Paulson: Troubled Assets Will Not Be Purchased

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MARTIN CRUTSINGER | November 12, 2008 09:22 PM EST | AP

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Chevrolet sales consultant Sherie Howard takes a call Wednesday, Nov. 12, 2008, in downtown Los Angeles. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson called autos a "critical industry" Wednesday but said a $700 billion financial rescue program wasn't designed for them. The White House was noncommital, but said it was open to new ideas. (AP Photo/Ric Francis)

WASHINGTON — Urgently shifting course, the Bush administration is abandoning the centerpiece of its massive $700 billion economic rescue plan and exploring new ways to shore up not only banks but credit-card, auto-loan and other huge nonbank businesses. Democrats are pressing hard to include a multibillion-dollar bailout for faltering automakers, too _ over administration objections. Unimpressed by any of the talk on Wednesday, Wall Street dove ever lower.

"The facts changed and the situation worsened," Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said at a news briefing, explaining the administration's switch from its original plan to help financial institutions by buying up troubled assets, primarily securities backed by bad home loans.

Despite its new flexibility, the administration remained opposed to using the rescue fund to bail out the ailing auto industry or to provide guarantees for home loans, an idea that supporters contend offers the greatest hope for helping legions of Americans who are facing foreclosure.

Congressional Democrats felt otherwise on autos, and strongly. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid were pressing for quick passage of a major package for carmakers during a postelection session that begins next Tuesday, and one key House Democrat was putting together legislation that would send $25 billion in emergency loans to the beleaguered industry in exchange for a government ownership stake in the Big Three car companies.

Not all the news was bad, Paulson suggested. He said the rescue program approved by Congress a month ago has already had an impact in dealing with the most severe financial crisis in decades, a credit squeeze that is threatening to push the country into a deep and prolonged recession.

"Our system is stronger and more stable than just a few weeks ago," he said. But he cautioned that much more needs to be done before the economy can turn the corner.

To accomplish those goals, Paulson said the administration would continue to use $250 billion of the $700 billion rescue fund to make direct purchases of bank stock as a way of supplying hundreds and potentially thousands of banks with extra capital in hopes that they will resume more normal lending.

But Paulson said the administration had decided that the original focus of the bailout program _ the purchase of distressed mortgage-backed securities and other troubled assets on the books of banks _ would not be employed. He said the administration had changed the emphasis because of a need to get money into the financial system much more quickly because of a worsening credit crunch. Setting up a purchase program for the bad assets was taking too much time, officials said.

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It was another rough day on Wall Street as investors received more bad news on corporate earnings and were also disappointed by Paulson's decision not to mop up bad assets of financial institutions. The Dow Jones industrial average fell for the third straight session, plunging 411.30 points to close at 8,282.66, the lowest close since it hit a 5 1/2-year low on Oct. 27.

But lawmakers applauded Paulson's switch, saying the administration was finally recognizing that its initial plan was flawed.

"I am glad that Secretary Paulson and the rest of the Treasury team have finally seen the light," said Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y. He said he would still like to see more strings attached to make sure banks use their bailout money to increase loans.

Paulson also said the administration was exploring the possibility of setting up a program in conjunction with the Federal Reserve that would provide support for the $1 trillion market in securities that fund such vital consumer products as credit cards, auto loans and students loans. About 40 percent of consumer credit is supplied through the sale of these securities that are backed by payments consumers make on their credit cards and other loans.

"This market, which is vital for lending and growth, has for all practical purposes ground to a halt," Paulson said. In response to a question, he said it would take weeks to design a program, which officials suggested might involve having the Federal Reserve provide loans.

The administration has already spoken for all but $60 billion of the initial $350 billion supplied by Congress, including the $250 billion for direct stock purchases from banks and $40 billion for a new loan supplied on Monday to help stabilize troubled insurance giant American International Group.

Paulson said he believed the $700 billion would be sufficient to stabilize the financial system. He would not give an estimate on when Congress would need to authorize the second $350 billion. With the Bush administration leaving office on Jan. 20, decisions on spending the second $350 installment could well be made by the incoming Obama administration.

Paulson said he had met Monday with officials from President-elect Obama's economic transition team.

On the issue of using the bailout package to help ailing auto companies, Paulson said the administration preferred an approach that would accelerate distribution of $25 billion Congress approved in separate legislation this fall. Obama had pressed the auto companies' case in his own meeting with President Bush on Monday.

Some of the bailout money could be used to support efforts to keep homeowners from losing their houses because of soaring default levels, he said, but he rejected tapping the fund to provide partial guarantees to financial institutions for mortgages they agree to rework.

This approach is being pushed by Sheila Bair, head of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., who has said the government guarantees would provide an attractive incentive to banks to modify mortgages to more affordable levels.

Paulson praised a new set of guidelines issued Wednesday by the Federal Reserve and other bank regulators, saying they addressed crucial issues such as making sure that banks use the rescue assistance for its intended purpose of increasing lending.

Critics have charged that some banks may be tempted to hoard the money or use it to pay out dividends to shareholders or boost compensation for their executives unless regulators tighten standards.

WASHINGTON — Urgently shifting course, the Bush administration is abandoning the centerpiece of its massive $700 billion economic rescue plan and exploring new ways to shore up not only banks bu...
WASHINGTON — Urgently shifting course, the Bush administration is abandoning the centerpiece of its massive $700 billion economic rescue plan and exploring new ways to shore up not only banks bu...
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- rbspickles I'm a Fan of rbspickles 9 fans permalink

So which one has the pea under it? Nothing like a fast paced shell game to keep the mind roiling.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:49 PM on 11/12/2008
- Tyrione I'm a Fan of Tyrione 44 fans permalink
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Senator Stevens is your top headline and not the negative slide of Wall Street that continues to accelerate after election night?

You people have no concept of priorities.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:47 PM on 11/12/2008

I agree 1000% this should be at the top in big bold RED ink, not the Stevens story.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:02 PM on 11/12/2008
- rubinoff I'm a Fan of rubinoff 55 fans permalink

Tyrione:

Correct and who cares about that 'felon?'

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:02 PM on 11/12/2008
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what do you mean, YOU PEOPLE???

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:02 PM on 11/12/2008

you know, liberal finger pointers

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:09 AM on 11/13/2008
- Grannysue I'm a Fan of Grannysue 135 fans permalink
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So he lied again, how many times can you sell the American people the same lemon, apparently many many times.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:43 PM on 11/12/2008

I enjoy banging ideas with you all...time to go for the day and take a deep breath. Have a great day, and remember...STARVE THE BEAST !! Don't pay your income taxes this year...no mortgage...no credit card bill payments...add dependents to your W-2's and when tax time comes...DON'T PAY THAT EITHER !!
Get a job working 'off the books' and forget to tell the tax people about it. I learned those tricks from our loved elected officials. Have a great day, y'all!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:40 PM on 11/12/2008
- rubinoff I'm a Fan of rubinoff 55 fans permalink

Just getting back on here....oooh this thread has blown up to 9 pages....So why is it sooo far down on the 'home page?' It should be on top, way before anything about St. Sarah and Cindy,...duh.
I'll scroll down and read you guys replies. :)

p.s.
I'm so upset.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:49 PM on 11/12/2008
- Dwight5 I'm a Fan of Dwight5 4 fans permalink

More of the same from the Bush Crime Family. Lie their arses off to sell their policies to Congress and the public. Change the rules almost immediately. Give all the money to the corporations that their wealthy friends own and run, and then rely on these corporations to do the right thing, i.e. resume lending money to people who are no longer credit worthy due to Bush administration policies. Why would the banks start lending again, anyway, when the fundementals haven't changed? What in human history has ever indicated that corporations will do the right thing unless they are forced to?
I line up with the Libertarians, but the federal government is never going to give back the power they've usurped over the last two centuries, and the feds are never going to return to the eight things the US Constitution gave them authority over. Therefore, government's role has evolved into the people's advocate, and that's the way it should be. God knows we need one.
This bailout money is just being thrown away, and the plug should be pulled now. The administration can prop up all the banks in the world, nothing's gonna change until people can pay their mortgages and other bills.
These funds will trickle down to the pe-ons when?

Bush-Cheney - "Leave no billionaire behind. Leave no child a dime."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:36 PM on 11/12/2008
- Tyrione I'm a Fan of Tyrione 44 fans permalink
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As a Libertarian, you either need to study your history better or cut your estimates by 100 years on this power usurping from the Central Federal Government.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:48 PM on 11/12/2008
- freebeer I'm a Fan of freebeer 5 fans permalink

I wish it was just about the Bush crime family. But the game in the upper most reaches of our political stratosphere is strictly one of rich vs. poor.
Bipartisan effort is needed for such extreme crimes, and it happens slowly over decades.

Highlights include Ronald Reagan getting the deregulation ball rolling, Bill Clinton knocking it out of the park with the repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act, and George W Bush taking the ball away from us with the help of Obama.

http://globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=10860

This stuff is hard to understand. The robbers count on us not really cluing in to what is happening, and their personal media outlets sure don't give us the real score.
Bottom line, we the people are losing our country and our future to an old bankers cartel, fronted by puppet politicians in both parties.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:57 PM on 11/12/2008
- rubinoff I'm a Fan of rubinoff 55 fans permalink

freebeer:

You said a mouthful and I'm not sure you are wrong...Don't forget to give thanks to Dr. Greenspan...whose wife got her own tv show....The media (print, television and electronic) know (I assume) a whole lot more than they are telling the public, but because of their 'greed,' they, too, go along with the program....I can only imagine they have dual citizenship, passports ready for when the SHTF, to scadaddle on out of here, while the rest of us stand in the soup lines.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:08 PM on 11/12/2008

I just finished calling Senators Feinstein and Boxer and Rep. Mike Honda's offices. I actually got two live people who recorded my message. Do it. Tell them what you think of Mr. Paulson's statement today. This house of cards and 0% accountability is about to collapse. I ran an international company and I'm telling you we saw plans, even if only sketched out in an emergency, before cash ever flowed. I refuse to accept this one-man government. Let's join together and make our voices heard in every available venue and media possible to kickstart our elected Congress to challenge this.

I'm a glass-half-full kind of person, but I'm seeing very few drops at the bottom of the glass - and I am worried about my young nieces and nephew and their parents and the generations after.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:35 PM on 11/12/2008
- rubinoff I'm a Fan of rubinoff 55 fans permalink

mpflinn:

good for you :) however, perhaps it just me for being so shocked today, but I'm feeling that those people in congress don't really care about the middle class, only themselves...really.
All of those people in dc are peas in the same pod....They work tues, wed., & thurs. and have more time off than they spend there working the the citizens.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:59 PM on 11/12/2008
- haramagoti I'm a Fan of haramagoti 12 fans permalink
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It's called a shell game, and why there isn't an oversight committee or independent body stapled to this man's shoulder is beyond me. Nothing he has proposed has panned out, and abuse of this bailout has already proved rampant under his "guidance", not excluding his shifting gears while hurtling downhill; the man simply keeps getting checked on his poor judgment and deed, while defensively realigning himself with his critics as the amount of our grandchildren's loot drops like a stone somewhat mysteriously in the obscured corners of the process. Look how he changed the tax law for banks while we were all so heavily distracted, with even congressional tax lawyers kept in the dark the week of the announced bailout. He should bail out.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:26 PM on 11/12/2008

I'm not one who usually takes the time to write my Senators and U.S. Representative, but the bailout plan, the auto industry needing a bailout and now American Express was enough to compel me to do so. I encourage all of you to do the same - it takes only a few moments to compose a few paragraphs (some of you could use what you've posted here) and then send your thoughts through the contact section of the website for your Senators & Representatives. If enough people voice their anger they'll take notice. It's great to vent here at HuffPo, but don't stop here.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:21 PM on 11/12/2008

It's called the "Shock Doctrine" as outlined in Naomi Kein's book of the same name. They mean to bankrupt this country and then, when everyone (themselves excluded) is a pauper, they mean to put all of us back to work, enriching all their corporations, for pennies. Read the book! It will completely open your eyes. This was all planned out and is now being implemented. They WILL bankrupt this country.

CONGRESS!! WHERE ARE YOU?? This 'bailout' needs to be stopped immediately, if not sooner. You need to put adults in charge, not the foxes!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:50 PM on 11/12/2008
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To call them foxes is a compliment. I think it is coyotes, really,
because they are known to eat another's young while
they are being born. That is out on the range.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:53 PM on 11/12/2008
- dolphy I'm a Fan of dolphy 49 fans permalink

How about investigations of all these crooks? And letting them rot in jail? BO must have these peole investigated, indicted and imprisoned.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:20 PM on 11/12/2008
- Pdubya I'm a Fan of Pdubya 44 fans permalink

How else does anyone think the New World Order is going to take over the country?

"Allow me to issue and control a nation's money and I care not who writes its laws!" Amschel Rothschild

Both candidates were NWO lackeys. O voted for FISA and the Bailout. W. prepped the constitution for the NWO. O is going to sell it to us.

No wonder Congress ignored its constituents. $2Trillion unaccounted and no purchasing of toxic assets.

Treason and High Crimes!

www.endthefed.us

join us on November 22nd.

peace

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:13 PM on 11/12/2008
- TheOpus I'm a Fan of TheOpus 4 fans permalink

we're been sold snake oil again... they're all liars. even Barney Frank and Chris Dodd, who are now trying to put rose colored lenses on this. ridiculous. figure it out, guys.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:01 PM on 11/12/2008
- Egalitare I'm a Fan of Egalitare 6 fans permalink
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Somebody get Spitzer back in the game, quick.

I'll pay for the chasity belt. It would be money well spent.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:48 PM on 11/12/2008
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ok, that's it, I recommend Bush immediately remove Paulson & replace him with Sarah Palin.........

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:46 PM on 11/12/2008

That's not even a funny joke.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:14 PM on 11/12/2008
- Javani I'm a Fan of Javani 7 fans permalink

So, don't buy toxic real estate derivatives, but buy toxic credit card and car loan derivatives--because they're safer???

And, if the credit card company doesn't qualify for the bailout, rename itself a "bank" like American Express just did!

It's insanity. Either this is merely a blowout by Bush Admin officials to get sinecure jobs later with the recipients of the money, or there is foreign pressure on Bush. Or both. Either way, I don't see the media getting to the root causes, and certainly no businesspeople will make strong objections--it is their fiduciary duty to wait and see if they can get a piece of the fascist pie.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:45 PM on 11/12/2008

Who said the Bush admin didn't have a plan?

The goal: leave a Democratic administration with nothing, nada. no possibility of crawling out of the hole created in our economy to fix even one bridge.

The means: pass the torch from one unaccountable leader to another one-man government named Paulson (and he wasn't even elected).

Citizens call your senators and Representative and complain to high heaven.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:43 PM on 11/12/2008
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