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Obama team weighs government bank to
ease crisis
By Tim Ahmann
The incoming Obama administration is considering setting
up a government-run bank to acquire bad assets clogging
the financial system, a person familiar with the Obama
team's thinking said on Saturday. The U.S. Federal
Reserve, Treasury and Federal Deposit Insurance Corp have
been in talks about ways to ease a banking crisis that is
once again deepening -- and a government-run "aggregator
bank" is among the options.
Outgoing Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson and FDIC
Chairman Sheila Bair both said on Friday a government
bank was one of a number of ideas U.S. regulators had
been discussing. The source said advisers to
President-elect Barack Obama, who takes office on
Tuesday, were also considering the idea of an aggregator
bank among a range of options that could be pursued.
David Axelrod, a top adviser to Obama, told Reuters the
new administration would have something to say about a
fresh approach to the financial crisis in "the next few
days."
"I'm not going to get into the structure of how we're
going to approach the revamped financial rescue package,"
Axelrod said after speaking to a conference of mayors in
Washington.
"What we have to do is approach this with a lot more
transparency on the front end."
In addition to steps to bolster banks, Obama officials
want to aggressively attack the underlying causes of the
credit crisis: the sharp downturn in the U.S. housing
market and the related deterioration in mortgage-related
assets.
"There are a range of things we're going to have to do to
stabilize the financial community and part of it is going
to involve housing, and part of it is going to involve
how we approach this issue generally," Axelrod said.
BACK TO THE FUTURE
In outlining the idea of an aggregator bank on Friday,
Bair and Paulson said the government could use money from
the Treasury-administered $700 billion financial rescue
fund to capitalize a new institution that would be able
to absorb toxic assets now weighing down bank balance
sheets. The hope would be that taking these bad assets
off the hands of banks would allow the banks to attract
badly needed private capital and renew lending, the
original intention behind the bailout fund known as the
Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP).
"I think the key thing is assets purchases, and if you
buy something, you have to put it somewhere," said Mark
Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Economy.com.
A surge in U.S. mortgage defaults led to a global credit
crisis that has raged since the summer of 2007. Last
week, Goldman Sachs estimated that losses worldwide could
mount to $2 trillion, about double what has been realized
so far. British Prime Minister Gordon Brown told the
Financial Times on Saturday that banks need to reveal the
true size of their losses as a step toward moving past
the crisis. While officials have been discussing
leveraging money from the U.S. bailout fund, it is not
clear whether the fund is large enough for the task at
hand.
"They may very well have to come back to ask (Congress)
for TARP Two," Zandi said.
ACTIONS NEEDED
Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke said on Tuesday it was critical
to bolster the banking system as a complement to the
effort underway in Washington to enact a huge package of
tax cuts and spending to lift the recession-mired
economy.
"Fiscal actions are unlikely to promote a lasting
recovery unless they are accompanied by strong measures
to further stabilize and strengthen the financial
system," Bernanke said, laying out three possible ways to
aid ailing banks.
The government could buy the assets, perhaps through
so-called reverse auctions, as originally planned, but
analysts said that is an extremely complicated endeavor
and it no longer seems to have traction among
policy-makers. Bernanke also said the government could
offer guarantees against losses on assets that would be
ring-fenced but remain on bank balance sheets, a tactic
the government has used to help Citigroup and Bank of
America.
The third option would be to set up bad banks with
government cash, an approach similar to the U.S.
Resolution Trust Corp, which liquidated almost $400
billion in assets from more than 700 insolvent savings
and loans institutions from 1989 to 1995.
Original at: http://finance.yahoo.com/news/Obama-team-weighs-government-rb-14091318.html
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