“…we’re literally maybe days away from a complete meltdown of our financial system, with all the implications here at home and globally.”

On Thursday night, a meeting with Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke shook our partisan divided Congressional leaders like nothing since 9/11; a looming reality that so potentially devastating that both parties decided to react together. From the NYT:

Congressional Leaders Stunned by Warnings


Mr. Bernanke and Treasury Secretary Henry M. Paulson Jr. had made an urgent and unusual evening visit to Capitol Hill, and they were gathered around a conference table in the offices of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

When you listened to him describe it you gulped,” said Senator Charles E. Schumer, Democrat of New York.

As Senator Christopher J. Dodd, Democrat of Connecticut and chairman of the Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee, put it Friday morning on the ABC program “Good Morning America,” the congressional leaders were told “that we’re literally maybe days away from a complete meltdown of our financial system, with all the implications here at home and globally.

Mr. Schumer added, “History was sort of hanging over it, like this was a moment.”
[emboldenings mine]

President Bush, from the Rose Garden, Friday morning..

“This is a pivotal moment for America’s economy,” Bush said. “There will be ample opportunity to debate the origins of this problem, now is the time to solve it.”

The attendants of that Thursday night meeting in Pelosi’s office didn’t much want to share exactly what was said, but Chucky Schumer allows “You have the credit lines in America, which are the lifeblood of the economy, frozen.” and “That hasn’t happened before. It’s a brave new world. You are in uncharted territory, but the one thing you do know is you can’t leave them frozen or the economy will just head south at a rapid rate.

Today, Saturday, these properly panicked elected officials are finally working together, hopefully working up some emergency legislation written to bail us out; to save us all. This bailout is designed to save our economy from an overdue and easily-predicted meltdown. Basically, this new legislation has all of us, US taxpayers, absorbing that bad mortgage debt from our banks and other lenders, to unfreeze the credit crunch. And save the economy.

What will happen is that the U.S. Government will authorize the printing of new money not backed up by anything except the word of the U.S. Government; printing billions and billions of dollars of new money at a furious rate, further devaluing our already nearly-tanked dollar, making our huge national debt even more alarming.

We’ll get a whole new federal agency in the process..

Few exact details of the plan have been revealed, but it essentially involves creating a new government agency that could soak up all the bad assets that are bringing down US financial firms.Bush said the intervention would require a ’significant amount of taxpayer dollars.’ Paulson earlier said the cost would be in the ‘hundreds of billions.’

‘I am convinced this bold approach will cost American families far less than the alternative,’ Paulson said. ‘The financial security of all Americans … depends on our ability to restore our financial institutions to sound footing.’

Bush said he was confident the mortgage-backed securities, which the government is now taking on, would recover their value in the longer term. Their value has plunged due to a record rate of home foreclosures in the US, but Bush pointed out that most Americans still paid their mortgages on time.

Paulson outlined the overall framework, a plan that will cost ‘hundreds of billions’ of previously nonexistent dollars…

“The federal government must implement a program to remove these illiquid assets that are weighing down our financial institutions and threatening our economy,” he said.“This troubled asset relief program must be properly designed and sufficiently large to have maximum impact, while including features that protect the taxpayer to the maximum extent possible.”

In full crisis mode Friday morning, the US Treasury said it would guarantee US money market funds to stem a run on deposits that could further destabilize the battered financial sector.

A Treasury statement said President George W. Bush approved the use of up to 50 billion US dollars to guarantee for the next year the deposits which are widely held by Americans in mutual funds and brokerages, if the firms pay an insurance fee.

According to the financial industry, US financial firms hold some 3.4 trillion US dollars in money market funds, which are generally considered safe investments although they have not up to now been federally guaranteed.

Well, I know the blame game shouldn’t start until we are past the point of meltdown, but just in case we don’t make it, the blame rests squarely on that party what owns the codeword ‘affordable housing‘ for the masses.

And they are at it again. From Bloomberg, dateline today…

Sept. 20 (Bloomberg) — U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson is sending a financial-rescue plan worth about $800 billion to Congress as Democrats prepare to turn it into a vehicle to help people with high-cost mortgages stay in their homes.

Bad idea. That’s what caused this meltdown in the first place.

Affordable housing for the masses. Affirmative action for the disadvantaged.

Socialism is failing even before Barack Obama takes office.

Who knew?


crossed from home

7 comments:

  1. William, 20. September 2008, 9:02

    No, Bush Administration and Republican failures have forced the Fed to take socialist measures to save Americans from getting hurt even worse. The Clinton years are looking mighty good right now. McCain wants to hand a huge tax cut to the top one %… the golden parachute CEOs while the rest of us pay the 3 trillion dollar bill of Iraq and Americas bailout. Truly, Republicans are the party that has wrecked America.

    4 more years! 4 more years! 4 more years!

     
  2. Serr8d, 20. September 2008, 9:27

    Ummm, William, now the mantra should probably be 4 more days! 4 more days! 4 more days!

     
  3. hbk, 20. September 2008, 10:59

    Affordable housing for the masses

    Didn’t that used to be called the American dream?

     
  4. Serr8d, 20. September 2008, 11:47

    The American Dream, arrived at by hard work, saving money and buying within one’s means; not arrived at by government dictating and manipulating the financial markets to achieve some sort of ‘equality quota’. Such manipulation at the direction of the well-meaning but totally inept could, you know, bring down the markets if the balloon was overly pumped, the bubble burst, and the people who owned more house than they could have ever afforded reneged on the mortgages.

    Read John Lott

    The current mortgage crisis arose because loans were made with virtually nonexistent underwriting standards. There was no verification of income or assets, little assurance of the ability to pay the mortgage, and little or no down payment. So, with rules like these, who wouldn’t have expected defaults? In January, the Federal Reserve stepped in proposing strict regulations on what conditions should be met before loans would be allowed.

    Democrats criticized the rules as not going far enough in determining when loans could be made.

    But if lending money to people with so little credit worthiness were so obviously such a boneheaded mistake that even non-bankers see it, why would people who had billions of dollars at stake and years of experience lend out money this way?

    To critics the answer seems simple: Greed.

    Yet, no matter how greedy you are, would you think that loaning money to people who are likely to default with little collateral in their property was the way to riches? Would you lend your money out that way?

    Obviously, no.

    So, why did they make the loans? Government regulation.

     
  5. Hugh L. Logan, 20. September 2008, 20:03

    A few interesting facts can be found at: http://www.ibdeditorials.com/IBDArticles.aspx?id=306370789279709. I frankly think both parties could have done better.

     
  6. Hugh, 20. September 2008, 20:18

    “A few interesting facts can be found at: http://www.ibdeditorials.com/IBDArticles.aspx?id=306370789279709.” apparent;y does not work for some reason. If interested, try GOOG:R with the following: Real Culprits In This Meltdown

     
  7. Serr8d, 20. September 2008, 20:19

    Thanks, Hugh.

    A smoking gun is referenced in this comment, a couple posts over.

     

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