SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Gold/Mining/Energy : Gold Price Monitor -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: long-gone who wrote (46599)1/3/2000 4:37:00 PM
From: lorne  Respond to of 116762
 
Banks Start to Ship Extra Cash Back to Fed; Economists See No Impact
The Associated Press

Jan 3, 2000 - 03:49 PM

WASHINGTON (AP) - Some of the billions of extra dollars distributed to banks to alleviate Y2K panic were shipped back in armored trucks Monday to the Federal Reserve.

Economists said the temporary displacement should have no significant impact on the economy.

Yields on Treasury bonds, meanwhile, hit two-year highs as some investors sold bonds they had been holding as insurance against Year 2000 disruptions. The selling wave pushed down bond prices, which move inversely to yields.

"It appears to be money going back home," said David Wyss, chief financial economist at Standard and Poor's DRI in Lexington, Mass.

In addition, government bond prices were driven lower by what Allen Sinai, chief global economist at Primark Decision Economics, called "the same old concern: inflation and the Fed" and whether the central bank would raise interest rates early next month.

The Federal Reserve distributed some $80 billion to banks, thrifts and credit unions during the fourth quarter of 1999, compared with $23 billion over the same period a year ago. But some of the extra currency could have been requested for reasons unrelated to Y2K, such as bank customers' holiday shopping needs, Fed officials say.

Now that 2000 has arrived without a run on banks, the banks and other financial institutions started packing up the surplus currency and sending it back to regional Federal Reserve banks, as previously planned. The process is expected to take several days.

"The funds were just there temporarily," Wyss said. "(The Fed is) going to take them right back."

Since most of the Y2K money stayed in bank vaults and didn't get into the public's hands, there shouldn't be any inflationary effect on the economy, he said.

Still, the Fed needed to provide the extra cushion of cash to reassure the public, banks and the financial markets, Sinai said from New York City.

"No responsible central bank could have done otherwise," he said.

Overall, the nation's banking system appeared to be operating largely free of Y2K glitches on the first business day of 2000 - when weekend transactions were first accounted for in massive computer databases.

ATMs - stuffed with extra cash - continued to work, and bank balances and loan information appeared accurate throughout the system, government and banking industry officials reported.

"We've been doing the 'health checks' of financial institutions," said Fed spokeswoman Rose Pianalto, referring to the telephone calls to the nation's banks made by Fed employees. "There have been no major problems reported."

In addition, Ms. Pianalto said, the central bank's check-clearing operations, which process 68 million checks on a typical day, continued to operate normally. "Everything went smoothly," she said.

Banking industry officials say they're optimistic people won't experience problems withdrawing cash from automated teller machines.

"We're thrilled with how everything has gone," said John Hall, a spokesman for the American Bankers Association.

"If there had been a public confidence issue, we could have had a much bigger problem," he said. "The American people took a commonsense approach. Anecdotally, it appears there were completely normal withdrawal patterns."

Still, banks will be watching closely to see how their computer systems perform this week.

"We won't have a complete picture until Tuesday," said Mary Rodrigues, a spokeswoman at Wells Fargo in San Francisco.
ap.tbo.com



To: long-gone who wrote (46599)1/3/2000 4:47:00 PM
From: Bobby Yellin  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 116762
 
why not start a thread on computer glitches
a lot of us have expected glitches..but no major castrophic fallouts..
again if Wien is correct and the long bond edges to seven percent,
that will be competition for gold which doesn't pay anything.