Fed emergency loans to banks continue to decline

<div id="subtitle">Banks again reduce their borrowing from Federal Reserve's emergency loan window</div><div><p>Banks borrowed less from the Federal Reserve's emergency lending program over the past week, another sign that strains on private credit markets are easing.</p><p>Commercial banks averaged $14.77 billion in daily borrowing for the week that ended Wednesday, the Fed reported. That was down from $14.86 billion in average borrowing for the previous week.</p><p>Banks have been scaling back their use of the Fed's emergency discount loan window as the financial crisis has eased. At the peak of the crisis, which struck with force in the fall of 2008, banks' daily borrowing from the discount window reached $110 billion as banks found their normal sources of credit frozen.</p><p>The Fed said last week that "in light of improved functioning of financial markets" it would phase out as previously scheduled by Feb. 1 a number of the emergency programs it created to deal with what was the worst financial crisis to hit the country since the 1930s.</p><p>The Fed's weekly status report on Thursday showed that banks are making less use of many of these programs.</p><p>The average value of the central bank's holdings of short-term debt known as "commercial paper" declined by $2.54 billion for the week ending on Wednesday to $8.66 billion.</p><p>The Fed established the program to purchase commercial paper as a way to increase the availability of financing used by businesses to fund crucial operations such as payroll and supplies. At its peak in January 2009, the Fed held almost $350 billion worth of commercial paper.</p><p>The Fed said that banks' use of short-term loans drawn from the Fed's "term auction credit" program was unchanged at an average of $38.53 billion this past week, far below the $377.33 billion average for these loans a year ago.</p><p>Even with all the reductions, the Fed's balance sheet — a broad measure that tracks the Fed's lending activities — stood at $2.23 trillion for the recent week, more than double the level before the financial crisis struck.</p><p>As of Wednesday, the Fed held $970.16 billion of mortgage-backed securities purchased from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.</p><p>In its statement last week, the Fed repeated its desire to purchase $1.25 trillion of these securities by the end of March. The central bank has been making these purchases to keep mortgage rates low and give a boost to the nation's battered housing market.</p><p>Freddie Mac reported Thursday that the national average for 30-year fixed-rate loans remained near record lows at 5.01 percent this week, up slightly from last week's 4.98 percent. A year ago, 30-year mortgages stood at 5.25 percent.</p><p>Some economists have expressed worries that once the Fed ends its mortgage support program, home loan rates will begin to rise, acting as a drag as the housing industry struggles to recover from its deep slump.</p><p>At last week's meeting, Fed policymakers repeated their pledge to keep a key interest rate, which has been at a record low for more than a year, at exceptionally low levels for an extended period. Many economists believe the Fed will not start raising rates until the nation's jobless rate, currently at 10 percent, begins to decline, something they do not expect to occur until midyear.</p><img src="http://admatch-syndication.mochila.com/images/ad.gif?aid=68469467&bid=informcom" /></div><div id="copyright"><div>


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