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Home Front Economy
Lawmakers: Financial bailout agreement reached
2008-09-25

Happy days are here again...
WASHINGTON - Warned of a possible financial panic, key Republicans and Democrats reported agreement in principle Thursday on a $700 billion bailout of the financial industry and said they would present it to the Bush administration in hopes of a vote within days.

Emerging from a two-hour negotiating session, Sen. Chris Dodd, D-Conn., the Banking Committee chairman said, "We are very confident that we can act expeditiously."
Jesus. Could they pick a better spokesman then "Friend of Angelo", Chris Dodd?
"I now expect that we will indeed have a plan that can pass the House, pass the Senate (and) be signed by the president," said Sen. Bob Bennett, R-Utah.

The bipartisan consensus on the general direction of the legislation was reported just hours before President Bush was to host presidential contenders Barack Obama and John McCain and congressional leaders at the White House for discussions on how to clear obstacles to the unpopular rescue plan.

Tony Fratto, the White House deputy press secretary said the announcement was "a good sign that progress is being made. We'll want to hear from Secretary Paulson, and take a look at the details. We look forward to a good discussion at the meeting this afternoon," he said.

On Wall Street, financial markets grew more upbeat as the Dow Jones industrial average at times rose more than 300 points.

Key lawmakers in Washington said at midday that few difficulties actually remained, although no details of their accord were immediately available. "There really isn't much of a deadlock to break," said Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass, chairman of the House Financial Services Committee.
Another guy who should keep his mouth shut.
But there were fresh signs of trouble in the House Republican Caucus. A group of GOP lawmakers circulated an alternative designed to attract private capital back into the credit markets with less government intrusion. Under the proposal, the government would provide insurance to companies that agree to buy frozen assets, rather than purchase them directly as envisioned under the administration's plan. The firms would have to pay insurance premiums to the Treasury Department for the coverage."The taxpayers haven't done anything wrong," said Rep Eric Cantor, R-Va., adding that rather than require them to bear the cost of the bailout, the alternative "pretty much puts the burden on Wall Street over time."

Rep. John A. Boehner, R-Ohio, the minority leader, was huddling with McCain on the rescue. Earlier, asked whether the GOP presidential nominee could corral restive Republicans to support the plan, Boehner said, "Who knows?"

And Rep. Spencer Bachus of Alabama, the only House Republican in the bargaining meeting, did not directly say he agreed with the other lawmakers who emerged describing an imminent deal."There was progress today," said Bachus, the senior Republican on the Financial Services panel.

Bush told the nation in a televised address Wednesday night that passage of the package his administration has proposed is urgently needed to calm the markets and restore confidence in the reeling financial system. His top spokeswoman, Dana Perino, had told reporters earlier Thursday that "significant progress" was being made.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said Bush's agreement with Democrats on limiting pay for executives of bailed out financial institutions and giving taxpayers an equity stake in the companies cleared a significant hurdle.

The core of the plan envisions the government buying up sour assets of shaky financial firms in a bid to keep them from going under and to stave off a potentially severe recession.

It was not yet clear how lawmakers had resolved lingering differences over how to phase in the eye-popping cost — a measure demanded by Democrats and some Republicans who want stronger congressional control over the bailout — without spooking markets. A plan to let the government take an ownership stake in troubled companies as part of the rescue, rather than just buying bad debt, also was a topic of intense negotiation.

Bush acknowledged Wednesday night that the bailout would be a "tough vote" for lawmakers. But he said failing to approve it would risk dire consequences for the economy and most Americans. "Without immediate action by Congress, America could slip into a financial panic, and a distressing scenario would unfold," Bush said as he worked to resurrect the unpopular bailout package. "Our entire economy is in danger."
Posted by:tu3031

#12  Even better, the Democrats insisted that 20% of the deals in the handout be reserved for ACORN.
Posted by: Zhang Fei   2008-09-25 22:59  

#11  The deal apparently includes a handout for ACORN. Very nice... Maybe Joe Biden will throw in $200m for Iran, as well.
Posted by: Zhang Fei   2008-09-25 22:27  

#10  700 billion quick deal. It is paramount that McCain not run with the herd on this. This is a defining moment for him and his candidacy. Are you an outside reformer or are you a bloodsucking parasite like the rest of the Congress, Mr. McCain. We need to know. And BTW, taxpaying citizens are bloody fighting mad about this.
Posted by: Alaska Paul   2008-09-25 22:22  

#9  I have heard of up toward 2000 trillion $ in derivatives based in part on the sub-prime loan bundles are out there. The US GDP is 12 to 18 trillion so it is an impossible number.

If the loans are just insured the derivatives could collapse on PMI costs alone.

That's why MorganGoldmanSax wants the full bail out.

However they have to face up to the derivatives being imaginary not representing anything but monopoly money and burn them in the end anyway.

They just can't bear to burn the paper.
Tuff titties...
Posted by: 3dc   2008-09-25 21:15  

#8  Republican House plan is to do full mortgage insurance. 1/2 now insured.
Require Wall Street to pay premiums on the insurance.
No other money related bail out.
Under 10 billion repair cost.
attachment of golden parachutes etc.
Posted by: 3dc   2008-09-25 21:05  

#7  There are some details about what the Boehner-led House Republicans are negotiating for here. The posts are in reverse chronological order, so either start at the bottom or keep scrolling down, depending on your preferred temporal orientation.
Posted by: trailing wife    2008-09-25 20:16  

#6  Cavuto was SPOT ON! His message was essentially, 'no need to rush into anything.' Obama is tossing accusations, blaming McCain. Dodd and Reid are very, very upset. Knowing these buggers are upset would indicate things went well at today's Whitehouse meeting.
Posted by: Besoeker   2008-09-25 19:50  

#5  Neil Cavuto on FoxFn came out against it!
Posted by: 3dc   2008-09-25 19:29  

#4  Report is a huge fight in the Whitehouse meeting.
Almost approaching fists!
Posted by: 3dc   2008-09-25 19:18  

#3  But there were fresh signs of trouble in the House Republican Caucus. A group of GOP lawmakers circulated an alternative designed to attract private capital back into the credit markets with less government intrusion. Under the proposal, the government would provide insurance to companies that agree to buy frozen assets, rather than purchase them directly as envisioned under the administration's plan. The firms would have to pay insurance premiums to the Treasury Department for the coverage."The taxpayers haven't done anything wrong," said Rep Eric Cantor, R-Va., adding that rather than require them to bear the cost of the bailout, the alternative "pretty much puts the burden on Wall Street over time."

I'm no financial wizard, but this looks MUCH better to me than the "Blank Check" strategy.
Posted by: DLR   2008-09-25 17:59  

#2  Sen. Chris Dodd, D-Conn., the Banking Committee chairman said, "We are very confident that we can act expeditiously."

More VIP treatment for the King of Countrywide?
Posted by: Besoeker   2008-09-25 17:40  

#1  no deal yet.
Posted by: 3dc   2008-09-25 17:30  

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