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Home Headline News Commentary and Opinions No to Fast Track Banking Bailout: Let free market capitalism run its course.
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No to Fast Track Banking Bailout: Let free market capitalism run its course.

Secretary of Treasury Paulsen speaks to Press ConferenceIs the media telling the truth about the dynamic dual Paulson and Bernanke’s bailout? Do they even know the truth? Do our leaders in Congress know the truth? What exactly is President Bush taking a “bold stand” with?

Folks we are facing an historical event. If not handled with the spirit of wisdom it could throw the world into a depression. I’m not exaggerating! Over the weekend private meetings were taken place in Washington to let these two Canaanites come up with a plan to rescue the economy. In my opinion they are not rescuing you and me. Every time I listen to them on television my spirit is grieved. Looking to these men to solve this problem is the same as letting the bank robbers be in charge of the robbery investigation.

These men are asking Congress to fast track a bailout plan this week. My prayer is that the American public will call their Senators and Congressmen to “vote no” to this plan. We need to slow this decision down. Panic never offers wise solutions. This plan will not save the economy.

We cannot afford as a nation to take on a trillion dollar debt (they are starting with $700 billion) to bail out unregulated and greedy bankers without fully disclosing “in public meetings” what this plan is really all about. Weren't the bailouts of Fanny Mae, Freddie Mac, AIG and Bear Sterns enough? Here is the wording on one of the proposals that takes oversight, change or modifications away from the American people:

Sec. 8. Review. Decisions by the Secretary pursuant to the authority of this Act are non-reviewable and committed to agency discretion, and may not be reviewed by any court of law or any administrative agency.

Did you get that, non-reviewable by any court of law or agency? This is typical of these folks. If this proposal is passed it offers complete control to the very people that caused the banking problems in the first place. Do you notice that they balked at Congress even suggesting that if their proposal was accepted that they would be limited to $400,000 annual salaries?

There is also wording in the proposal that will extend the bailout to cover the debts and purchase of the “junk assets” of foreign nations.

Our leaders need our prayers! Paulson, Bernanke and the bankers should not be viewed as the "experts."

For those that think these two have the best interest of our nation in their hearts read Mark Pittman’s article about Paulson’s ties to Wall Street: I have more to say after the article.

………………………………..

Paulson's Focus on `Excesses' Shows Goldman Gorged
By Mark Pittman

Nov. 5, 2007 (Bloomberg) -- Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson says the U.S. is examining the subprime mortgage crisis to ensure that ``yesterday's excesses'' aren't repeated. He could be talking about himself and his former firm, Goldman Sachs Group Inc.

Paulson, 61, doesn't mention that Goldman still has on the market some $13 billion of almost $37 billion in bonds backed by subprime loans or second mortgages that it created while he was chief executive officer. Those bonds have an average delinquency rate of almost 22 percent, higher than the average of other subprime bonds from the period, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Goldman, the most profitable investment bank, was one of 14 primary dealers of U.S. Treasuries who contributed to a three- year binge as $1 trillion of subprime mortgages were packaged and sold to investors. The value of Goldman's outstanding subprime bonds trails Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.'s $33 billion, out of $106.8 billion created during Paulson's years at Goldman, and Morgan Stanley's $28.8 billion, out of $82.5 billion.

``He should admit to having been involved in creating the problem that we have now,'' said Representative Brad Miller, a North Carolina Democrat, who introduced a bill Oct. 22 to make firms packaging subprime mortgages liable for bad loans in some circumstances.

The subprime crisis developed earlier this year when falling home prices triggered defaults by homeowners who wouldn't have normally qualified for a mortgage. Many were unable or unwilling to make adjustable-rate payments that were due to rise. Home foreclosures doubled in the third quarter from a year earlier to 635,159, RealtyTrac reported Nov. 1.

Largely Contained

Starting in March, Paulson said the damage was ``largely contained'' and was no risk to the larger economy. When other credit markets began to be affected, he and others began pushing for solutions.

``I can't help but notice that when middle-class homeowners were losing their homes to foreclosure, he was pretty nonchalant about it,'' Miller said of Paulson. ``But when Wall Street CEOs start seeing trouble in their absurdly complicated financial instruments built on the mortgages of middle-class homeowners, he feels their pain.''

Paulson declined to comment through spokeswoman Michele Davis, who said, ``he can't talk about Goldman business.'' Spokesman Michael DuVally of New York-based Goldman declined to say how much subprime mortgages contributed to the investment bank's profits, or Paulson's compensation, during his tenure from May 1999 through June 2006.

Goldman paid Paulson $38.5 million for 2005, and he received an $18.7 million bonus for the first half of last year.

Bet Against Subprime

While competitors reported losses from their subprime portfolios in recent months, Goldman said Sept. 20 that it profited from the market's decline by using derivatives to bet that mortgage securities would continue to fall.

Paulson's involvement in the subprime crisis ``points out that there needs to be complete accountability up and down the system,'' said Allen Fishbein, the director of credit and housing policy at the Consumer Federation of America in Washington. ``Goldman wasn't alone. All the brokerages did this.''

Goldman ranks 10th among 118 issuers, based on the amount of subprime loans still on the market. Bonds with a face value of $484.6 billion remain from those created in the years Paulson ran Goldman.

Countrywide

Market leader Countrywide Financial Corp. has $40.7 billion in subprime bonds still on the market, or 8.4 percent of the total. GMAC LLC's Residential Capital LLC has $34.4 billion. Lehman's $33.1 billion leads Wall Street firms. The amounts tally the securities issued, not what remains on the banks' books.

Calabasas, California-based Countrywide, the nation's biggest home lender; ResCap, the Minneapolis-based home lending arm of General Motors Corp.'s finance subsidiary; and Goldman were among those competing to create pools of mortgages consisting mostly of subprime loans, made to borrowers with poor credit records or high debt.

Goldman has more subprime debt outstanding than Credit Suisse, which has almost $10 billion; Citigroup Inc., with $6.8 billion; or JPMorgan Chase & Co., with $7.8 billion.

Losses on holdings of subprime securities have already claimed the jobs of two chief executive officers. Citigroup yesterday accepted the resignation of CEO Charles Prince after saying its holdings of subprime securities may cause writedowns of as much as $11 billion. Merrill Lynch CEO Stan O'Neal left last week amid writedowns of more than $8 billion.

House Bill

The data on subprime bonds, compiled by Bloomberg from reports by debt servicing companies, don't include all of the mortgage bond offerings managed by any of the firms. That's because all of them handle offerings by bond issuers outside of Wall Street, including Irvine, California-based New Century Financial Corp., a subprime lender now in bankruptcy.

The House bill Miller introduced is backed by Representative Barney Frank, the Massachusetts Democrat who is chairman of the Financial Services Committee. One provision would make firms that package and sell subprime mortgages liable for damages if loans violate certain minimum standards, including ensuring a borrower's reasonable ability to repay.

Paulson criticized the liability idea in an Oct. 16 speech at Georgetown University in Washington.
``We need to ensure yesterday's excesses are not repeated tomorrow,'' Paulson said. Penalizing Wall Street for packaging mortgage loans ``is not the answer to the problem,'' he said.

Potential Paralysis

The House measure would ``potentially paralyze securitization,'' which, Paulson said, has been ``extremely valuable in extending the availability of credit to millions of homeowners nationwide and lowering the cost of financing.''

In New Delhi on Oct. 30, Paulson repeated his pledge to find what went wrong in the financial system. ``We need to shed light on it and make the policy adjustments so this doesn't happen again,'' he said.

When the subprime mortgage issue exploded as an economic and political issue this year, Federal Reserve Board Chairman Ben S. Bernanke was the federal government's point man. He was called before Congress to defend regulators' failure to prevent lending abuses.
Paulson's public role increased in the past month as the credit crunch spread to the commercial paper markets and off- balance-sheet structured investment vehicles, known as SIVs. He urged major lenders in a Sept. 12 meeting in Washington to help subprime borrowers keep their homes.

Saving SIVs

Paulson and Robert Steel, a former Goldman Sachs vice chairman who is the Treasury's undersecretary for domestic finance, helped persuade Citigroup and other banks to set up an $80 billion partnership to buy assets from any SIVs that couldn't refinance their debt.
Goldman under Paulson created 58 mortgage pools branded under the acronym of GSAMP, which originally stood for Goldman Sachs Alternative Mortgage Products, starting in July 2002. The value of the loans at risk of default is almost 50 percent for one Goldman pool, according to Bloomberg data, which includes pools identified as containing home equity financings as well as subprime mortgages.

The average delinquency rate for subprime bonds sold from May 1999 through June 2006 is 19.3 percent as of yesterday, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Among the top 20 issuers that have more than $5 billion outstanding, Goldman's GSAMP ranks ninth with 21.7 percent for delinquencies of 60 days or more, foreclosures or real estate that has been taken away from borrowers.

Higher Delinquencies

That rate is higher than for JPMorgan, with 20.8, and Citigroup, with 19.9 percent, according to data compiled by Bloomberg through October. Goldman's delinquency rate is lower than the 26.2 percent for bonds in Deutsche Bank AG's ACE trust, as well as 25.1 percent for Barclays Capital's SABR and 23.8 percent for Merrill Lynch's MLMI.

One of Goldman's bonds, GSAMP 2006-HE2 B2, is valued at 47 cents on the dollar, to yield 14.5 percent, according to Merrill Lynch. The pool, which was sold March 1, 2006, already has a delinquency rate of 16.4 percent. The bond was cut five levels from investment-grade Baa2 to a junk rating of B1 on Oct. 11 by Moody's Investors Service.
End

……………………………….

It’s interesting that Lehman failed without Paulson wanting an emergency bailout but when Goldman Sachs stock fell 40% last Thursday he wanted a fast track bailout.

In the long run this bailout cannot help the economy. Please consider emailing and calling your Senators and Congressman to vote no on a fast track plan to bail out these banks. The market is much better at solving problems than government. Our leaders have not had enough time to review this plan (heist).

Senators - http://www.senate.gov/general/contact_information/senators_cfm.cfm
Congressman - https://forms.house.gov/wyr/welcome.shtml

Nancy Pelosi - http://www.house.gov/pelosi/contact/contact.html

Senator Bunning -
http://bunning.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?FuseAction=Contact.ContactForm

Senator Bunning is the only Senator that has spoken against this plan. Prayerfully others will too.

God bless America!

Christ is still on the throne,

Your partner,

Jonas Clark





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0
It's Our Money Plan
written by patriot, September 27, 2008
Hi Noone:

That's a great plan. They should pay off the debt they owe the American people... I Agree.
0
it's our money
written by noone, September 27, 2008

OK.....here's a plan I could live with. A REAL stimulus package....

Hi folks, I'm against the $85,000,000,000.00 bailout of AIG. Instead, I'm
in favor of giving $85,000,000,000 to America in a We Deserve It Dividend.
To make the math simple, let's assume there are 200,000,000 bonafide U.S.
Citizens 18+. Our population is about 301,000,000 +/- counting every man,
woman and child.

So 200,000,000 might be a fair stab at adults 18 and up.. So divide 200
million adults 18+ into $85 billon that equals $425,000.00. My plan is to
give $425,000 to every person 18+ as a We Deserve It Dividend.

Of course, it would NOT be tax free.

So let's assume a tax rate of 30%. Every individual 18+ has to pay
$127,500.00 in taxes.

That sends $25,500,000,000 right back to Uncle Sam. But it means that
every adult 18+ has $297,500.00 in their pocket.

A husband and wife team has $595,000.00. What would you do with
$297,500.00 to $595,000.00 in your family?

Pay off your mortgage - housing crisis solved.

Repay college loans - what a great boost to new grads.



Put away money for college - it'll be there.



Save in a bank - create money to loan to entrepreneurs.

Buy a new car - create jobs Invest in the market - capital drives growth.



Pay for your parent's medical insurance - health care improves.



Enable Deadbeat Dads to come clean - or else!



Remember, this is for every adult U S Citizen 18+ including the folks who
lost their jobs at Lehman Brothers and every other company that is cutting
back. And, of course, for those serving in our Armed Forces. If we're
going to re-distribute wealth let's really do it ... instead of trickling
out a puny $1000.00 ("vote buy") economic incentive that is being proposed
by one of our candidates for President. If we're going to do an $85
billion bailout, let's bail out every adult U S Citizen 18+!



As for AIG - liquidate it. Sell off its parts. Let American General go
back to being American General.

Sell off the real estate. Let the private sector bargain hunters cut it up
and clean it up. Here's my rationale. We deserve it and AIG doesn't. Sure
it's a crazy idea that can "never work." But can you imagine the
Coast-To-Coast Block Party! How do you spell Economic Boom? I trust my
fellow adult Americans to know how to use the $85 Billion We Deserve It
Dividend more than do the geniuses at AIG or in Washington DC.

And remember, The Birk plan only really costs $59.5 Billion because $25.5
Billion is returned instantly in taxes to Uncle Sam.



Ahhh...I feel so much better getting that off my chest.

Kindest personal regards,





0
...
written by Georgia Hardy, September 24, 2008
I think this is a fantastic article, I wish everyone in America could see this article. I belive what you have said is the truth. I pray that more men of God would stand up for the truth. I pray for you & your family Ps. 119 God protection & for the U.S. I plan on contacting our Senator.

God Bless & Keep you,
Georgia
0
...
written by Shane, September 24, 2008
I am a Realtor in Georgia and I will say it is a shame that reckless lending was indeed taken to the extreme over the past 6 yrs. I have only held a real estate license for just 2 yrs and I can honestly say I got in just as home sales & prices began slipping as foreclosure inventory began climbing. As banks began clamping down on their lending, now there are fewer and fewer buyers. "Will the qualified buyers with great credit please stand up!"?

As they've slid more and more it's now quite apparent that a "market correction" isn't going to occur suddenly. If what I've heard is correct (and I'm fairly confident it is) the resetting of subprime 5-1-ARM's loans made from 2002-2005 should give us an idea of how long the brunt of defaults will continue. If this is true we may be looking at a high volume of foreclosures until around 2010!

Not exactly what I had in mind, when I signed up... But, I choose to accept that this is the market I have to work with. I must use this to my advantage.

busy
 
Congress banking bailout votes

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