Click on graph for larger image.According to the Fed, the discount rate spread narrowed to 58 bps. This graph was released this morning.
Also, asset backed commercial paper (CP) increased $26.3 billion to $773.8 billion. This is the first increase since August.
This is preliminary evidence that the liquidity crisis is easing. But the solvency crisis remains. From the WSJ Economics Blog a couple of day ago: Liquidity Threat Eases; Solvency Threat Still Looms:
As 2007 winds down, the much-feared year-end liquidity crisis appears to have been averted thanks to aggressive action by central banks. ... [A]s 2008 begins, it's solvency, not liquidity, that threatens the economy and the financial system. And at the root of the solvency threat is a likely decline in housing prices that will further undermine credit quality. Making banks more confident of their own ability to raise funds is not going to resolve a generalized shrinkage of lending driven by declining collateral values. ...