Volcker Tells of $30-Billion Bank ‘Glitch’
- Share via
WASHINGTON — Federal Reserve Board Chairman Paul A. Volcker today blamed “something in the nature of a glitch” for a massive computer failure last month that left the Bank of New York temporarily $30 billion in the red, threatened to disrupt the financing of the federal deficit and prompted the biggest federal bank bail-out in history.
Volcker told a House Banking subcommittee that the nation’s central bank is reviewing its policy on making emergency loans to temporarily overdrawn banks as a result of the little-publicized Nov. 21 incident.
Volcker and officials of the Bank of New York testified that a flaw in a computer program apparently triggered the chain of events leading to the day-long bank crisis, which nearly spread throughout the nation’s banking system.
But the Fed chief said the decision to give the Bank of New York an “unprecedented” $22.6 billion loan to cover most of its electronic bookkeeping losses--the largest loan the Fed has ever made to a member bank--was justified.
He said major market confusion was avoided by the loan, which was repaid in full, plus $5 million interest, the following day.
More to Read
Sign up for Essential California
The most important California stories and recommendations in your inbox every morning.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.