All eyes will be on the feds to see if they lower interest rates today. But at this stage that we're in, will it really help? With all the turmoil going on in financial news right now, it's hard for me to say.
Many analysts are anticipating a half-point cut, which still would be an all-time low for the rate.
But the Fed's low rates have not yet filtered into many consumer and business loans, and the central bank is likely to expand its arsenal of extraordinary actions to break the global credit crunch and avert a crippling deflationary spiral, say analysts.
"The Fed basically lost control of the rate after the Lehman Brothers failure on September 15," said Jeremy Siegel, a University of Pennsylvania economist and adviser to Rittenhouse Asset Management.
"With the effective real market rate now at zero, what difference does a cut make?" said John Mauldin, president of Millennium Wave Advisors.
"I hope they do the right thing and go ahead and cut at least 75 basis points, if not more. That would stop the speculation and let them move on to quantitative easing and other allied policies."
Tuesday, December 16, 2008
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