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With the world's financial markets on a
stomach-churning ride, the Bush administration is scrambling to get
a $700 billion rescue effort for the U.S. banking system up and
running. And Europe's central banks began to take unified actions
Monday aimed at easing the credit crisis.
The coordinated efforts by European and U.S. authorities to prop
up the banking system brought a measure of relief to markets.
European markets opened strongly Monday following Asia's lead in
response to the widespread government initiatives.
The Bush administration, meanwhile, faced a daunting task as it
moves to put together what will be one of the world's largest asset
management firms while rethinking how the program should operate.
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Neel Kashkari, an assistant Treasury secretary running the
program on an interim basis, planned to give a progress report
Monday.
In Europe, the Bank of England, the European Central Bank and
the Swiss National Bank jointly announced they would work together
to provide unlimited short-term funds to make money available to
ease the credit freeze. The Bank of Japan said it was considering a
similar move.
"The government cannot just leave people on their own to be
buffeted about," said British Prime Minister Gordon Brown.
To assist the European banks, the U.S. Federal Reserve said it
was taking actions to assure enough U.S. dollar funds were
available to meet demand.
The British central bank was making available $63 billion to the
three largest British banks to bolster their balance sheets.
The government move will leave British taxpayers owning as much
47 percent of the Royal Bank of Scotland Group PLC, and 43 percent
of Loyds TSB Group PLC and HBOS PLC, two British banks in the
process of merging. A third bank, Barclays PLC said it would not
seek government help as it boosts its capital by $11.4 billion.
"The hope is that today will mark a watershed, with vast
measures of government reassurance finally rekindling some
confidence in the shattered banking sector," said Keith Bowman, an
analysts at Hargreaves Landsdown Stockbrokers in London.
Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said during weekend meetings
with global financial powers that his department was working around
the clock to carry out the plan. His comments were meant to
convince investors that the world's largest economy is moving
quickly to get lending restarted and avert what could be a deep and
painful global recession.
Those dire concerns sent markets around the world reeling last
week, giving the Dow Jones industrial average it worst week on
record. Since peaking a year ago, the Dow is now down 40.3 percent.
U.S. stocks have lost $8.4 trillion in value over the past year.
Throughout the weekend, the administration worked to restore
confidence, using the annual meetings of the 185-nation
International Monetary Fund and World Bank to send a message that
global finance officials will do what it takes to resolve the
crisis.
The Group of Seven major industrial countries issued a
five-point action plan that pledged to do everything from
preventing major banks from failing to unfreezing credit markets.
President Bush met with G-7 finance officials at the White House
on Saturday morning and later traveled to the IMF to meet with the
Group of 20, which includes rich countries as well as major
developing nations such as China, Brazil, India and Mexico. He
stressed the need for cooperation.
In Paris, the 15 nations in Europe's single-currency zone agreed
Sunday to steps including temporarily guaranteeing bank
refinancings.
The Bush administration over the past six weeks has taken over
the nation's two biggest mortgage finance firms, Fannie Mae and
Freddie Mac, rescued American International Group, the world's
biggest insurance company, and won congressional approval of a $700
billion rescue package for the entire financial system.
As the bailout bill rushed through Congress, Paulson stressed
that the major aim was to buy bad assets, primarily mortgage-backed
securities, from financial institutions. The hope was that taking
those bad loans off the books would encourage banks to return to
more normal lending operations and unclog credit flows - the
economy's lifeblood.
Paulson said Friday that the government also would use some of
the money to buy stakes in banks. The goal is to give banks the
resources to resume lending at more normal levels.
That about-face has left the administration trying to decide how
much to devote to buying bad assets and how much to use for stock
purchases.
Lawmakers who pushed to include the stock purchase program in
the rescue bill over initial administration objections say the
stock purchases can start much faster than the effort to buy bad
assets and help restore market confidence sooner.
Sen. Charles Schumer of New York, chairman of the Joint Economic
Committee, said Sunday that he hoped the administration would
announce as soon as Monday that the stock purchases were being
launched.
"We're beginning a downward spiral, not just in finance ... but
in the whole economy. We need quick action," Schumer said on ABC's
"This Week."
Schumer and other Democrats lined up behind House Speaker Nancy
Pelosi's plan to bring lawmakers back to Washington after the Nov.
4 election to work on a second economic relief plan of up to $150
billion. It would extend jobless benefits, increase food stamp
funding and finance government construction projects.
---
AP reporter Emily Flynn Vencat in London contributed to this
story.
(Copyright 2008 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
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