The Federal Reserve may cut interest rates to 1 percent as
U.S. housing foreclosures worsen, said Mark Mobius, who oversees
$47 billion in emerging-market equities at Templeton Asset
Management Ltd.
Mobius added that the dollar's slide, down more than 7 percent
against the euro and yen this year, is likely to slow because
its ``completely bombed out.'' The Fed yesterday reduced the
target rate for overnight loans between banks by a quarter
point to 2 percent and said the economy remains weak amid
the worst housing contraction in a quarter-century.
``I was looking at 1 percent a few months back. I still adhere
to that,'' Mobius, executive chairman at Templeton Asset Management,
said in an interview with Bloomberg Television today. ``I
don't think the fear is over. You're going to continue to
get more pressure on them to lower and lower.''
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Fed policy makers have cut the benchmark rate by 2.25 percentage
points in 2008, including two three-quarter point cuts. Treasury
Secretary Henry Paulson said yesterday the credit crisis,
now in its ninth month, probably is more than half over, and
retained his forecast for the U.S. economy to keep growing.
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