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Fed auctions $7.2B in Treasury securities

  • Story Highlights
  • Federal Reserve auctioned $7.2B in safe Treasury securities to big investment firms
  • Move is part of an ongoing effort to ease credit stresses
  • Auction drew bids of less than the $25 billion being made available
  • Auction intended to make investment houses more inclined to lend to each other
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WASHINGTON (AP) -- The U.S. Federal Reserve has auctioned $7.2 billion in safe Treasury securities to big investment firms, part of an ongoing effort to ease credit stresses.

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The lending program is one of several unconventional steps the Fed has taken to deal with a credit crisis.

The auction -- the eighth of its kind -- was held Thursday and drew bids of less than the $25 billion being made available. That could be viewed as a sign of some improvements in credit conditions.

In exchange for the 28-day loan of Treasury securities, bidding firms can put up as collateral more risky investments, including certain shunned mortgage-backed securities and bonds backed by federally guaranteed student loans. Bidders' identities are not made public.

The program began March 27.

In Thursday's auction, investment firms paid an interest rate of 0.1000 percent for a slice of the securities.

The auction program is intended to make investment houses more inclined to lend to each other. The program is also aimed at providing relief to the distressed market for mortgage-linked securities and for student loans.

To help shore up the shaky student loan market, the Fed recently agreed to let financial institutions put up bonds backed by federally guaranteed student loans as collateral. Spreading credit problems have forced more than 60 lenders to stop making federally guaranteed student loans, either temporarily or permanently.

The lending program is one of several unconventional steps the Fed has taken to deal with a credit crisis.

Credit troubles worsened earlier this year, driving investment firm Bear Stearns to the brink of bankruptcy and spurring fears that other big Wall Street companies could be in jeopardy.

Wanting to avert a broader panic that could endanger the entire U.S. financial system, the Fed agreed last month to temporarily let investment firms obtain emergency loans directly from the central bank -- a privilege previously limited to commercial banks. The decision marked the broadest extension of the Fed's lending authority since the 1930s.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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