Washington, Jan 30 : In the summer of 2007, as storm clouds
gathered over the world's financial system, then-New York Federal Reserve
President Timothy Geithner allegedly informed the Bank of America and other
banks about the possibility the U.S. central bank would lower one of its
critical interest rates, according to a senior Fed official.
Jeffrey
Lacker, the head of the Richmond Fed, originally raised the allegation during a
Fed conference call in August 2007, and he stuck to his 5-year-old claim against
the current U.S. treasury secretary in a statement.
"From conversations I
had prior to the video conference call on August 16, 2007, I was aware of
discussions among a few large banks about borrowing from their discount windows
to support the asset backed commercial paper market," Lacker said in the
statement. "My understanding was that (New York Fed) President Geithner had
discussed a reduction in the discount rate with these banks in connection with
these initiatives."
According to transcripts of the call released by the
Fed, Geithner at the time denied that banks knew the Fed was considering cutting
the discount rate. The Fed regularly releases transcripts of its policy meetings
with a five-year lag.
"We don't have any comment beyond the transcript,"
said Treasury spokesman Anthony Coley. The Treasury declined to make Geithner
available to comment.
Information about any planned interest rate move by
the Fed is among the most sensitive as it can have a huge impact on a range of
financial markets worldwide. That was particularly the case in the summer of
2007 when there were growing concerns about financial stability as a crisis that
would reach fever pitch just more than a year later began to
build.
Private disclosure of confidential, market-sensitive information
by the central bank would be highly unusual, but it was not immediately clear if
it would be illegal. It also was not clear if strict Fed internal rules
governing confidential information would have been breached, or whether any
internal or external investigation was mounted. Lacker made no suggestion of
wrongdoing by the banks as a result of getting hold of any
information.
The central bank delivered a surprise cut in the discount
rate, which governs direct loans it makes to banks, the day after the call. The
action spurred a big stock market rally, with the Standard & Poor's 500
Index enjoying its best gain in 4-1/2 years.
In his statement, Lacker did
not say which banks may have been privy to the information, although in the
transcript of the August 16, 2007, call he said he had discussed the matter with
Bank of America's then CEO, Ken Lewis, earlier that day. The Richmond Fed
supervises the Charlotte, North Carolina-based bank.
Spokesmen for the
Federal Reserve Board in Washington, the New York Fed and Bank of America all
declined to comment, as did Lewis.
The unusually large half-point cut in
the discount rate to 5.75 percent that the Fed delivered on August 17 was the
first in a long series and came just days after French bank BNP Paribas froze
three investment funds that were facing heavy redemptions. A month later, the
Fed would also cut the overnight federal funds rate, its primary lever to
influence the economy.
During the Fed's August 16, 2007, conference call,
Geithner said that banks had started to ask about borrowing from the Fed earlier
in the month after the central bank had released a statement saying it stood
ready to provide liquidity to credit markets.
Geithner said banks
"obviously don't have any idea that we're contemplating a change in policy" - a
statement that Lacker then questioned.
"Did you say that they are unaware
of what we're considering or what we might be doing with the discount rate?"
Lacker asked, according to the transcript.
Geithner said yes, and Lacker
followed up: "I spoke with Ken Lewis, president and CEO of Bank of America, this
afternoon, and he said that he appreciated what Tim Geithner was arranging by
way of changes in the discount facility. So my information is different from
that."
Geithner responded, "I cannot speak for Ken Lewis, but I think
they have sought to see whether they could understand a little more clearly the
scope of their rights and our current policy with respect to the (discount
lending) window."
"The only thing I've done is to try to help them
understand ... what the scope of that is," he said.
Geithner, who is
stepping down from his Treasury post, was an advocate of aggressive action to
stem the crisis, and the steps the central bank took are widely credited with
helping to calm the financial storm. Lacker was less inclined to intervene in
the markets.
Ends
SA/EN
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» Fed official alleges Geithner may have alerted banks to rate cut
Fed official alleges Geithner may have alerted banks to rate cut
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