The Ultimate Bailout

cranrab

Star
BGOL Investor
senate passes revised bill - now its $800B

to quote sigourney weaver in aliens, "did IQs suddenly drop"?

so the house votes down the $700B plan, but the senate passes an $800B plan?

WTF?

1 of the changes? FDIC insurance will cover accounts up to $250K now, instead of $100K

another of the changes? there will be (yet to be disclosed) tax breaks for businesses. great. but i'd like to hear about these alleged tax breaks for myself first.

BOTH of these proposed "bailouts" are a HUGE hoax. nobody is stopping to think this thing out a few steps in advance. yes, it creates (literally) more money to be loaned out. but by whom? the same thieves and con men who bilked the system the first time around? and now you're offering up seconds? and for the average consumer, the existence of more money does not mean the consumer will necessarily have access to it.

and yes, i'm still pissed that credit card companies AND foreign entities will be able to take huge chunks of this "bailout" pie.

and BTW, fuck a henry paulson.
 

Chitownheadbusa

♏|God|♏
Registered
Re: senate passes revised bill - now its $800B

im a big conspiracy theorist.
therefore imma say...for all u Obama fans.....yall better hope the bill gets passed. if it doesnt....shit could get worst.....or Bush can say they got worst and cancel the elections.

wouldnt that be a shame?
 

woodchuck

A crowd pleasing man.
OG Investor

fourth_retired

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Registered
Re: senate passes revised bill - now its $800B

even though iam in support of the BILL, the 2nd revised version has to much BS in it. The added parts were to gain more support from those in the congress who shot it down originally. In theory the bill is set to do good but I hope everybody know this is just a short term fix, not even a solution to coming economic situation that is happening globally.


What is was aimed to do is to relieve the credit markets if credit markets get tight, then you might not get your paycheck. I hope you know many small businesses rely on such to function daily operations, but this time around banks aren't allowing businesses to lend because of this whole mess. If businesses aren't getting money then u dont get paid or worst laid off. I know everybody here doesn't work for one of the banks that are "too big to fail".
 

cranrab

Star
BGOL Investor
Re: senate passes revised bill - now its $800B

I hope you know many small businesses rely on such to function daily operations, but this time around banks aren't allowing businesses to lend because of this whole mess. If businesses aren't getting money then u dont get paid or worst laid off.

i can only speak for myself, but for the past decade i have been a business owner of a handful of businesses (different sizes and structures, including sole proprietorship, partnership, S-corp and LLC). never ONCE have i needed a loan to make payroll. not ONCE.

industry peers (both those who failed AND thrived) with established businesses of varying sizes have never had to take a loan to make payroll (again, beyond initial capitilization).

revolving lines of credit for day to day expenditures? i can see it. outright loans for small businesses to conduct day to day operations? :smh:
 

fourth_retired

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Re: senate passes revised bill - now its $800B

i can only speak for myself, but for the past decade i have been a business owner of a handful of businesses (different sizes and structures, including sole proprietorship, partnership, S-corp and LLC). never ONCE have i needed a loan to make payroll. not ONCE.

industry peers (both those who failed AND thrived) with established businesses of varying sizes have never had to take a loan to make payroll (again, beyond initial capitilization).

revolving lines of credit for day to day expenditures? i can see it. outright loans for small businesses to conduct day to day operations? :smh:


theres alot of companies that do "borrow" to make payroll. You dont go to the bank and say i can't make payroll and they give you a loan it's more like a business has a credit line setup where they have to go into that credit line to pay workers and then once what ever business they are in brings in money the money is paying off the business line of credit. Alot of banks are decreasing the amount that a business/individual is allowed to use in their line of credit these days. Sorry If i made it seem that businesses are having to borrow money directly for payroll. Payroll was just one example i was using.
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
House Bailout Vote II

<font size="6">
8:28 Minutes Left to Vote

</font size>
<font size="4">

<u>Democrats</u>
Yes:78
No: 21




<u>Republicans</u>
Yes:47
No: 40


</font size>
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
Re: House Bailout Vote II

<font size="6">
3:25 Minutes Left to Vote

</font size>
<font size="4">

<u>Democrats</u>
Yes:103
No: 31


<u>Republicans</u>
Yes: 65
No: 56


</font size>
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
Re: House Bailout Vote II

<font size="6">
0:00 Minutes Left to Vote

</font size>
<font size="4">

<u>Democrats</u>
Yes:166
No: 61


<u>Republicans</u>
Yes: 89
No: 106


TOTALS:

Yes: 257
No. 167

PASSED - needed 218 Yes Votes


</font size>
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
Re: House Bailout Vote II

Final vote was 263 to 171.


The President will address the nation at 1:55 Eastern


and the markets dropped.
 

silkyblue

Potential Star
BGOL Investor
Re: senate passes revised bill - now its $800B

im a big conspiracy theorist.
therefore imma say...for all u Obama fans.....yall better hope the bill gets passed. if it doesnt....shit could get worst.....or Bush can say they got worst and cancel the elections.

wouldnt that be a shame?

PASSED!?!? What you talking about these are two private companies just like ENRON was. Why bail em out from what they did to themselves. The only reason they even thinking about bailing em out is because they have given so much money to Dems and Repubs all these years. They just created a monopoly just like Bill Gates did with Microsoft, but since he hates politicians and didn't give them any money, they tried to take microsoft out but it still didn't work, 12th year in a row he's the richest man on earth! The bailout won't bring back jobs only tax us on "mainstreet" more next year! WAKE UP!
 

silkyblue

Potential Star
BGOL Investor
Re: senate passes revised bill - now its $800B

Also remember the famous OBAMA finance plan is headed by "Franklin Raines who was a Chairman and Chief Executive Officer at Fannie Mae. Raines was forced to retire from his position with Fannie Mae when auditing discovered severe irregulaties in Fannie Mae's accounting activities. At the time of his departure The Wall Street Journal noted, " Raines, who long defended the company's accounting despite mounting evidence that it wasn't proper, issued a statement late Tuesday conceding that "mistakes were made" and saying he would assume responsibility as he had earlier promised. News reports indicate the company was under growing pressure from regulators to shake up its management in the wake of findings that the company's books ran afoul of generally accepted accounting principles for four years." Fannie Mae had to reduce its surplus by $9 billion.

Raines left with a "golden parachute valued at $240 Million in benefits. The Government filed suit against Raines when the depth of the accounting scandal became clear. http://housingdoom.com/2006/12/18/fannie-charges/The Government noted, "The 101 charges reveal how the individuals improperly manipulated earnings to maximize their bonuses, while knowingly neglecting accounting systems and internal controls, misapplying over twenty accounting principles and misleading the regulator and the public. The Notice explains how they submitted six years of misleading and inaccurate accounting statemen ts and inaccurate capital reports that enabled them to grow Fannie Mae in an unsafe and unsound manner." These charges were made in 2006. The Court ordered Raines to return $50 Million Dollars he received in bonuses based on the miss-stated Fannie Mae profits."

Now you think any president with this dude as an advisor is going to improve things?? NOT!
 

Makkonnen

The Quizatz Haderach
BGOL Investor
NYTimes - Bailout Is To Help Strong Banks Buy Up Competitors

October 25, 2008
Talking Business
So When Will Banks Give Loans?
By JOE NOCERA

“Chase recently received $25 billion in federal funding. What effect will that have on the business side and will it change our strategic lending policy?”

It was Oct. 17, just four days after JPMorgan Chase’s chief executive, Jamie Dimon, agreed to take a $25 billion capital injection courtesy of the United States government, when a JPMorgan employee asked that question. It came toward the end of an employee-only conference call that had been largely devoted to meshing certain divisions of JPMorgan with its new acquisition, Washington Mutual.

Which, of course, it also got thanks to the federal government. Christmas came early at JPMorgan Chase.

The JPMorgan executive who was moderating the employee conference call didn’t hesitate to answer a question that was pretty politically sensitive given the events of the previous few weeks.

Given the way, that is, that Treasury Secretary Henry M. Paulson Jr. had decided to use the first installment of the $700 billion bailout money to recapitalize banks instead of buying up their toxic securities, which he had then sold to Congress and the American people as the best and fastest way to get the banks to start making loans again, and help prevent this recession from getting much, much worse.

In point of fact, the dirty little secret of the banking industry is that it has no intention of using the money to make new loans. But this executive was the first insider who’s been indiscreet enough to say it within earshot of a journalist.

(He didn’t mean to, of course, but I obtained the call-in number and listened to a recording.)

Twenty-five billion dollars is obviously going to help the folks who are struggling more than Chase,” he began. “What we do think it will help us do is perhaps be a little bit more active on the acquisition side or opportunistic side for some banks who are still struggling. And I would not assume that we are done on the acquisition side just because of the Washington Mutual and Bear Stearns mergers. I think there are going to be some great opportunities for us to grow in this environment, and I think we have an opportunity to use that $25 billion in that way and obviously depending on whether recession turns into depression or what happens in the future, you know, we have that as a backstop.”

Read that answer as many times as you want — you are not going to find a single word in there about making loans to help the American economy. On the contrary: at another point in the conference call, the same executive (who I’m not naming because he didn’t know I would be listening in) explained that “loan dollars are down significantly.” He added, “We would think that loan volume will continue to go down as we continue to tighten credit to fully reflect the high cost of pricing on the loan side.” In other words JPMorgan has no intention of turning on the lending spigot.

It is starting to appear as if one of Treasury’s key rationales for the recapitalization program — namely, that it will cause banks to start lending again — is a fig leaf, Treasury’s version of the weapons of mass destruction.

In fact, Treasury wants banks to acquire each other and is using its power to inject capital to force a new and wrenching round of bank consolidation. As Mark Landler reported in The New York Times earlier this week, “the government wants not only to stabilize the industry, but also to reshape it.” Now they tell us.

Indeed, Mr. Landler’s story noted that Treasury would even funnel some of the bailout money to help banks buy other banks. And, in an almost unnoticed move, it recently put in place a new tax break, worth billions to the banking industry, that has only one purpose: to encourage bank mergers. As a tax expert, Robert Willens, put it: “It couldn’t be clearer if they had taken out an ad.”


Friday delivered the first piece of evidence that this is, indeed, the plan. PNC announced that it was purchasing National City, an acquisition that will be greatly aided by the new tax break, which will allow it to immediately deduct any losses on National City’s books.

As part of the deal, it is also tapping the bailout fund for $7.7 billion, giving the government preferred stock in return. At least some of that $7.7 billion would have gone to NatCity if the government had deemed it worth saving. In other words, the government is giving PNC money that might otherwise have gone to NatCity as a reward for taking over NatCity.

I don’t know about you, but I’m starting to feel as if we’ve been sold a bill of goods.



The markets had another brutal day Friday. The Asian markets got crushed. Germany and England were down more than 5 percent. In the hours before the United States markets opened, all the signals suggested it was going to be the worst day yet in the crisis. The Dow dropped more than 400 points at the opening, but thankfully it never got any worse.

There are lots of reasons the markets remain unstable — fears of a global recession, companies offering poor profit projections for the rest of the year, and the continuing uncertainties brought on by the credit crisis. But another reason, I now believe, is that investors no longer trust Treasury. First it says it has to have $700 billion to buy back toxic mortgage-backed securities. Then, as Mr. Paulson divulged to The Times this week, it turns out that even before the bill passed the House, he told his staff to start drawing up a plan for capital injections. Fearing Congress’s reaction, he didn’t tell the Hill about his change of heart.

Now, he’s shifted gears again, and is directing Treasury to use the money to force bank acquisitions. Sneaking in the tax break isn’t exactly confidence-inspiring, either. (And let’s not even get into the less-than-credible, after-the-fact rationalizations for letting Lehman default, which stands as the single worst mistake the government has made in the crisis.)

On Thursday, at a hearing of the Senate Banking Committee, the chairman, Christopher J. Dodd, a Connecticut Democrat, pushed Neel Kashkari, the young Treasury official who is Mr. Paulson’s point man on the bailout plan, on the subject of banks’ continuing reluctance to make loans. How, Senator Dodd asked, was Treasury going to ensure that banks used their new government capital to make loans — “besides rhetorically begging them?”

“We share your view,” Mr. Kashkari replied. “We want our banks to be lending in our communities.”

Senator Dodd: “Are you insisting upon it?”

Mr. Kashkari: “We are insisting upon it in all our actions.”

But they are doing no such thing. Unlike the British government, which is mandating lending requirements in return for capital injections, our government seems afraid to do anything except plead. And those pleas, in this environment, are falling on deaf ears.

Yes, there are times when a troubled bank needs to be acquired by a stronger bank. Given that the federal government insures deposits, it has an abiding interest in seeing that such mergers take place as smoothly as possible. Nobody is saying those kinds of deals shouldn’t take place.

But Citigroup, at this point, probably falls into the category of troubled bank, and nobody seems to be arguing that it should be taken over. It is in the “too big to fail” category, and the government will ensure that it gets back on its feet, no matter how much money it takes. One reason Mr. Paulson forced all of the nine biggest banks to take government money was to mask the fact that some of them are much weaker than others.

We have long been a country that has treasured its diversity of banks; up until the 1980s, in fact, there were no national banks at all. If Treasury is using the bailout bill to turn the banking system into the oligopoly of giant national institutions, it is hard to see how that will help anybody. Except, of course, the giant banks that are declared the winners by Treasury.

JPMorgan is going to be one of the winners — and deservedly so.

Mr. Dimon managed the company so well during the housing bubble that it is saddled with very few of the problems that have crippled competitors like Citi. The government handed it Bear Stearns and Washington Mutual because it was strong enough to swallow both institutions without so much as a burp.

Of all the banking executives in that room with Mr. Paulson a few weeks ago, none needed the government’s money less than Mr. Dimon. A company spokesman told me, “We accepted the money for the good of the entire financial system.” He added that JP Morgan would use the money “to do good for customers and shareholders. We are disciplined to try to make loans that people can repay.”

Nobody is saying it should make loans that people can’t repay. What I am saying is that Mr. Dimon took the $25 billion on the condition that his institution would start making loans. There are plenty of small and medium-size businesses that are choking because they have no access to capital — and are perfectly capable of repaying the money. How about a loan program for them, Mr. Dimon?

Late Thursday afternoon, I caught up with Senator Dodd, and asked him what he was going to do if the loan situation didn’t improve. “All I can tell you is that we are going to have the bankers up here, probably in another couple of weeks and we are going to have a very blunt conversation,” he replied.

He continued: “If it turns out that they are hoarding, you’ll have a revolution on your hands. People will be so livid and furious that their tax money is going to line their pockets instead of doing the right thing. There will be hell to pay.”

Let’s hope so.

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/10/25/b...r=3&oref=slogin&ref=business&pagewanted=print



------
I couldn't keep highlighting or the whole article would be bolded and red etc.

:smh:
 

keysersoze

Star
Registered
Re: NYTimes - Bailout Is To Help Strong Banks Buy Up Competitors

The bailout is to save the banks - the problem on mainstreet is the credit cruch that is forcing banks not to give out loans.

The way I see it, its trickle down economics: Banks get money, and if they feel like it, they will loan out money to consumers. OR they could use it to acquire more banks.
 

Fuckallyall

Rising Star
BGOL Patreon Investor
Re: NYTimes - Bailout Is To Help Strong Banks Buy Up Competitors

Thanks am billion - No - make that 700 billion and counting, for this article.
 

Fuckallyall

Rising Star
BGOL Patreon Investor
Re: NYTimes - Bailout Is To Help Strong Banks Buy Up Competitors

Thanks a billion - No - make that 700 billion and counting, for this article.
 

cranrab

Star
BGOL Investor
Re: senate passes revised bill - now its $800B

bump to repeat:

and BTW, fuck a henry paulson.

he sold congress and the american public a bill of goods.

told them/us the billions would be used to buy up assets. LIE.

flipped the script and is now putting the billions into the pockets of the credit card companies.

fuck a henry paulson.
 

Cruise

Star
Registered
In the tank: NBC (MSNBC/CNBC), Obama, and the bailout

Source

The Bailout, the Media, and the War Party
Yes, they're connected…

by Justin Raimondo
One is hardly ever shocked anymore: that seems to be the defining characteristic of modernity. Yet I got to experience that rare sensation the other day when I read this blog item on LewRockwell.com. Aha! I thought. So that's why the MSNBCers are hailing the Big Bailout at the top of their lungs – their parent company, General Electric, also owns GE Capital, which was declared "too big to fail" and given its bailout infusion the day after the election.

The timing of this announcement was fairly interesting, as noted by conservative-libertarian columnist Jim Pinkerton. Pinkerton was rightly outraged when, in response to MSNBC's Chris Matthews' comment that his job is to "make this presidency work," he told a Fox News panel:

"Well, Matthews is entitled to his opinion, although if he wants to run for the Senate in Pennsylvania in 2010 as has been widely reported he should resign and not have a platform on the air.

"But I think that the overall culture of MSNBC was established when they changed their slogan, post-election, to 'The Power of Change.' Now, that sounds a little bit familiar to the Obama campaign 'Change We Can Believe In.' Maybe that's not an accident.

"But of course, I think the big story here, I think it goes right to what MSNBC's up to as a strategy, is the news that the FDIC, which is now following election returns, is guaranteeing $139 billion of General Electric Capital debt. That's General Electric Capital, as in General Electric, which is the parent company of MSNBC, CNBC, NBC. Now, for a $139 billion guarantee, I'd consider, I'd probably go more, I'd probably go all the way over to the Olbermann/Maddow territory. $139 billion."

In answer to the question of why the current FDIC would reward MSNBC in this way, Pinkerton suggests that the bureaucracy is looking to the future – or, more accurately, its future – although he seems to back down a bit in describing the corporate proprietors of MSNBC as "lucky." This falls considerably short of outright bribery, but the sudden infusion of massive amounts of tax dollars into corporate mega-entities does indeed have profound implications for American journalism. In the age of bailouts, the wall of separation between the corporate media and the government – never that strong to begin with – is coming down, and this prospect is truly ominous.

I never fail to smile when I read contemptuous references in American news outlets to the "state-controlled media" of, say, Russia or China. This from the same crowd whose news "reporting" in the run-up to the invasion of Iraq might have been written by someone in the Pentagon press office – and probably was! With billions in bailout money pouring directly or indirectly into the corporate "mainstream" media, only the thinnest pretense of independence remains, with the more honest journalists like Matthews coming out of the closet, so to speak, as shills for the government, or this government, at any rate.

Forewarned is forearmed. The next time Matthews expresses an opinion about anything this administration does, turn on your B.S. Detector. Because if and when President Obama goes to war, against, say, Iran, Chris Matthews is determined to "make it work."

So here we have the intersection of two very dangerous phenomena, which, in combination, could prove deadly to our democracy and subversive in a way no foreign conspiracy ever could be. All by itself, a love-struck media – which has been in the tank for Obama since the early primaries – wouldn't be so bad. After all, any half-intelligent Epsilon-Minus Semi-Moron can see through the bias, which is often unapologetic, as in Matthews' case. However, add to this the breaching of the wall between the government and the corporate parents of major media outlets, and you're entering some very dangerous territory.

With the government in control of the commanding heights of the American economy – the financial sector, which, like GE, has its tentacles wrapped around the communications industry – the difference between private and state-controlled media is near abolition. The boundary between media and government has always been rather blurred, at least socially, and now the connection is being cemented with plenty of cash. If the government is now buying "shares" in the corporate owners of the major news outlets, then how close are we to some place like Russia, for instance, where the line between economy and state hardly exists and the major media dutifully spout the Kremlin line?

With two wars in the can and another one on the burner, the War Party has been busy lately, and there's hardly anyone keeping an eye on them. The usual media myopia is worsened by the financial disaster, which hasn't encouraged reporters to look much further afield than Wall Street and Washington. And even if they did notice something fishy in the works, would they sound the alarm, or keep quiet because it's their job to "make this presidency work"?
 
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owl

...
BGOL Investor
Re: In the tank: NBC (MSNBC/CNBC), Obama, and the bailout

Isn't this the same thing that Fox has been doing for the right the last eight years...

...in love and war...
 

toyracer

International
International Member
Re: In the tank: NBC (MSNBC/CNBC), Obama, and the bailout

Isn't this the same thing that Fox has been doing for the right the last eight years...

Were they reimbursed US$139 Billion for it? And, even if Fox has been doing it, does that then make it right? And okay for it to be copied and multiplied?
 

m10_v

Star
Registered
Re: In the tank: NBC (MSNBC/CNBC), Obama, and the bailout

Still posting the same old thing I see....


27y39rr.jpg



4gho9.jpg
 

RAY V.

AP 2nd Team All-American
BGOL Investor
Economy Rescue: Adding Up The Dollars

The government is engaged in an unprecedented - and expensive - effort to rescue the economy. Here are all the elements of the bailouts (So far / Pre-Obama).


Date Bailout Allocated Spent
December 2007 Term Auction Facility $1.6 trillion $1.6 trillion
February 2008 Economic Stimulus Act of 2008 $168 billion $168 billion
March 2008 Bear Stearns bailout $29 billion $29 billion
March 2008 Discount window n/a $148 billion1
May 2008 Student loan guarantees $9 billion unknown
September 2008 Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac bailout $200 billion $13.8 billion
September 2008 Foreign exchange dollar swaps Unlimited2 n/a2
October 2008 FHA housing rescue $320 billion unknown
October 2008 Auto industry energy efficiency loans $25 billion $0 billion
October 2008 Troubled Asset Relief Program $700 billion $201 billion
*AIG capital investment $40 billion $40 billion
*Bank capital investments $250 billion $161 billion
*Citigroup capital investment $20 billion $0 billion
*TALF loss provisions $20 billion $0 billion
October 2008 Money market guarantees $719 billion unknown
October 2008 Commercial Paper Funding Facility $1.4 trillion $303.9 billion
November 2008 Unemployment benefit extensions $8 billion $8 billion
November 2008 AIG $152.5 billion3 $117.2 billion3
November 2008 Citigroup loan-loss backstop $300 billion $0 billion
November 2008 Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility $200 billion $0 billion
November 2008 GSE mortgage-backed securities purchases $500 billion $0 billion
November 2008 GSE debt purchases $100 billion $0 billion
November 2008 FDIC Temporary Liquidity Guarantee Program Unlimited $40 billion
2008 FDIC bank takeovers $15.5 billion $15.5 billion
Total: $7.2 trillion $2.6 trillion
 

MASTERBAKER

༺ S❤️PER❤️ ᗰOD ༻
Super Moderator
Trillion Dollar Bailout

<embed src='http://www.addictinggames.com/D78AQSAKQLQWI9/5496.swf' type='application/x-shockwave-flash' width='640' height='480'></embed><br><a href='http://www.addictinggames.com' target='_blank' title='Play Games'>Play Games at AddictingGames</a>
ORINGINAL POST ON MAIN
:cool:
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
Re: Economy Rescue: Adding Up The Dollars

<font size="5"><center>
Treasury Presses Ahead With Plan For Toxic Assets</font size>
<font size="4">
New Body to Work With Private Investors</font size></center>


Washington Post
By David Cho
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, March 22, 2009; Page A01


The Treasury Department will unveil the next step in its financial rescue efforts tomorrow, announcing that it intends to create a government body, called the Public Investment Corp., to finance the purchase of as much as $1 trillion in soured loans and toxic assets from ailing banks, according to sources.

The plan calls for the new entity to combine its resources with the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., the Federal Reserve and private investors to buy those loans and other assets. But the government will put far more money into the deals and take on more risk than the investors, which could include hedge funds, private-equity firms, pension funds and foreign investors with U.S. headquarters, the sources said. The corporation will be funded with $75 billion to $100 billion from the $700 billion financial rescue package.

Key details of the toxic asset purchasing program are not yet finalized, said officials in contact with the Treasury. Some expressed concern that the markets would expect too much out of Monday's announcement. When Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner first sketched out the administration's rescue plan last month, he was criticized on Wall Street and on Capitol Hill for being too vague and creating uncertainty in the markets.

The Obama administration also risks a backlash from lawmakers and ordinary Americans who expressed outrage over $165 million in bonus payments by American International Group to employees of its most troubled unit -- despite the firm receiving more than $170 billion in federal aid.

White House officials said they are seeking a solution to the AIG bonus controversy in light of a bill that the House passed Thursday that would impose punitive taxes on bonus payments at all financial firms. Industry officials say the House measure would scare off many banks from taking government aid because the majority of their employees receive bonuses. The banks could still survive, but without federal assistance they would not have enough capital to restart lending, which is considered central to reviving the economy.

The administration's goal, one senior official said, is to pursue compensation reform that addresses public outrage while maintaining stability in the financial system.

The toxic asset initiative is only one piece of the administration's financial rescue package, which includes efforts to stabilize banks, aid the consumer credit markets and provide relief for struggling homeowners to head off foreclosures, a Treasury official said.

"Our singular focus is on increasing lending to support economic recovery. Everything we do to stabilize the financial system is done with that goal in mind," added Stephanie Cutter, a Treasury adviser to Geithner. She declined to discuss details of the plan. "Ridding bank balance sheets of problem assets is the next step in that process, but it alone won't solve the credit problem."

The government's effort to deal with toxic assets and loans harkens back to the original intent of the Troubled Assets Relief Program, or TARP, that Congress approved in October.

After the measure was signed into law, Bush administration officials moved away from directly purchasing the assets partly because they thought it would take too long to develop the right program and because they thought they needed to use the bulk of the rescue funds simply to keep banks alive. Those officials were widely criticized by lawmakers and investors for changing course so suddenly and creating uncertainty about the government's intentions.

Last fall, billionaire investor Warren E. Buffet, Goldman Sachs chief executive Lloyd Blankfein and William H. Gross, the managing director of PIMCO, the largest bond fund in the world, approached Treasury officials about an idea to create investment funds, using public and private money, to buy toxic assets from banks, according to former senior Treasury officials. Buffett is a director of The Washington Post Co.

The Obama administration further developed that proposal to address the two main problems banks are facing: troubled debt such as mortgages that institutions are holding until the loans are paid off, plus the complex securities and derivatives that were invented to finance those loans. Both types of assets -- the loans and the complex securities -- have fallen in value. Banks are stuck with them, hindering their ability to lend.

To deal with the troubled loans, the administration would combine resources from the FDIC and the Public Investment Corp. to create several investment funds that could ultimately buy $500 billion to $750 billion worth of loans.

Here's how the program could work: If a lender wants to dispose of about $10 million worth of residential mortgages, it would approach the FDIC, which would run an auction for interested private investors. If the winning bid ended up fetching an $8 million price tag, the FDIC would provide most of the financing and guarantee losses for as much as $6 million. The Treasury would contribute as much as 80 percent of the rest of the cost of the pool of loans. Private investors would contribute only the remaining amount, yet would be in charge of managing the portfolio of loans. Government officials said they would maintain strict oversight on who will run the funds and how the funds will be managed.

To deal with toxic securities, the government has developed two separate initiatives.

One would expand an existing Fed program, known as the Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility, or TALF, that is aimed at reviving non-traditional lending markets. These markets, which some call the "shadow banking system," provide nearly half of all U.S. consumer loans. The program would be expanded to buy some residential and commercial mortgage-backed securities that have high credit ratings using money from the Public Investment Corp. Although details have not been worked out, the plan would require the Fed to offer loans to private investors for a much longer period than the central bank does under TALF, possibly as long as seven years, sources said.

The administration will also launch public-private investment funds to buy toxic assets that back mortgages and other troubled loans. In this case, the Treasury would provide financing that would match, dollar-for-dollar, money from private investors who participate. In addition, the department would provide a loan to increase the newly formed investment funds' purchasing power. The details of these financing terms, however, have not been worked out, the sources said.

Treasury officials said more information about these programs will be revealed in the coming weeks. The Treasury also intends to ask Congress to pass legislation that would provide the government with the authority to take over large nonbank financial firms on the brink of collapse. Government officials said that if they had such powers last fall, they could have seized AIG and wound down its troubled businesses at far less cost to taxpayers.

"We've made significant progress over the last six weeks in putting the core elements in place to increase liquidity and stabilize the system," Cutter said. "We've got more work to do, and it will take some time for the financial system to recover, but we've done more in weeks than it takes other countries years to do."

Staff writers Binyamin Appelbaum and Michael D. Shear contributed to this report.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/03/21/AR2009032102246.html?sub=AR
 
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