Top News: Paulson to push for oversight reforms - reports


Reuters - Published: June 19, 2008
http://www.reuters.com/article/marketsNews/idUSN1928844120080619


WASHINGTON, June 18 (Reuters) - U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson is 
expected to urge that the Federal Reserve be given new powers to regulate Wall 
Street after the collapse of brokerage Bear Stearns Cos. Inc., U.S. media 
reported on Wednesday.

In a speech to be delivered on Thursday, Paulson will say that the fall of Bear 
Stearns has expedited the need for the government to address the "outdated" 
regulatory oversight structure while not intervening too much in the 
functioning of markets, The Wall Street Journal and The Washington Post said.

"We should quickly consider how to most appropriately give the Fed the 
authority to access necessary information from highly complex financial 
institutions and the responsibility to intervene in order to protect the 
system, so they can carry out the role our nation has come to expect -- 
stabilizing the overall system when it is threatened," Paulson will say, 
according to prepared remarks obtained by the newspapers.

Bear Stearns, once the fifth-largest U.S. investment bank, was sold in March to 
JPMorgan Chase & Co in an emergency takeover deal orchestrated by the U.S. 
central bank in close consultation with the Treasury Department.

In a speech earlier this month, New York Federal Reserve President Timothy 
Geithner said regulatory reforms should mitigate and reduce the need for future 
interventions, but that it was not realistic to attempt pre-emptively to 
diffuse pockets of risk and leverage.

"I do believe, however, that we can make the system better able to handle 
failure by making the shock absorbers stronger," Geithner said.

The Bear Stearns takeover came after the firm's sudden collapse, when investors 
and trading partners withdrew their business and their cash from a bank heavily 
exposed to the U.S. mortgage crisis.

Top U.S. regulators defended the rescue arguing that Bear Stearns could not be 
allowed to collapse because it could have shattered confidence in financial 
markets and caused lasting damage to the economy.

It was the Federal Reserve's first rescue of a broker since the Great 
Depression in an effort to soothe financial markets roiled by fallout from 
rising mortgage defaults.







-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-- 
# Look at market fluctuations as your friend rather than your enemy; profit 
from folly rather than participate in it. "A good momentum is a good 
opportunity". 

# We simply attempt to be fearful when others are greedy and to be greedy only 
when others are fearful. "Buy when you cannot find a Bull". 

# Only buy something that you'd be perfectly happy to hold if the market shut 
down for 10 years. 

--Warren Buffett Quotes -- 
Smart Investment ideas 

------------------------------------------------------------


      

Kirim email ke