The Mercury News

Emergency steps:

Fed slashes interest rates to near zero, boosts assets by $700B

- By Jeanna Smialek and Neil Irwin

WASHINGTON>> With the fast-spreading coronaviru­s posing a dire threat to economic growth, the Federal Reserve on Sunday night took the dramatic step of slashing interest rates to nearzero and unveiled a sweeping set of programs in an effort to backstop the U.S. economy.

In addition to cutting its benchmark interest rate by a full percentage point, returning it to a range of 0% to 0.25%, the Fed said it would inject huge amounts of money into the economy by snapping up at least $500 billion of Treasury securities and at least $200 billion of mortgageba­cked debt “over coming months.”

The remarkable Sunday afternoon action — reminiscen­t of the global financial crisis a dozen years ago — reflected the imminent peril facing the economy from a virus that has shuttered factories, quarantine­d workers and made a recession look increasing­ly likely.

To try to contain the damage, the U.S. central bank engaged a significan­t amount of its firepower, deploying multiple tools across several areas of policy.

As workers are forced to stay home, restaurant and movie traffic slows, and entire cities grind to a halt, the economy is certain to endure short-term pain.

Officials are trying to prevent those near-term disruption­s from forcing businesses to default on loans or close permanentl­y, inflicting long-term damage.

They are also working to make sure that the inner workings of financial markets function smoothly at a time of intense volatility.

“The virus presents significan­t economic challenges,” Fed Chairman Jerome Powell said in a news conference Sunday evening. In the past week, he said, “several important financial markets” have “shown signs of stress,” pointing specifical­ly to the Treasury market.

He said that the Fed’s purchases of government bonds and mortgageba­cked debt will help to support functionin­g in those markets, which form a crucial backbone for the rest of the financial system.

“The coronaviru­s outbreak has harmed communitie­s and disrupted economic activity in many countries, including the United States,” the central bank said in a statement on Sunday.

“The Federal Reserve is prepared to use its full range of tools to support the flow of credit to households and businesses.”

President Donald Trump praised the Fed’s action. “I want to congratula­te the Federal Reserve,” he said Sunday night. “People in the market should be very thrilled.” Trump added, “We got it down to potentiall­y zero.”

The move was not unanimous. Loretta Mester, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, voted against it, preferring to lower interest rates by only half a percentage point.

The Fed encouraged banks to use its discount window, which provides ready access to financing, and said it was “encouragin­g banks to use their capital and liquidity buffers as they lend to households and businesses.” The Fed also eliminated bank reserve requiremen­ts — which mandate that banks stash a certain amount of cash at the central bank — a suite of efforts meant to free up cash for the banks to keep lending.

The central bank also announced that the Fed, along with the Bank of Canada, the Bank of England, the Bank of Japan, the European Central Bank and the Swiss National Bank, would lower the pricing on the standing U.S. dollar liquidity swap arrangemen­ts and take other measures to encourage their use and effectiven­ess — an effort to keep dollar funding flowing globally.

Meanwhile, a clinical trial evaluating a vaccine designed to protect against the new coronaviru­s will begin today, according to a government official.

The first participan­t in the trial will receive the experiment­al vaccine today, the official said, speaking on the condition of anonymity because the trial has not been publicly announced yet.

The National Institutes of Health is funding the trial, which is taking place at a Kaiser Permanente research facility in Washington state, the official said.

Public health officials say it will take a year to 18 months to fully validate any potential vaccine.

While the cuts leave the Fed back near zero, meaning the central bank has exhausted perhaps its most powerful recession-fighting tool, economists believe that moving aggressive­ly and early to stave off a downturn is the best prescripti­on when interest rates are low to start with.

In a sign of how urgent the Fed considered Sunday’s moves, Powell said the Federal Open Market Committee would no longer hold its previously planned meeting scheduled for March 17-18, saying this decision was “in lieu” of that meeting.

Powell did not use the “recession” word but said he expected the second quarter of U.S. economic growth to be “weak.”

After that, he said, “it’s very hard to say how big the effects will be or how long they will last. That’s going to depend on how widely the virus spreads” he said, adding that the answer to that is “unknowable.”

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