Official: Working Group on Financial Markets (Plunge Protection Team) to the rescue!

Discussion in 'Trading' started by crgarcia, Oct 6, 2008.

  1. AP
    Treasury and Fed pledge rapid response to crisis

    Monday October 6, 9:19 am ET
    By Martin Crutsinger and Jeannine Aversa, AP Economics Writer

    Treasury and Fed pledge to move with substantial force to implement $700 billion rescue plan

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The president's top economic advisers are pledging to work with their counterparts around the world to restore confidence and stability to financial markets.

    The President's Working Group on Financial Markets said in a statement Monday it planned to quickly implement the expanded authorities granted to federal regulators by the $700 billion rescue package passed on Friday. The working group was formed after the 1987 stock market crash.

    The group, which includes Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke, said it planned to move "with substantial force on a number of fronts."

    The statement was one of a number of rapid-fire announcements released early Monday before Wall Street stocks began trading.

    It came as European governments took steps to limit the damage from the growing global financial crisis. Among other things, the governments of Germany, Ireland and Greece said they would guarantee bank deposits.

    In a fresh effort to loosen dangerous credit clogs, the Federal Reserve said it will significantly expand its loan program to squeezed banks by billions of dollars.

    The Fed said that 28-day and 84-day cash loans being made available to banks will be boosted to $150 billion a piece, effective Monday. Those increases will eventually bring the amounts outstanding under the program to $600 billion.

    Loans that will be made available in November to banks also will be increased to $150 billion each. That makes a total of $900 billion in credit potentially outstanding over year end, the Fed said. Banks have a chance to bid on a slice of the cash loans at Fed auctions.

    The Fed also said it will begin paying interest on commercial banks' reserves, another way to expand the Fed's resources to battle the worst credit crisis in decades.

    Congress in the $700 billion bailout bill President Bush signed on Friday gave the Fed the power to pay interest on those reserves for the first time. The law accelerated the effective date to October of this year versus in 2011. That will encourage banks to keep more resources at the central bank.

    Meanwhile, Treasury said it would expand the size of its upcoming debt auctions to handle the increased borrowing needs to fund the $700 billion bailout effort, which is expected to buy about $50 billion in troubled assets each month. Treasury said it was considering bringing back the three-year note besides expanding the size of other debt auctions.

    The statement from the president's working group laid out a number of initiatives that the Treasury, the Fed and other government regulators including the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. would be undertaking.

    "The diversity of institutions and markets under stress, and the magnitude and complexity of the adjustment under way, requires that the tools available to policymakers, regulators and supervisors be used in forceful and coordinated ways across regulatory and supervisory agencies in the United States and throughout the world," the working group said in its statement.

    Over the weekend, governments across Europe rushed to prop up failing banks. The German government and financial industry agreed on a $68 billion bailout for commercial-property lender Hypo Real Estate Holding AG, while France's BNP Paribas agreed to acquire a 75 percent stake in Fortis' Belgium bank after a government rescue failed.

    Global markets sold off Monday. In Asia, the Nikkei 225 closed 4.25 percent lower. Europe's stock markets also declined, with the FTSE-100 down 2.72 percent, Germany's DAX down 5.04 percent, and France's CAC-40 down 5.501 percent.

    Major U.S. indexes were ready to open lower as well. Dow Jones industrial average futures fell 173, or 1.70 percent, to 10,191. Standard & Poor's 500 index futures fell 25.80, or 2.33 percent, to 1,082.50, while Nasdaq 100 futures fell 31.25, or 2.12 percent, to 1,446.25.

    The anxiety was again obvious in the credit markets. The yield on the three-month Treasury bill slipped to 0.40 percent from 0.50 percent late Friday. Demand for bills remains high because of their safety; investors are willing to take extremely low returns just to have their money in a secure place.

    Associated Press Business Writer Joe Bel Bruno in New York contributed to this report.

    http://biz.yahoo.com/ap/081006/meltdown_administration.html
     
  2. Plunge Protection Team has been fired!
    A new team is being formed from two secret organizations. "The Buzzardbros Group" and "New Vulture Ventures" are teaming up to save the market! They are in a holding pattern waiting for the markets to get ripe. Then they will swoop down on what ever is left of the carcasses and have a feast to save the day. Your Tax Dollars hard at work:D
     
  3. ridonculous.