Lawmakers press Paulson on bailout plan changes

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JEANNINE AVERSA | November 18, 2008 06:46 PM EST | AP

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Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, left, and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke arrive on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, Nov. 18, 2008, to testify before the House Financial Services Committee. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

WASHINGTON — Faced with exasperated lawmakers upset by shifts in bailout strategy, Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson launched a spirited defense Tuesday of his handling of the $700 billion program and expressed fresh reservations about tapping the pool for mortgage guarantees to relieve skyrocketing home foreclosures.

Members of the House Financial Services Committee grilled Paulson for not doing enough to help distressed homeowners and for failing to force banks that get some of the bailout money to specifically use it to bolster lending to customers, one of the prime reasons behind the rescue package.

"It is essential" that some of the bailout money be used to ease foreclosures, said the panel's chairman, Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., a key player in shaping the package that Congress passed and President George W. Bush signed into law Oct. 3.

Amid fits and starts in the administration's rollout and direction of the program, "I have to say at this point that public confidence in what we have done so far is lower than anybody would want it to be, to the point where it could be an obstacle to further steps," Frank lamented.

In a break with the administration, Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Chairman Sheila Bair, made a fresh pitch for using $24 billion of the bailout pool to help Americans at risk of losing their homes. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is urging Paulson to support the FDIC plan.

"As foreclosures escalate, we are clearly falling behind the curve," Bair warned the panel. "Much more aggressive intervention is needed if we are to curb the damage to our neighborhoods and broader economic health."

Although Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke told lawmakers that in cases of some home loans, the FDIC plan could saddle heavy costs on the government, he said it is still a "very promising approach."

While Paulson was resistant to using some of the bailout money to provide mortgage guarantees, he said the administration will look for ways to provide foreclosure relief.

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Some Democrats also prodded Paulson to divert $25 billion of the bailout money to help Detroit automakers. Paulson, however, didn't budge in his opposition.

"I don't see this as the purpose" of the bailout program, which is intended to stabilize jittery financial markets and get lending flowing more freely again, Paulson told the panel.

The Treasury chief found himself on the hot seat just one week after he officially abandoned the original rescue strategy of buying rotten mortgages and other bad assets from financial institutions. That had been the main thrust of the plan Paulson and Bernanke originally pitched to lawmakers.

"It appears that you seem to be flying a $700 billion plane by the seat of your pants," said Rep. Gary Ackerman, D-N.Y.

Focusing the bailout program on infusing billions into banks _ and possibly other types of companies _ to pump up their capital and bolster lending to customers was deemed a faster and more effective approach to stabilizing the financial system than the original centerpiece of the plan, Paulson said.

Buying financial institutions' toxic debts would have required a "massive commitment" of the bailout money, Paulson told the panel. As economic and financial conditions quickly worsened, it became clear that the first installment of the money _ $350 billion _ for that purpose "simply isn't enough firepower," he said.

It's crucial that the administration be nimble in assessing changing conditions and adapt the bailout strategy accordingly, Paulson said.

"If we have learned anything throughout this year, we have learned that this financial crisis is unpredictable and difficult to counteract," he said. "There is no playbook for responding to turmoil we have never faced. We adjusted our strategy to reflect the facts of a severe market crisis."

But lawmakers worried the administration was sending confusing signals to taxpayers and Wall Street investors.

"It is in the best interest of, not only the economy, but also of the public, that as we shift and improvise on occasion that we clearly communicate the objective and the basis for what we're doing," said Rep. Spencer Bachus, R-Ala. "I have a particular concern and that's that we don't appear to have an exit strategy."

Treasury will focus on rolling out a capital injection program to pour $250 billion into banks in return for partial ownership stakes in them, Paulson said. And, the department will search for new ways to boost the availability of auto loans, student loans and credit cards, which have been become harder to get due to the credit crisis.

Specifically, the department along with the Federal Reserve, is exploring using some of the bailout money to bankroll a new loan facility designed to help companies that issue credit cards, make student loans and finance car purchases. Paulson said he expected putting up only a "relatively modest share" of the bailout money for this facility.

So far, the Treasury Department has pledged $250 billion for banks and has agreed to devote $40 billion to troubled insurer American International Group_ its first slice of funds going to a company other than a bank. That leaves just $60 billion available from Congress' first bailout installment of $350 billion.

Paulson said he is not planning to initiate another capital injection program beyond those already announced. Thus he's unlikely to tap the remaining $350 billion before the Bush administration leaves office on Jan. 20.

The idea behind the capital injection program is for banks to use the money to rebuild reserves and lend more freely to customers. However, banks do have the leeway to use the money for other things, such as buying other banks, paying dividends to investors or bonuses to executives. That has touched a nerve with some lawmakers.

"My constituents are telling me that many of them still cannot get access to credit," said Rep. Carolyn Maloney, D-N.Y.

Locked-up lending is a prime reason why the U.S. is suffering through the worst financial crisis since the 1930s. All the fallout from the housing, credit and financial crises have badly hurt the economy, which is almost certainly in recession, analysts say.

Paulson said the U.S. had "turned a corner " in averting a financial collapse, but he warned "there's a lot of work that still needs to be done in terms of the recovery of the financial system."

___

AP Business Writer Marcy Gordon contributed to this report.

WASHINGTON — Faced with exasperated lawmakers upset by shifts in bailout strategy, Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson launched a spirited defense Tuesday of his handling of the $700 billion progra...
WASHINGTON — Faced with exasperated lawmakers upset by shifts in bailout strategy, Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson launched a spirited defense Tuesday of his handling of the $700 billion progra...
 
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we are all looking for a quick fix and that is unrealistic. these things take time, even though i do not agree with how this moola is being spent. rewarding the crooks is just digging a bigger hole for us. we are just as bad as those countries that have stinking wealth on one side of the street and poverty right across the street.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:31 PM on 11/18/2008
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So it makes sense to feed a Banking system while NOT FEEDING a Auto manufacturing system that has been guided by BIG OIL to produce "Gas Guzzlers" so EXXON can make Record Historic Profits!

I guess if you are Bush & Company this makes some kind of SENSE!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:27 PM on 11/18/2008
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Jan 20 cant come soon enough. they should just tell paulson to pack his trash and leave, and take his bald houseboy with him.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:10 PM on 11/18/2008
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if 1 million go unemployed, he gets us closer to feudalism.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:10 PM on 11/18/2008

i don't know anyone who should be or is looking for an auto loan, a student loan or to get a credit card. who goes into debt in this rocky environment?

the consumer is not buying and for good reason. we are way beyond our means. we are not going to start buying because of this or because we get a $300 tax refund.

you want us to spend? cut a $1 million check to every American and it would still be cheaper than the cost of this bailout.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:07 PM on 11/18/2008
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Discover a new LAYER of corruption by Wall Street:

1. Sub-prime puts a 125% mortgage on a $250,000.00 home so loan is at $312,500.
2. Bank packages it and sells it with fees added to bring its artifical value of $365,000+
3. "Credit crunch" has everything to do with Investment Banks specious creation of Derivatives with fees added for slicing and dicing the mortgages.

So you end up with a 250,000 house with a fee of $500,000 changed to buyers of the Derivatives valued as "AAA". But in today's market the house is worth $125,000! No wonder the BANKS hate "Mark to Market" as it forces buyers to realize a write-down for every $500 to $125 or in some cases worse!

That means that we should focus on the mark-ups by the Investment Banks as the LARGEST area of Corruption! So we have LAYER UPON LAYER of CROOKS taking Trillions from our KIDS Future!

This will take an incredible amount of UNWINDING and we have only begun!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:54 PM on 11/18/2008

you're right. they just lied about the AAA rating. they were FFF. but fool me once, shame on you, fool me twice, shame on me."

those of us staying in the stock market are just being suckers. this will continue in just another form in a new "product" probably the green product that will boom and bust.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:13 PM on 11/18/2008

Paulson is doing nothing but following the Bush and Republican marching orders to destroy the unions. If he can force GM to knuckle under then it will set the labor movement back 50 years.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:20 PM on 11/18/2008

Screw Paulson. We"ve given up nearly every manufacturing facility we built over the past 100 years so that the Chinese can build our products for us with unsafe materials and artificially cheap labor. We cannot give the auto industry to the Japanese and Europeans (and eventually the Chinese), despite horrific management by the Big Three.

We want energy independence. We need the American automotive industry. So this is what we do. The U.S. government (you and me) take $300 billion of our money and tell Detroit what we want. We want an affordable oil-independent fleet of cars within three years. Electrics with 300 mile range or on-the-fly hydrogen or both (both are within reach). If they don"t deliver, they owe the American people that debt load due within 15 years. If they do delivery, the American people shoulder their current legacy costs from that point forward.

This is a horrific mess. Let"s use it to our advantage.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:01 PM on 11/18/2008

This whole thing is a farce. The money was supposed to supply funds
for loans. We got exactly nothing. But thankfully AIG got two junkets,
sales meetings I think they were called, with $400 dinners and executive
perks. And then they come back with hands open.
Asking the Senate and Congress to really consider the motives behind
this bailout was a waste of time, because Paulson and Bernake warned
of horrible consequences.
Who is responsible for taking money from the Social Security fund?
When do our do-nothing elected reps decide we count for some real
help too?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:56 PM on 11/18/2008

When GM, Ford, and Chrysler open up manufacturing plants on Wall Street, then they might get some of the gravy being slopped into the bowls of Goldman, Morgan, Citi, etc!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:24 PM on 11/18/2008

Hey Hank,
Why not get the oil companies to buy the auto makers?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:23 PM on 11/18/2008
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Great Point!

They have "in effect" own them for years!

Why do you think Big 3 cars have in the past maked "Gas-Guzzlers?" Who benefited the most? Big OIL! Who sponsored Big Oil to the HISTORIC PROFITS? Bush and Company!

It has been an integrated Plan!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:43 PM on 11/18/2008

BUt he gave 150 billion to AIG..his buddys....and when he's gone from his DAY job this guy will be running one of these big investemnt houses..fire this dude now..he's the deV**...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:21 PM on 11/18/2008
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Not another Dime to Paulson for Big Banks Mergers to form MEGA-BANKS that stifle competition?
Playing with Financial paper to make PROFITS is a "HOUSE OF PAPER CARDS which has blown down!"

Democrats pass this bill! Show Bush Administration will sacrifice the Financial Safety and Security of 18,000,000 people for a less than 4% of the $700 Billion Bailout package!

No Executive taking a Bailout should make more than our President and that is $400,000+sevices or a package worth no more than $1,000,000! That will save Billions a year!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:09 PM on 11/18/2008
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Get rid of the F R S, have the gov't print its own "interest free" money, and let's cure this problem once and for all!!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:26 PM on 11/18/2008
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Now that is the best idea so far.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:35 PM on 11/18/2008
    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:04 PM on 11/18/2008

I am disgusted. 700 billion for banks who are not even using it for its purpose which are LOANS, and bailouts of companies that created the fraudulent mortgage securities in the first place, and Wall Street who puts constant pressure on the auto manufacturers to outsource jobs, are complaining of incompetency and a 25 paltry billion?

For Wall Street and bankers to blame just the managers of the Big 3 (although YES they deserve blame also) for short term profits is just disgusting. THEY ARE THE REASON BIG BUSINESS CAN ONLY FOCUS ON SHORT TERM PROFITS. It is so freakin' amazing, how little they care for the average worker, it is an open contempt. Dodd, Frank and Pelosi should be ashamed of themselves for being party to this travesty (and I SUPPORTED this to begin with). It is clear this money is used to manipulate stocks and not to unfreeze money. A bonus is now to break the unions because God Knows you can't live on a 1 million dollar salary you gotta have that 28 million dollar bonus once those stocks get manipulated. A guy has gotta pay the bills you know.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:16 PM on 11/18/2008
- Diane Tucker - Huffpost Blogger I'm a Fan of Diane Tucker permalink

Automotive journalist Peter DeLorenzo agrees with you. Here's the link:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/diane-tucker/journalist-to-gop-youre-1_b_144481.html

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:06 PM on 11/18/2008
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