Thursday, September 18, 2008

6 Central Banks pledge joint pumping of 180 billion USD to stabalize market

To counter the more and more serious downward development if the financial crisis, the 6 central banks globally on 18 September 2008 jointly took action to help stabilize the market.

The FED in its open statement says that FOMC (Federal Open Market Committee) has approved a plan to authorize $180 billion USD expansion of temporary foreign currency swap arrangements. This will help increase the liquidity in the monetary market.

Europe central bank expressed that the Europe central bank and FEDs foreign exchange swap arrangements limits will increase from current 55 billion USD to 110 billion USD.

The Swiss central bank expressed that its foreign exchange swap arrangements limits will increase from current 15 billion USD to 27 billion USD.

The Canadian central bank says that it has reached an agreement with the FED for a foreign exchange swap arrangement worth 10 billion USD to increase the US currency liquidity in the Canadian market.

Japan central bank has reached an agreement with the FED for a foreign exchange swap arrangement worth 60 billion USD.

The England central bank says that it will inject 40 billion USD into the market. It says that this and the previous measures taken by the various central banks aims to improve the global financial liquidity situation.

Latest Updates
19 September 2008
  • Central banks redouble efforts to keep financial system alive
    Sept. 19 (AFP) -- FRANKFURT - Central banks redoubled efforts Friday to get the global financial system through the worst financial crisis in decades, raising the volume of injections this week close to around 800 billion dollars.

    With stock markets boosted by news that Washington is trying to cobble together a US debt clearance mechanism, the Bank of Japan led the way, making two fresh injections totalling three trillion yen (28.3 billion US dollars).

    The BoJ has made emergency injections twice daily for the past four days, and the latest brings the total to 11 trillion yen since Tuesday.

    The European Central Bank (ECB) meanwhile freed up 40 billion US dollars and the Bank of England offered 40 billion US dollars (28 billion euros) to financial institutions struggling to obtain funds amid a worldwide squeeze on credit.

    The US Treasury said meanwhile it would guarantee US money market funds up to an amount of 50 billion US dollars in order to ensure their solvency in another move to shore up the financial sector.

    "Money market funds play an important role as a savings and investment vehicle for many Americans," the Treasury said in statement.

    "They are also a fundamental source of financing for our capital markets and financial institutions. Maintaining confidence in the money market fund industry is critical to protecting the integrity and stability of the global financial system," the statement said.

    It added that the guarantee "should enhance market confidence and alleviate investors' concerns about the ability for money market mutual funds to absorb a loss."

    Since the credit crunch began 14 months ago, distrust about the quality of assets being offered as collateral has spread through the money markets where banks obtain short-term funds.

    The resulting drying up of liquidity became a drought this week with the demise of Lehman Brothers and the last-minute rescue of fellow Wall Street titan Merrill Lynch and the de-facto nationalisation of insurance giant AIG.

    As a result, central banks have had to step up to the plate and fulfill their traditional role as the lender of last resort, making billions available for banks to borrow.

    On Thursday, the US Federal Reserve made 180 billion US dollars of liquidity available to the central banks of the eurozone, Japan, Britain, Canada and Switzerland to help ease the pressures.

    The US Securities and Exchange Commission meanwhile said Friday it had followed authorities in Britain, Switzerland and Ireland to ban so-called short selling of shares, widely blamed for the crippling falls in stock prices of banks this week.

    Short-selling occurs when investors sell stock they do not yet own in order to profit later from an anticipated fall in prices -- often contributing to the price fall.

    The London stock market jumped 6.88 per cent, Paris 5.40 per cent, Frankfurt 3.87, Tokyo 3.76, Hong Kong 9.6 per cent and Shanghai nearly 9.5 per cent, and Russian shares roared up 15.5 per cent after several trading suspensions.

    The dollar surged in London, where the euro fell to 1.4197 dollars from 1.4348 here late Thursday.

    And the timeless barometer of confidence, gold, signalled a fall in the fear level, dropping to 855.5 US dollars an ounce in Hong Kong from 875.5 dollars Thursday.

18 September 2008
  • Central Banks Offer Extra Funds to Calm Money Markets
    Sept. 18 (Bloomberg) -- The Federal Reserve almost quadrupled the amount of dollars central banks can auction around the world to $247 billion in a coordinated bid to ease the worst crisis facing financial markets since the 1920s.

    The Fed increased the amount of dollars that the European Central Bank, the Bank of Japan and other counterparts can offer from $67 billion ``to address the continued elevated pressures in U.S. dollar short-term funding markets.'' The Bank of England, the Bank of Canada and the Swiss National Bank also participated.

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