Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Small Improvement Vs. Little Relief

Calculated Risk notes a small improvement:

"From the WSJ: Credit Shows Signs of Easing on Bank Rescue

The overnight dollar London interbank offered rate, or Libor, which reflects bank borrowing costs, fell to 2.18% on Tuesday from 2.47% the previous day. But the three-month Libor, a benchmark for many mortgages and corporate loans, remained high at 4.6%.
This is a very small improvement. "

Read on.

Or, as Naked Capitalism puts it:

"Little Sign of Relief in Interbank Markets Despite Massive Intervention

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Although the stock market has taken considerable cheer from the monumental action by central banks to try to restore interbank lending to something resembling normalcy, the results to date have been meager. However, hope remains that improvement will continue, albeit at a slow pace.

From the Financial Times:
The costs for banks to borrow money from each other remain at highly elevated levels in spite of the global government action taken to cure the paralysis at the heart of the financial system..."

Read on again, and take your pick.

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