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Government works radical rescue

Hundreds of billions are part of bailout proposal

By TOM RAUM and JEANNINE AVERSA
Associated Press
Published/Last Modified on Saturday, Sep 20, 2008 - 01:43:20 pm MST

WASHINGTON — Struggling to stave off financial catastrophe, the Bush administration on Friday laid out a radical bailout plan with a jawdropping price tag — a takeover of a half-trillion dollars or more in worthless mortgages and other bad debt held by tottering institutions.

Relieved investors sent stocks soaring on Wall Street and around the globe. The Dow-Jones industrials average rose 368 points after surging 410 points the day before on rumors the federal action was afoot.

A grim-faced President Bush acknowledged risks to taxpayers in what would be the most sweeping government intervention to rescue failing financial institutions since the Great Depression. But he declared, “The risk of not acting would be far higher.”

The administration is asking Congress for far-reaching new powers to take over troubled mortgages from banks and other companies, including purchasing sour mortgage-backed securities. Administration officials and congressional leaders are to work out details over the weekend.



Congressional officials said they expected a request for legal authority to buy up the bad loans, at a cost in excess of $500 billion to the government. Democrats were discussing whether to try to attach middle class assistance to the legislation, despite a request from Bush to avoid adding controversial items that could delay action. An expansion of jobless benefits was one possibility.

In other major steps, the Treasury Department and Federal Reserve moved to give money-market mutual funds the same kind of federal protection, at least temporarily, that now applies to savings and checking accounts and certificates of deposit at banks. Money-market accounts sold through retail banks are already FDIC insured.

The spreading global selling panic had started to threaten some money-market funds, usually thought of as rock-solid investments.

Administration officials feared a run on these funds, held by millions of Americans.

“Every American should know that the federal government continues to enforce laws and regulations protecting your money,” Bush said at the White House. The 75-year-old Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation now insures savings and checking accounts and certificates of deposit up to $100,000.

Separately, the Securities and Exchange Commission acted to block short-selling in financial securities. That is a trading method that bets the value of stocks will go down. It has been blamed for accelerating the plunge in stock prices of banks and other financial institutions.

“This is a pivotal moment for America’s economy,” Bush said. “In our nation’s history, there have been moments that require us to come together across party lines to address major challenges. This is such a moment.”

Congressional leaders of both parties welcomed the administration’s bold moves, after a series of ad hoc rescues.

The federal government already has pledged more than $600 billion in the past year to bail out, or help bail out, some of the biggest names in American finance. That includes the rescue of investment bank Bear Stearns in March, the takeover of mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac earlier this month and the takeover of the world’s largest insurance company, American International Group, just this week.

But the contagion continued to spread, bringing political consensus that drastic and comprehensive federal action was needed.

There are precedents for such a federal takeover.

In the late 1980s, the government created the Resolution Trust Corporation to tackle the savings and loan crisis. It acquired the defaulted mortgages, foreclosed real estate and other assets of nearly a thousand failed S&Ls, restoring order and stability to the system. Resolving that crisis took six years and $125 billion in taxpayer money — roughly equal to $200 billion in today’s dollars.

And there was the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, a Depression-era relief program formed in 1932 by President Hoover that tried to revive the market by giving loans to banks and other businesses.

On Friday, Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson gave few details about the structure of the new program. Asked about an overall price tag, he said, “hundreds of billions” of dollars.

Congressional leaders said they were ready to move quickly but still needed details of the administration plan. For instance, there was no indication of what the government would get in return from financial companies for the federal assistance.

Paulson and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke briefed lawmakers in both parties on the idea by conference call Friday.



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    Becky wrote on Sep 20, 2008 10:04 AM:

    " Billy-
    How did Bush create this? How is he directly responsible for stupid banks to give out stupid loans to stupid people? Has he been making charges to my credit card? Go ahead, blame Bush for something, but make it realistic. "

    Sierra Vista Resident wrote on Sep 20, 2008 8:54 AM:

    " Why doesn't the government do a takeover of all the golden parachutes the CEOs of mega-corporations like Bear Stearns, Enron, etc.? How can these corporations, being run by these same CEOs, lose all the money of their investors but still pay their "departing" CEOs millions and millions of dollars in golden parachutes? That's just absurd. "

    Billy Hill wrote on Sep 20, 2008 7:38 AM:

    " Here we go again. Bush is proposing legislation to fix the mess he made. He knows darn well that Traitor Joe Losermans defection left the Senate deadlocked and they will not come back in Session. Now he will be able to blame the situation it took him seven years to create on someone else. "

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