Great, but what happens in 28 days?
Shortly after the Federal Reserve announced plans to inject primary dealers with $200 billion in cash on Tuesday, shares of the Financial Select Sector SPDR ETF (XLF) spiked as investors hoped the move would add much-needed liquidity to cash-strapped financial institutions. However, when the news had been fully disseminated and cooler heads prevailed, the XLF gains were trimmed as analysts and investors speculated on the more poignant question of the day: What happens in 28 days?
“Essentially, it’s a wash,” Thomson Squawk Box analyst John Forman said. “The move doesn’t really add anything new to the system. What’s going to happen 28 days later when the Fed takes back the Treasury paper? Banks need to redevelop trust with one another for there to be any chance of a long-term solution.” 
The Fed, thinking out of the box on Tuesday, tried to develop a new, two-prong weapon in its fight against the credit and liquidity crunch, lending up to $200 billion of Treasury securities to dealers for a term of 28 days. The injection will come in the form of a Term Securities Lending Facility (TSLF) auction, where the dealers will be allowed to pledge other, more illiquid securities as collateral, including federal agency debt, federal agency residential-mortgage-backed securities (MBS), and non-agency “AAA/Aaa”-rated private-label residential MBS.
“The TSLF is intended to promote liquidity in the financing markets for Treasury and other collateral and thus to foster the functioning of financial markets more generally,” the Fed said in its statement.
Increases in its existing swap lines with the European Central Bank and the Swiss National Bank served as the Fed’s second prong. The FOMC extended the term of these swap lines through Sept. 30, 2008, and will now provide dollars in the amounts of up to $30 billion and $6 billion to the ECB and the SNB, respectively.
“This is the more interesting aspect of the package,” Forman said. “With the dollar hitting record lows against the euro and the Swiss franc, this opens the door for a possible currency market manipulation in support of the dollar. That is not to say that the central banks will do this, but it at least opens the possibility for a meaningful intervention, which is something we haven’t seen in a long time.”
At least one analyst speculated that a solution to the credit and liquidity problem would need to be fiscal rather than monetary.
“When it comes to the government deficit, there is the good, the bad, and the ugly. The good stems from cutting taxes, the bad from excess government spending, and the ugly from a recession,” IFR Markets analyst Ed Rombach said. “With the U.S. markets heading into a recession, we need more of the good - a tax cut.”
Either way, investors saw something in the move that sparked hope, as they sent the XLF up to its intraday high of $25.08 within the first 10 minutes of Tuesday’s trading session. The financial sector ETF has since given back 78 cents to change hands at $24.30, up 2.8% in mid-day trading.


Markets-hub.com