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Key interest rate cut half-point

Wednesday, September 19, 2007

The Dow soared more than 300 points with the
interest rate cut.

WASHINGTON (AP) — In a bold strike, the Federal Reserve slashed a key interest rate by a half-point Tuesday — the first cut in over four years — and left the door open to further relief to prevent a painful housing slump and jarring credit crunch from driving the country into recession.

Wall Street responded enthusiastically, propelling stocks up more than 330 points. Politicians, shaken by record-high home foreclosures, also welcomed the move.

In a crucial and anxiously awaited decision, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke and his central bank colleagues lowered an important interest rate to 4.75 percent. Economic and political pressure has been building on the Fed to act.

As a result, Wells Fargo, Bank of America and other commercial banks dropped their prime lending rate charged to millions of borrowers by a corresponding amount to 7.75 percent.

Whether Bernanke can handle the crisis successfully is the biggest challenge he has faced in his 19 months at the Fed helm.

“Today’s action is intended to help forestall some of the adverse effects on the broader economy that might otherwise arise from the disruptions in financial markets and to promote moderate growth over time,” the Fed said in a statement released after its closed-door meeting.

The Fed’s action means borrowers who can obtain credit should see rates drop on a variety of loans. It will become less expensive for people to finance certain credit card debt and for homeowners to take out popular home equity lines of credit, which often are used to pay for education, home improvements or medical bills.

Some relief

And, it will provide relief to some homeowners whose adjustable-rate mortgages reset in the fall. Those rates will still go up but not by as much as they otherwise could have, analysts said.

Less immediate will be relief for the country’s economic health. An expected series of rate decreases could take three to nine months to ripple through the economy and bolster overall activity.

The aggressive action underscored the Fed’s resolve.

“The Fed has rolled out the heavy artillery here. Bernanke is not being timid,” said Brian Bethune, economist at Global Insight. “The Fed has seen the problems. It is not trying to put out a forest fire with a bucket of water,” he said.

Bethune and some other analysts predict the Fed will lower rates again — probably by a more modest one-quarter percentage point — at its next meeting in October. Another rate reduction could come in December, the last meeting of this year, if the economy were to falter.

The Dow soared 336.05, or 2.51 percent, to 13,739.47. The last time it rose more than 300 points in one session was Oct. 14, 2002, when it gained 378 points. The blue-chip index is now only about 1.9 percent below its record close of 14,000.41 reached in mid-July.

The Standard & Poor’s 500 index rose 43.13, or 2.92 percent, to 1,519.78. The Nasdaq composite index gained 70.00, or 2.71 percent, to 2,651.66.