UPDATED ON:
Thursday, November 01, 2007
06:41 Mecca time, 03:41 GMT
 
Business
Federal Reserve cuts interest rates
The US economy is suffering from a housing slump
and related credit-market woes [GETTY IMAGES]

The Federal Reserve has cut US interest rates by a quarter-percentage point but indicated that further rate reductions are far from a sure bet.
 
Wednesday's decision by the central bank's Federal Open Market Committee to lower the overnight federal funds rate to 4.5 per cent was widely expected.
The move follows a half-point interest-rate reduction last month and is seen as aimed at buffering the US economy from a housing downturn.
 
The central bank said its actions should put the US economy on better footing and help it weather the housing slump and related credit-market woes.
But the Fed also offered a bit of a surprise by saying the risk of inflation was about equal with downside risks to growth.
 
That statement, coupled with a dissent from Thomas Hoenig, the Kansas City Federal Reserve Bank president, who favoured holding rates steady, threw cold water on expectations that additional reductions in borrowing costs are in store.
 
More details on the Fed's thinking are likely to emerge on November 8 when Ben Bernanke, the Fed chairman, testifies before the congressional joint economic committee.
 
Market reaction
 
US treasury debt prices fell and stocks initially dropped as traders saw the Fed's statement suggesting a lower likelihood of further rate reductions.

The Dow Jones industrial average closed up
137.54 points after the cut [GETTY IMAGES]

Stock prices, however, later turned around and the blue-chip Dow Jones industrial average closed up 137.54 points, while the dollar hit a record low against the euro.
 
US interest-rate futures contracts implied only a 42 per cent chance the Fed will lower rates again at its next meeting in December, down from 64 per cent overnight.
 
The decision by the Fed to lower the federal funds rate, which governs overnight borrowing between banks, led major banks to lower the prime rate they charge on loans to their best customers.
 
It could also lead to lower rates on credit cards and car loans for consumers. Most mortgage rates, however, are tied to long-term rates set by the markets.
 
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