The Federal Reserve slashed a key US interest rate by three-quarters of a percentage point this evening, a substantial cut but smaller than many in financial markets had expected, as part of an effort to hold off a deep recession and financial meltdown.
The Fed's action takes the bellwether federal funds rate to 2.25 per cent, the lowest since February 2005, and comes two days after the central bank announced the latest in a series of emergency measures to stem a fast-spreading global financial crisis. Many in financial markets had expected the Fed to chop the overnight rate by a full point.
The Fed has now cut rates by 3 percentage points since mid-September, including 2 points since the start of the year. In recent days, the central bank has also unveiled steps not used since the Great Depression to ensure financial institutions have access to liquid funds.
The central bank is pulling out all the stops to provide liquidity to financial markets and put a floor under an economy many analysts believe is in recession.
A spike in mortgage delinquencies has escalated since the summer to a full-blown credit crunch that claimed venerable Wall Street institution Bear Stearns as its most prominent victim.
The Fed, fearing financial markets would freeze up and send the economy into an sharp downward spiral, has offered cash auctions and direct loans to financial institutions, opening those liquidity avenues beyond the banks that normally deal with the Fed to include other Wall Street firms.
In spite of a series of interest rate cuts and liquidity-providing measures, US economic activity has decelerated sharply. Recent reports show a loss in jobs, reduced factory output and a drop in retail sales.
The US central bank has set aside lingering concerns on inflation arising from a jump in oil prices, some of which is blamed on the continuing deterioration of the dollar's value.
The government has responded to the economy's abrupt slowing with a fiscal stimulus package aimed at putting cash in consumers' wallets. Lawmakers are also pushing for measures that would revive the struggling US housing market by providing relief
for homeowners who are delinquent in their mortgages and facing possible foreclosure.
US Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson earlier today conceded the economy was in decline. "There's no doubt that the American people know that the economy has turned down sharply," he told NBC's Todayshow.