills.

"There's really no theme except the theme of survival," said John Spinello, bond strategist at Jefferies & Co., referring to the constricted trading in the credit markets Friday.

The impact of the credit market seize-up has affected individuals, small businesses, large companies and municipalities.

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger said Friday that California might take out short-term loans from the federal government if the markets don't loosen up.

Also Friday, YRC Worldwide Inc., one of the nation's largest trucking companies, said it drew down $325 million on a credit line to repay some debt that matures this year and next.

After the House's vote Friday afternoon, the yield on the 3-month Treasury bill slipped to 0.49 percent from 0.70 percent late Thursday. There has been no let-up in demand for T-bills, seen as the safest assets around, even though they are offering extremely low returns.

Share this:
Loading Comments...
Loading
Print This Print Bookmark and Share XML Feed For This Channel
 

ADVERTISEMENT

Advertisement

IYP and SEO vendors: SEO by eLocalListing | Advertiser profiles
Oops! Your email could not be sent because of the following errors: