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Topic: Bailout Bill Passes; Now For The Hard Part (08/4/08)*-*

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۞ Shampoo ۞
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Bailout Bill Passes; Now For The Hard Part (08/4/08)*-*

Washington, D.C. -

By a vote of 263-171, the House of Representatives finally passed the bailout bill Friday, and President Bush signed it.


Now comes the hard part: putting the plan in motion and restoring market confidence.


It's not going to be easy. Many important details of the
program--including which banks will be the first to sell their troubled
assets to Uncle Sam--are still unknown. Meanwhile, the economy is still
stumbling along. U.S. The Labor Department reported Friday that 159,000
jobs were lost in September, the biggest drop since 2003 (see "The Bailout: An Owners Manual").


Meanwhile, the U.S. Treasury Department still has to work out the
program's fine details. For instance, it needs to hire a team of
consultants and managers to help it figure out how to dole out the $700
billion that will be used to buy toxic assets from companies that can't
sell them.


Treasury officials have not responded to inquiries regarding how far
along the administration is in that process. Under the program, up to
$350 billion could be available immediately (Congress can say no to the
remainder). However, White House spokesman Tony Fratto told reporters
Thursday that it could be "at least weeks" before the first banks and
insurance companies are able to sell their troubled assets.


According to financial services analyst Howard Glaser, Treasury
Secretary Henry Paulson already has chosen Ed Forst, an executive from
Paulson's old firm, Goldman Sachs, to lead the implementation of the
plan. Paulson apparently didn't want to wait for Congress to get the
ball rolling. They'll have to proceed quickly but gingerly.


"Continued political support for the effort depends on a 'clean'
execution of Treasury's broad new authority," says a research note from
the Glaser Group.


The bill has grown considerably since it was first proposed by the
administration two weeks ago, but here's what it else it does:


--Provides the government with warrants to obtain an equity stake in
companies. This helps ensure that taxpayers share in future gains of
companies that are bailed out.


--Limits excessive executive compensation for some companies. Any
firm that sells more than $300 million in troubled assets to the
government is also subject to more taxes.


--Establishes an oversight board and special inspector general to act as a watchdog.


--Requires the Treasury secretary to regularly report to Congress the details of all financial transactions under the bailout.


--Allows federal agencies to modify troubled mortgage loans.


--Expands the amount of government insurance on individual bank deposits from $100,000 to $250,000.


--Gives the chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission the
authority to suspend mark-to-market accounting and requires the agency
to complete a study on the effectiveness of this accounting method.


--Requires the president five years from now to devise a plan to recoup net losses, if there are any.


--Gives companies the opportunity to insure their troubled assets
rather than selling them, although this is up to the discretion of the
Treasury secretary.


The version of the bill the House approved Friday is what the Senate overwhelmingly passed Wednesday night. It includes tax breaks,
disaster relief, clean energy tax incentives and a fix to prevent the
alternative minimum tax from hitting more than 20 million additional
people in 2008. The added price tag: $110 billion over the next decade.


On Monday of this week, the House squashed the plan, with many
lawmakers--mainly Republicans--echoing their constituents' feelings
that it was a bailout of Wall Street at the expense of Main Street.
After the vote, the Dow Jones industrial average
dropped a record 7% in one day. That probably helped change some minds.
So did a full-court lobbying press by the president, congressional
leaders and some of Washington's most powerful industry groups.


"This legislation is very far from perfect, but it is a necessary
start," says Rep. Elijah Cummings, D-Md., one of those switched from a
"nay" vote to a "yea."


Both House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and Republican leader
John Boehner of Ohio reminded members of Congress that the action taken
Friday is just one component of an economic recovery. "No new deficit
spending must be our mantra," said Pelosi.



Boehner appealed to a higher authority, invoking a familiar motto:
"Remember those words today: In God we trust. Because we're going to
need his help."Washington, D.C. -
By a vote of 263-171, the House of Representatives finally passed the bailout bill Friday, and President Bush signed it.

Now comes the hard part: putting the plan in motion and restoring market confidence.


It's not going to be easy. Many important details of the
program--including which banks will be the first to sell their troubled
assets to Uncle Sam--are still unknown. Meanwhile, the economy is still
stumbling along. U.S. The Labor Department reported Friday that 159,000
jobs were lost in September, the biggest drop since 2003 (see "The Bailout: An Owners Manual").


Meanwhile, the U.S. Treasury Department still has to work out the
program's fine details. For instance, it needs to hire a team of
consultants and managers to help it figure out how to dole out the $700
billion that will be used to buy toxic assets from companies that can't
sell them.


Treasury officials have not responded to inquiries regarding how far
along the administration is in that process. Under the program, up to
$350 billion could be available immediately (Congress can say no to the
remainder). However, White House spokesman Tony Fratto told reporters
Thursday that it could be "at least weeks" before the first banks and
insurance companies are able to sell their troubled assets.


According to financial services analyst Howard Glaser, Treasury
Secretary Henry Paulson already has chosen Ed Forst, an executive from
Paulson's old firm, Goldman Sachs, to lead the implementation of the
plan. Paulson apparently didn't want to wait for Congress to get the
ball rolling. They'll have to proceed quickly but gingerly.


"Continued political support for the effort depends on a 'clean'
execution of Treasury's broad new authority," says a research note from
the Glaser Group.


The bill has grown considerably since it was first proposed by the
administration two weeks ago, but here's what it else it does:


--Provides the government with warrants to obtain an equity stake in
companies. This helps ensure that taxpayers share in future gains of
companies that are bailed out.


--Limits excessive executive compensation for some companies. Any
firm that sells more than $300 million in troubled assets to the
government is also subject to more taxes.


--Establishes an oversight board and special inspector general to act as a watchdog.


--Requires the Treasury secretary to regularly report to Congress the details of all financial transactions under the bailout.


--Allows federal agencies to modify troubled mortgage loans.


--Expands the amount of government insurance on individual bank deposits from $100,000 to $250,000.


--Gives the chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission the
authority to suspend mark-to-market accounting and requires the agency
to complete a study on the effectiveness of this accounting method.


--Requires the president five years from now to devise a plan to recoup net losses, if there are any.


--Gives companies the opportunity to insure their troubled assets
rather than selling them, although this is up to the discretion of the
Treasury secretary.


The version of the bill the House approved Friday is what the Senate overwhelmingly passed Wednesday night. It includes tax breaks,
disaster relief, clean energy tax incentives and a fix to prevent the
alternative minimum tax from hitting more than 20 million additional
people in 2008. The added price tag: $110 billion over the next decade.


On Monday of this week, the House squashed the plan, with many
lawmakers--mainly Republicans--echoing their constituents' feelings
that it was a bailout of Wall Street at the expense of Main Street.
After the vote, the Dow Jones industrial average
dropped a record 7% in one day. That probably helped change some minds.
So did a full-court lobbying press by the president, congressional
leaders and some of Washington's most powerful industry groups.


"This legislation is very far from perfect, but it is a necessary
start," says Rep. Elijah Cummings, D-Md., one of those switched from a
"nay" vote to a "yea."


Both House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and Republican leader
John Boehner of Ohio reminded members of Congress that the action taken
Friday is just one component of an economic recovery. "No new deficit
spending must be our mantra," said Pelosi.



Boehner appealed to a higher authority, invoking a familiar motto:
"Remember those words today: In God we trust. Because we're going to
need his help."



__________________


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Shampoo
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MZ Guru
Status: Offline
Posts: 1574
Date:
i think ther iz mo to it than meets the eye......

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A wise man sees failure as progress/

a fool divorces his knowledge and misses the logic/

And loses his soul in the process/
obsessed with nonsense with a caricature that has no content/


canibus

DJ Hot Head Shabba
Status: Offline
Posts: 6722
Date:
weh macka deh....money ooooooo

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The Leeching Type
Status: Offline
Posts: 35
Date:
i also think there is alot more to it

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