Published by CNNMoney.com
WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Federal Reserve announced Friday it will
auction another $100 billion in April to cash-strapped banks as it
continues to combat the effects of a credit crisis.
The central bank said it would make $50 billion available at each of two auctions, on April 7 and April 21.
Through
the end of March, the Fed has provided $260 billion in short-term loans
to commercial banks through the innovative auction process. It also has
employed Depression-era provisions to provide money to investment banks.
All
the moves have been designed to cope with a serious financial crisis
that has roiled U.S. and global markets and caused the near-collapse of
Bear Stearns Cos. (BSC, Fortune 500), the nation's fifth largest investment bank.
The
Fed has been holding auctions every two seeks since December to provide
short-term loans to commercial banks. It started with auctions of $20
billion, then pushed the level to $30 billion, and in early March
raised the auction amount to $50 billion as the credit shortage grew
more severe.
In announcing the move to $50 billion last month,
the Fed said it would continue the auctions for at least the next six
months, unless credit conditions show they are no longer needed.
The
auctions are just one of a series of unorthodox steps the Fed has taken
to battle the current crisis. The biggest of those moves was an
announcement that it was allowing investment banks to borrow directly
from the Fed. Previously, only commercial banks, which face tighter
regulations, had that privilege.
The Fed also said it would make
available $30 billion in financing to support the sale of troubled Bear
Stearns to JP Morgan Chase & Co (JPM, Fortune 500)., hoping to prevent a bankruptcy that could have rocked Wall Street.
The
Fed's auctions have drawn criticism from some that the central bank,
and ultimately U.S. taxpayers, could be financing a bailout for big
Wall Street firms that had engaged in risky lending practices.
Fed
Chairman Ben Bernanke will fact questions about the Fed's recent moves
when he testifies on Wednesday before the congressional Joint Economic
Committee. 
First Published: March 28, 2008: 12:15 PM EDT