Fed pledges more auctions to banks
WASHINGTON – The Federal Reserve, working to combat the effects of a severe credit crunch, announced Friday it had auctioned another $20 billion in funds to commercial banks at an interest rate of 4.67 percent. Fed officials pledged to continue with the auctions “for as long as necessary.”
The central bank said it had received bids for $57.7 billion worth of loans, nearly three times the amount being offered, indicating strong interest in the Fed’s new approach to providing money to cash-strapped banks.
It was the second of four scheduled auctions. The first auction, on Monday, of $20 billion resulted in loans being awarded at an interest rate of 4.65 percent. There were 93 bidders seeking $63.6 billion at the first auction and 73 at the second.
Two more auctions will occur in early January. In a statement Friday, the central bank said it would continue with further auctions “for as long as necessary to address elevated pressures in short-term funding markets.”
Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke and his colleagues decided to try the new process because their efforts to inject funds into the banking system through the Fed’s discount window, which makes direct loans to banks, had proven less successful than Fed officials had hoped.