Money | credit market Fed Pumps Money Into Reeling Banks It will loan billions more this month to ease credit crisis By Kevin Spak Posted Mar 7, 2008 12:02 PM CST Copied Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke delivers the Fed's Monetary Policy Report, Thursday, Feb. 28, 2008, during an appearance before the Senate Banking Committee. (AP Photo/Dennis Cook) (Associated Press) The Federal Reserve will lend more money to banks in March in a bid to ease the worsening credit crisis, Bloomberg reports. By dramatically increasing the funds available in two upcoming auctions—from $30 billion to $50 billion—the Fed hopes to convince banks to loosen up and lend more. “Given what we have seen in terms of illiquidity in the financial markets, this came right in time,” said one strategist. The Fed stressed that the move had nothing to do with today’s low job data and was instead focused on the credit market. Credit standards and rates have been daunting lately, as banks recoil from the $181 billion they’ve lost this year. Read These Next A look at President Trump's fast pivot on Minneapolis. Minnesota judge makes an unusual move against the ICE chief. Canada's Mark Carney is standing by his big Davos speech. Sydney Sweeney is at the center of a controversy yet again. Report an error