Geithner, Bernanke work on $700B bailout overhaul
Geithner meeting with Bernanke, other senior banking regulators to discuss bailout reform
US Stocks stumbled even though there are reports of government's plans to help banks and a milder-than-expected report on fourth-quarter economic activity came out from the US Commerce Department. Gross domestic product, the widely followed measure of any economy, shrank at a 3.8 percent pace in the final three months of 2008, the Commerce Department reported. That compared with a 0.5 percent decline the previous quarter. Friday's reading was much better than the 5.4 percent drop economists expected.
However, what is appalling is that: it seems some of the US analysts who proliferate, in the "ever pessimistic US Financial Media", have formed a bad habit of always finding out something monstrously perilous; every time a good report comes out from its coffers. What is more disgusting is that all these are being ably backed by a group of misguided, US Financial Journalists, whose flip flop reporting in the last few days, has been confusing investors across the globe.
Can anyone advice all these content companies who cater to these Group of US Financial Press, to get trained in India---because it seems from their hoch-poch reporting, all their US degrees could be a sheer waste.
WASHINGTON -- Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke and other top banking officials met Friday to hammer out details of a major overhaul of the government's financial rescue program. One official said the Obama administration was close to unveiling the new plan. This senior administration official, who spoke to The Associated Press, said the administration was on track to announce its overhaul of the $700 billion bailout program soon, possibly as early as next week.
This official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the plan has not yet been unveiled, said that it would employ a full range of tools to get credit flowing again to families and businesses.
While there had been reports that the administration may decide against setting up a government-run bank known as a bad bank to purchase toxic assets, this official said the administration was still developing the part of the plan to deal with toxic assets and no final decisions had been made.
The administration is working on proposals for how it will use the last $350 billion from the rescue program. Some of the measures being considered could end up costing taxpayers hundreds of billions of dollars beyond the original $700 billion pricetag.
Geithner previously said the administration is weighing the possibility of using a bad bank to buy up toxic assets that are weighing on the books of financial institutions, a proposal that some analysts have estimated could cost well over $1 trillion.
In addition to conferring throughout the day Friday with senior Treasury Department officials, Geithner met with Bernanke and other top banking regulators including Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Chairman Sheila Bair and John Dugan, the head of the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency. The OCC regulates the country's biggest banks.
Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., said the issue of how much more money to ask Congress to commit beyond the current $700 billion is a key item the administration is debating.
"Do you guarantee the bad assets or do you buy them? Do you guarantee all the bad assets or just the housing assets? There are a lot of unanswered questions," Schumer said.
Meanwhile, congressional auditors released a new report saying it may never be known whether the initial $700 billion plan accomplished its objectives because it will be difficult to separate the impact of the rescue program from the effects of other economic forces.
The Government Accountability Office said the Treasury Department had made progress in implementing about half of the nine reforms it suggested in an earlier report, including improving communication about the bailout and hiring more staff to run it.
But the department had not fully addressed eight of the recommendations, according to the GAO. "The lack of a clearly articulated vision has complicated Treasury's ability to effectively communicate to Congress, the financial markets, and the public on the benefits of TARP," the report said.
Treasury spokesman Isaac Baker said President Barack Obama and Geithner both agree that "much more needs to be done to better stabilize our financial system and get credit flowing again to families and businesses."
In an e-mail responding to the GAO report, Baker wrote the administration would soon announce an overhaul of the bailout program "that will increase lending and impose new measures to strengthen oversight, transparency and accountability so that taxpayers know where and how their money is being spent and whether it's achieving real results." Geithner said earlier this week that the administration would announce its new proposals "relatively soon." Many expect decisions as early as next week.
The administration is trying boost confidence that it can get control of the worst financial crisis to hit the country since the 1930s. However, former Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson quickly committed the first $350 billion from the bailout program in an effort that so far has not yielded the expected results of stabilizing the situation and getting banks to resume more normal lending to consumers and businesses.
The bailout program has generated a huge amount of controversy. Critics charge that the Bush administration failed to impose enough restrictions on banks to make sure the billions they were receiving went to boost lending.
Obama on Thursday called it "shameful" and the "height of irresponsibility" that Wall Street had paid out $18.4 billion in bonuses last year.
The Treasury statement on Friday said that Geithner, who was sworn into office Monday night after being confirmed by the Senate, had spent part of this week in telephone conversations with the finance ministers of France, Germany and Australia on the joint efforts that will be needed to stabilize the global economy and restore growth.
Treasury said the discussions with French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde involved a review of France's proposals to overhaul the global financial architecture and the progress being made by the Group of 20 major industrial and developing countries.
Those talks are in preparation for a G-20 leaders' meeting in April that will be a follow-up to an initial summit chaired by former President George W. Bush in November.

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