Despite
talk of an imminent cut to the federal funds target rate, which now
lies at a 40-year low of 1.75 percent, most experts said there was no
justification for such a move now.
But
many analysts were unwilling to rule it out as signs began to appear
of a fraying around the U.S. economic recovery.
The
U.S. economy has been hard hit by the results of corporate corruption
and in the early days of the current George W. Bush Administration saw
the highest unemployment rate in almost 8 years.
"Although
the abruptness of recent developments may argue against a hasty move
by the Fed, upbeat assessments of the outlook are being reassessed
continually," said Salomon Smith Barney economist Robert
DiClemente, news agencies reported.
"We
do not expect the Fed [Federal government] to act next week but the
fluid nature of the situation suggests that an early cut cannot be
ruled out," he added.
"Events
have persuaded us that a half-point move in the funds rate is a likely
scenario over a one to two-month horizon as a catalyst for recovery in
the markets and the economy."
U.S.
expectations have performed a U-turn from one month ago, when most
analysts were tipping a rise in interest rates to unwind the dramatic
easing over the past 18 months.
Since
then, the relentless slide in the stock market and news of only
sluggish economic growth - 1.1 percent in the April-June quarter after
a 5.0 percent expansion the first quarter - have darkened the outlook.
News
Friday that productivity growth had slumped to 1.1 percent in the
April-June quarter from a near 19-year record of 8.6 percent in the
first quarter prompted manufacturers to cry out for action.
"This
slow, jobless, inflation free recovery needs a boost from lower
interest rates at the Fed meeting next week," said Thomas
Duesterberg, president and chief executive of the Manufacturers
Alliance/MAPI, Agence France-Presse (AFP) reported.
Morgan
Stanley Dean Witter economists Dick Berner and Dave Greenlaw were
among the few actually tipping a cut in rates.
"We
believe the Federal Reserve will ease monetary policy at its meeting
next week by 50 basis points to insure that emerging economic weakness
doesn't turn into a double-dip recession," they said in a report.
"If
we are wrong and the Fed does not change rates next Tuesday, we expect
officials to ease by the September 24 FOMC [Federal Open Market
Committee] meeting. An additional ease is possible if economic
weakness spreads."
Most
analysts, however, believed the economy already had sufficient
stimulus to recover.
"I
think rates are at a low enough level to spur recovery," said Sal
Guatieri, Chicago-based economist at Bank of Montreal.
"But
essentially any further rate cuts from these already low levels would
imply greater insurance against the risk of a double-dip
recession," the economist said.
Bank
of Montreal expected the Federal Reserve to hold the key federal funds
rate target steady.
"However,
if things to worsen, if stock prices fall further, employment begins
to contract or CPI [the consumer price index] moderated, the Fed
probably would cut interest rates."