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标题[新闻] 美政府将组庞大组织解决毒债问题
时间Fri Sep 19 12:04:32 2008
标题:US push for crisis breakthrough
By Krishna Guha in Washington, Michael Mackenzie in New York, Ralph
Atkins in Frankfurt and Paul Davies in London
Published: September 18 2008 09:10 | Last updated: September 19 2008
01:37
A breakthrough agreement to create a giant US government-sponsored
vehicle to take on toxic assets in the financial system looked
possible on Thursday night as Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson,
Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke and top lawmakers convened a
dramatic meeting to discuss the financial crisis.
The US Treasury said the meeting discussed a “comprehensive approach
to address the illiquid assets on bank balance sheets that are at the
underlying source of the current stresses in our financial
institutions and financial markets. “
The Treasury added that Mr Paulson and Mr Bernanke were “exploring
all options, legislative and administrative, and expect to work
through the weekend with Congressional leaders to finalise a way
forward”.
Senate Democratic leader Harry Reid said the administration had not
yet presented a detailed proposal but congressional leaders looked
forward to receiving one “in a matter of hours not days”.
Hope that a deal could be in sight to create a vehicle loosely
modelled on the Resolution Trust Corporation used to clean up the
mess after the Savings and Loan crisis of the 1980s fuelled a late
surge in stocks on Thursday, with the US S&P 500 index closing up 4.3
per cent, the biggest gain in nearly six years.
This capped a remarkable day that began with a giant effort by the
world’s central banks to support market liquidity. The central banks
offered an extra $180bn to banks outside the US that are desperate
for dollars. Meanwhile, regulators mounted fresh assaults on
short-sellers dragging down bank shares. The UK’s watchdog took the
drastic steps of banning the short-selling of financial stocks – a
move unprecedented in modern times.
Treasury and Fed officials discussed the idea of creating a
government-sponsored vehicle to deal with toxic assets in recent days
and sounded out leaders on Wall Street. But Mr Paulson was reluctant
to put a plan forward unless he was confident it would pass Congress,
for fear that a failed effort would destroy what remains of market
confidence.
Until the middle of this week, received wisdom was that it would be
impossible to agree complex legislation putting large amounts of
taxpayer money with very few legislative days left before the
election.
Even on Thursday, Democratic senator Charles Schumer said that the
RTC itself was not the right model for dealing with this crisis.
The discussions are certain to be fraught. Democrats may insist that
any rescue involves aid for troubled homeowners as well as the
financial sector. This would likely be resisted by many Republicans
in Congress, some of whom are very hostile to putting more taxpayer
money at risk.
However, it appears that the terrifying events of the past week may
have changed the political landscape so profoundly as to make
RTC-type legislation possible – particularly if it came as part of a
wider plan to help people threatened by the crisis. Some experts have
suggested extending depositor protections, including to money market
mutual funds.
Earlier, the Federal Reserve gave central banks in Japan, the
eurozone, the UK, Switzerland and Canada $180bn to lend on to local
banks that cannot access its onshore dollar lending facilities.
The central banks said they were taking “co-ordinated measures
designed to address the continued elevated pressures in US dollar
short-term funding markets”. They promised to “continue to work
together closely” and to take “appropriate steps to address the
ongoing problems”.
The move had some success in bringing down overnight borrowing rates
that had hit extraordinary levels on Wednesday and brought barometers
of systemic stress back from historic highs.
However, markets remained under enormous pressure, and the cost of
borrowing money for periods of more than a few days went up in spite
of the central bank operation.
Many expect further giant liquidity operations in the coming days. “
It really felt like we were teetering on the brink of absolute
disaster yesterday and it was still pretty grim at the start of today,
” said a senior liquidity manager at one large European bank.
Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2008
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/e91b24b6-8557-11dd-a1ac-0000779fd18c.html
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