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Akron home prices rank best in college-town poll
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Unusual sports bar to be sold at auction
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Bank helps more save their homes
Circle K on Brown Street robbed
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Brown still testing Cavs' lineup
Humane Society telethon short of goal
'Docs Who Rock' delivers excitement
Kosar would be wrong call as GM
Blogs:
Pets:
Cats are trainable — and that's not a punchline
The Heldenfiles:
Monday Notebook
Patrick McManamon:
Time for Kokinis, Browns to agree and part ways
Akron Zips:
Zips tip off tomorrow
Tribe Matters:
Indians announce spring dates
Cleveland Browns:
Mangini doesn't name a quarterback
Kent State Sports:
KSU Notes – November 9
Cleveland Cavaliers:
Shaq: It’s All About Winning Championships
Buckeye Blogging:
Weekly ‘B’ Deck Report – New Mexico St.
Varsity Letters:
Walsh Jesuit’s Caponi commits to Duquesne
All Da King's Men:
If It Looks Like Islamic Terrorism…
Blog of Mass Destruction:
Dems Message To Women: Don't Enjoy The Sex
Akron Law Café:
Abortion Analogies
See Jane Style:
Muffle Your Muffler
Car Chase:
Clock Tender- Extending the Life of Collector Car Clocks
Let's Talk Real Estate:
Rumors: Akron Starbucks Closing
Ohio Travels with Betty:
Jack is looking for a trip to Southern Ohio the week of November 16.
Sound Check:
The Black Keys to perform benefit concert at Musica on November 27
HRLite House:
Personal Rant – Why People Do Not Live in Northeast Ohio
Akron Gamer:
New 'Call of Duty' could set entertainment record
By Martin Crutsinger and Charles Babington
Associated Press writers
POSTED: 08:54 p.m. EDT, Oct 03, 2008
WASHINGTON: Signed and sealed, the $700 billion bailout now must be delivered.
After 14 days, three votes and billions of dollars in stock market losses to get the massive financial rescue through Congress, the government is rushing to develop a plan for spending the money.
Still, it will likely be at least a month before funds are flowing to ailing financial institutions from the bill signed by President Bush shortly after passing the House on Friday.
Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said he did not wait for final approval of the measure to begin preparation. He has been lining up outside advisers as his staff works out details on a multitude of complex issues.
For instance, the government must decide how it will determine which bad assets to buy from banks and how those purchases will be made. One possibility being considered is a process known as a reverse auction in which the winners would be the financial firms willing to sell their assets for less money to the government, say 50 cents on the dollar instead of 60 cents.
''We have been doing a lot of work, a lot of thinking getting ready for this,'' Paulson told reporters at Treasury. ''We will be going out and lining up some advisers from the private sector.''
The bill, H.R. 1424 all 451 pages of it gives Treasury the power to spend up to $700 billion to buy bad debt from banks, credit unions, thrifts and insurance companies. The hope is that by shoring up their books, trust will be restored to the financial system, banks will begin lending again, and it will start the economy on the road to recovery.
Over the next few weeks, the government will have to determine what price to pay for complex mortgage-backed securities that have plunged in value because of the worst slump in housing in decades. The goal is to take enough of these toxic assets off the books of financial institutions to bring an end to the severe credit crisis, which has caused the biggest upheaval on Wall Street since the 1929 stock market crash.
To help them do that, Treasury expects to retain at least five and maybe as many as 10 asset management companies to operate the program, a department official said.
Besides contracting with these firms, Treasury will be hiring about two dozen new employees, including accountants, experts in asset management, financial advisers, bankers and attorneys, to help run the program, said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because details have not been publicly announced.
The successful House vote came four days after the House defeated the first bailout bill, sending the Dow Jones industrial average plunging by 778 points, its worst one-day point loss on record. Congressional leaders and the administration worked the rest of the week to get the proposal back on track.
The legislation that Paulson sent Congress two weeks ago was only three pages long. It grew to 110 pages during negotiations with key lawmakers who objected to giving the administration sweeping authority with no congressional oversight.
Congressional negotiators broke the $700 billion into installments of $250 billion, then another $100 billion and the final $350 billion upon congressional approval.
They also added extensive oversight provisions and limits on executive compensation for firms participating in the program and gave the government the power to take equity stakes in participating companies to guarantee that taxpayers will benefit if the financial firms return to health with the government's assistance.
The Senate temporarily increased bank deposit insurance to $250,000, up from $100,000, and included a number of tax breaks.
Congress isn't through with the issue yet.
Leaders promised the biggest changes in government regulation of financial companies since the 1930s, and no fewer than five hearings already were scheduled in the House Monday on the collapse of investment bank Lehman Brothers, Tuesday on the $85 billion bailout of insurance giant American International Group, Oct. 16 on hedge funds, Oct. 17 on the actions of credit rating agencies and Oct. 23 on the role of federal regulators.
''It will be our job to enact and I think it will be comparable to what Franklin Roosevelt and the Congress did in the New Deal a set of regulations for all of the financial industry,'' said House Financial Services Chairman Barney Frank, D-Mass.
AP Business Writer Marcy Gordon contributed to this report.
WASHINGTON: Signed and sealed, the $700 billion bailout now must be delivered.
After 14 days, three votes and billions of dollars in stock market losses to get the massive financial rescue through Congress, the government is rushing to develop a plan for spending the money.
Still, it will likely be at least a month before funds are flowing to ailing financial institutions from the bill signed by President Bush shortly after passing the House on Friday.
Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said he did not wait for final approval of the measure to begin preparation. He has been lining up outside advisers as his staff works out details on a multitude of complex issues.
For instance, the government must decide how it will determine which bad assets to buy from banks and how those purchases will be made. One possibility being considered is a process known as a reverse auction in which the winners would be the financial firms willing to sell their assets for less money to the government, say 50 cents on the dollar instead of 60 cents.
''We have been doing a lot of work, a lot of thinking getting ready for this,'' Paulson told reporters at Treasury. ''We will be going out and lining up some advisers from the private sector.''
The bill, H.R. 1424 all 451 pages of it gives Treasury the power to spend up to $700 billion to buy bad debt from banks, credit unions, thrifts and insurance companies. The hope is that by shoring up their books, trust will be restored to the financial system, banks will begin lending again, and it will start the economy on the road to recovery.
Over the next few weeks, the government will have to determine what price to pay for complex mortgage-backed securities that have plunged in value because of the worst slump in housing in decades. The goal is to take enough of these toxic assets off the books of financial institutions to bring an end to the severe credit crisis, which has caused the biggest upheaval on Wall Street since the 1929 stock market crash.
To help them do that, Treasury expects to retain at least five and maybe as many as 10 asset management companies to operate the program, a department official said.
Besides contracting with these firms, Treasury will be hiring about two dozen new employees, including accountants, experts in asset management, financial advisers, bankers and attorneys, to help run the program, said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because details have not been publicly announced.
The successful House vote came four days after the House defeated the first bailout bill, sending the Dow Jones industrial average plunging by 778 points, its worst one-day point loss on record. Congressional leaders and the administration worked the rest of the week to get the proposal back on track.
The legislation that Paulson sent Congress two weeks ago was only three pages long. It grew to 110 pages during negotiations with key lawmakers who objected to giving the administration sweeping authority with no congressional oversight.
Congressional negotiators broke the $700 billion into installments of $250 billion, then another $100 billion and the final $350 billion upon congressional approval.
They also added extensive oversight provisions and limits on executive compensation for firms participating in the program and gave the government the power to take equity stakes in participating companies to guarantee that taxpayers will benefit if the financial firms return to health with the government's assistance.
The Senate temporarily increased bank deposit insurance to $250,000, up from $100,000, and included a number of tax breaks.
Congress isn't through with the issue yet.
Leaders promised the biggest changes in government regulation of financial companies since the 1930s, and no fewer than five hearings already were scheduled in the House Monday on the collapse of investment bank Lehman Brothers, Tuesday on the $85 billion bailout of insurance giant American International Group, Oct. 16 on hedge funds, Oct. 17 on the actions of credit rating agencies and Oct. 23 on the role of federal regulators.
''It will be our job to enact and I think it will be comparable to what Franklin Roosevelt and the Congress did in the New Deal a set of regulations for all of the financial industry,'' said House Financial Services Chairman Barney Frank, D-Mass.
AP Business Writer Marcy Gordon contributed to this report.
SHhhh! Not a word...? They don't want to talk about it...?
HOW MUCH MORE MONEY MUST TAXPAYERS PAY OUT, TO SUPPORT THE EMPLOYERS IMPORTED POVERTY INTO AMERICA.
Revealed is the ugly fact that banks and other finance institution lobbied our already corrupt politicians, to allow illegal aliens buy homes they were unable to afford. Allowing illegal aliens to use IRS (ITIN) numbers, because they could not be issued legal Social Security numbers.
This shows a violation of our sovereignty laws, and shows the length greedy Wall Street opportunists will use. www.familysecuritymatters.org/publications/id.1258/pub_detail.asp Now the middle class already overburdened with war appropriation funds, is still force to pay for the education, free health-care and Federal, state welfare handouts for illegal criminals. SIGN UP FOR THE SAVE ACT(H.R.4088) enforcement 'ONLY' law at www.numbersusa.com.
SIGN JUDICIAL WATCH, A LEGAL ORGANIZATIONS PETITION, TO RESCIND ALL 'SANCTUARY CITIES & STATES. www.sanctuarybusters.org/?source. www.numbersusa.com to Petition the SAVE ACT. For immigration facts not propaganda or lies,
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