Money markets remain almost paralysed

Money markets struggled in a state of near paralysis this morning as the start of a new financial quarter failed to relieve the…

Money markets struggled in a state of near paralysis this morning as the start of a new financial quarter failed to relieve the strains that have made it difficult for many banks to secure funds, especially much-needed dollars.

Traders in Asia quoted overnight dollar borrowings as high as 6 per cent, three times the Federal Reserve's target for overnight rates. Activity was limited due to holidays in Singapore and other financial centres.

"There's still fundamental concerns about counterparty risk in the interbank market. Until that eases up, nothing is going to change," said Bernie Ward, head of non-yen fixed-income trading at RBS Securities Japan.

A day earlier overnight dollar LIBOR spiked 4.3 percentage points, a record one-day rise, to 6.875 per cent as financial firms had trouble getting the dollars they needed to close their books on the July-September quarter.

Central banks globally have unleashed billions of dollars into money markets hoping to loosen the paralysis. The Bank of Japan and the Reserve Bank of Australia kept the money flowing today, injecting extra funds into their markets as banks still had trouble securing cash.

Market players had hoped the start of a new business quarter in October might thaw trading in short-term cash, but instead there were few signs of improvement.

Money markets have frozen up since the bankruptcy of Lehman and nationalisation of other major financial institutions in the United States and Europe has made banks very wary of lending to each other.

Some analysts have said that major central banks may consider cutting interest rates in a coordinated move to help give a boost to investors and limit the economic fallout from the crisis, but a solution to the money market breakdown remained elusive.

"It's not going to solve the core problem - no one is lending to each other. I don't know how to fix that," said Gerrard Katz, head of North Asia currency trading at Standard Chartered in Hong Kong.

"If people can't fund themselves through the money market or swaps, they have to go out and buy dollars. That's what we've descended into," he said.

The Bank of Japan injected 1.6 trillion yen ($15 billion) of funds on a one-week basis, responding to big demand from foreign banks.

But the BOJ drained 400 billion yen of funds from the market on an overnight basis as Japanese banks remained awash in funds, causing the overnight call rate to fall slightly below the 0.5 per cent target.

Since the demise of Lehman Brothers last month, Japanese banks turned cautious about lending funds to foreign institutions.

Reuters