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The Federal Reserve on Monday announced it was expanding its program to buy bonds directly from states and cities to include more local communities.
In a news release, the Fed said it would now purchase bonds from counties with a population of at least 500,000 residents and U.S. cities of at least 250,000 residents.
That’s a much lower threshold than the initial proposal announced in early April. The first plan was limited to cities with 1 million residents and counties with at least 2 million residents.
A group of Senate Democrats complained in a letter to Fed Chairman Jerome Powell that under the initial limits, the Fed’s program would only benefit 15 counties and 10 cities, leaving out much of the hardest-hit communities.
The Fed also extended the termination date of the facility to the end of the year, instead of the Sept. 30 in order to provide issuers more flexibility.