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Bush says anxiety feeding market instability

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By TERENCE HUNT / The Associated Press

Friday, Oct 10, 2008 - 11:47:27 am CDT

WASHINGTON — President Bush said Friday that the government’s financial rescue plan was aggressive enough and big enough to work, but would take time to fully kick in. “We can solve this crisis and we will,” he said in brief remarks from the White House Rose Garden.

Bush spoke as leaders of the world’s top economies gathered in Washington amid frozen credit markets, panic selling in stock markets and a looming global recession.

The president noted that major Western countries were working together in an attempt to stabilize markets and end the spreading panic, including coordinated cuts in interest rates.

Story Photo
President Bush makes a statement about the financial crisis Friday. (AP)

“Through these efforts, the world is sending an unmistakable signal. We’re in this together and we’ll come through this together,” Bush said.

Finance ministers and central bankers from the Group of Seven — the United States, Japan, Britain, Germany, France Italy and Canada — were here for a weekend meeting. Bush plans to meet with the leaders on Saturday.

Bush said he understood how Americans could be concerned about their economic future. “That anxiety can feed anxiety and that can make it hard to see all that’s being done to solve the problem,” he said.

But despite a relentless sell-off that has seen the Dow Jones industrials plunge 20 percent in the past seven trading days, Bush said, “We are a prosperous nation with immense resources and a wide range of tools at our disposal.”

The president said the new $700 billion rescue plan that he signed into law a week ago authorizes the Treasury Department to use a variety of measures to rebuild their balance sheets including “purchasing equity of financial institutions.”

It was the first time the president has mentioned suggestions that the government buy shares of banks, although it has been mentioned by other administration officials.

Since the bailout package was signed into law, the conversation about how it will be used has shifted from taxpayers buying troubled mortgages to taxpayers buying troubled banks. Or at least pieces of them.

Such a move would amount to a partial nationalization of the U.S. banking industry, a move once considered unthinkable.

The government is authorized under the law to buy “troubled assets.”

Those assets include mortgages, but according to the law, they may also include “any other financial instrument” that is “necessary to promote financial market stability ... .”

It is the government’s position that this authority extends to bank stocks.

“The plan we are executing is aggressive. It is the right plan. It will take time to have its full impact. It is flexible enough to adapt as the situation changes. And it is big enough to work,” Bush said.

He also noted that the Federal Reserve has injected hundreds of billions into the system and with other central banks has made interest-rate cuts that should help thaw frozen credit markets and enable loans to flow again.

Government insurance on bank and credit union deposit accounts has been raised to $250,000 and the Treasury is offering insurance for the first time for money-market funds, he added.

“The federal government has a comprehensive strategy and the tools necessary to address the challenges in our economy,” Bush said.

While he sought to reassure Americans that the government is doing all it can, Bush also acknowledged mounting worry among people about their retirement and investment accounts.

Bush said his administration had launched initiatives that “have helped more than 2 million Americans stay in their homes.”

He also noted “rigorous enforcement” steps taken by the Securities and Exchange Commission to make sure that some investors don’t “take advantage of the crisis to illegally manipulate the stock market.”

Stock market volatility continued, with the Dow Jones industrials falling nearly 700 points soon after trading began, regaining all of that deficit to show an advance and then turning lower again.

“Over the past few days,” Bush said, “we have witnessed a startling drop in the stock market, much of it driven by uncertainty and fear. This has been a deeply unsettling period for the American people.”

 


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rich wrote on October 10, 2008 10:02 am:
" There are 10^11 stars in the galaxy. That used to be a huge number. But it's only a hundred billion. It's less than the national deficit! We used to call them astronomical numbers. Now we should call them economical numbers. "

tired wrote on October 10, 2008 10:09 am:
" Thanks for coming along and stating the obvious George. I sure feel better now. Lord help us, just go away already. You talk, the market drops. Take the hint. "

Alan Clark wrote on October 10, 2008 10:39 am:
" This financial fiasco is the grand finale of the most reckless presidency in history. "

His thoughts wrote on October 10, 2008 10:45 am:
" I think he is more worried about what's for lunch than the economy! "

Explain this wrote on October 10, 2008 11:05 am:
" The day they first announced they rejected the $700B bailout the market tanked, the next day it looked as if we were going to have to fix it ourselves and the market rose in gains not seen in years.....shortly after that day they came back approved the $700B and ever since that point the market has plunged.....is this what the $700B was to do? "

word game wrote on October 10, 2008 11:21 am:
" Take the 6 words in the title of this article and start changing them around. I especially like "unstable bush feeding anxiety says market". "

lincolnnite wrote on October 10, 2008 11:48 am:
" So can someone tell me how this is supposed to reassure me? I can't afford my rent & all the bills anymore, with the price of everything going up I can't afford anything anymore, plus my rent is going up too?? Whats next? Soon everyone will be living on the street b/c no one can afford to live. This is ridiculous!! I stress & cry everyday over what I am going to do to survive. "

Greg wrote on October 10, 2008 12:27 pm:
" Okay, so if you voted for him, you share the blame with him. People need to understand that the republican congresses of the first six years of his term gave him all the deregulation and abdicated any responsibility for the "hard work" of governing. So if you want more of the same, vote for McCain. "

Nina wrote on October 10, 2008 12:42 pm:
" We know all too well what you've stated, Alan Clark, but crying over spilt milk...you understand. The quandary now is how to assure people the sky is not falling, so they become willing consumers again, in spite of fears and signs that the sky is indeed falling. The extreme frustration and anger many feel toward Bush, Cheney (who is might elusive these days) and the Republican-favored 'trickle down' theory, which has been tried and failed before, which is still being favored by McCain, and which only seems to enable powerful people to be more greedy and crooked - such anger is well-deserved. But to be helpful, this frustration and anger needs to find outlets in helping ourselves and our country. Insist to your reps and other government leaders that our government go into survival mode (instead of finding that bailed-out executives spent last weekend at a posh hotel having a 'conference' that cost over $440,000), so that we citizens can trust in a future, and act like it, which is the only thing that will stop feeding the panic. "

Lincoln Taxpayer wrote on October 10, 2008 12:43 pm:
" To Lincolnnite.
Wait till Lincoln tack on the cost of the new jail and that white elephant known as the arena to the property taxes then your rent will really go up. "

His Legacy wrote on October 10, 2008 12:50 pm:
" And he was concerned he wouldn't have time left to establish a memorable one. "

Arnold wrote on October 10, 2008 1:20 pm:
" "We can solve this crisis and we will". WE certainly will; beginning on November 4. It's been called a financial crisis, liquidity crisis, etc., everything but what it really is -- a crisis of failed leadership. It's time We the People turn the page on this dark chapter of out nations history. "

Dan wrote on October 10, 2008 1:51 pm:
" I would like to thank the government, both Republicans and Democrats alike, for the severe lack of leadership over the past decade. Let's take a roll call on the prime accomplishments: (1) The Irag War, (2) No new energy policy, (3) No new Social Security/Medicare path, (4) Fannie, Freddie, and the economic meltdown (5) Pork projects and a clear lack of restraint on any financial level. All of this while taking a 6 figure salary and benefitting from a pension that takes all the worry away from their own lack of a future social security. Nothing gets done because special interests on both sides are in their respective pocketbooks. If only a third party could represent America instead of special interest. Ladies and Gentleman of our branches of government, give yourself a pat on the back for a job well done. Turns out my grandparents were more than right in their fiscal conservatism. The lessons learned from the 30's may now be applied to this generation.... "

Jon wrote on October 10, 2008 3:20 pm:
" If you think this just happened in the last 8 years then you have no concept of economics or the markets...try and look back with an objective eye as far back as the 1970s to follow this thing to today. Both parties are to blame and every president from the one in the late 70s (I won't mention his name because every time I do I almost vomit), to Pres. Bush. Our government as a whole has failed us at every turn. That is the truth, neither party is clean "

Question wrote on October 11, 2008 8:48 am:
" So you want stability and you think voting for the democratic congress and democratic President will solve it. Guess what? you may be in for a surprise. My guess is you will vote for them anyways. Good luck. "

Sorry America wrote on October 11, 2008 11:21 am:
" I fear the Bush/Cheney duo will go down in history as one of the worst governing teams this nation has ever elected. From 9/11, to the Iraq war, to the economic downturn, their leadership has only worsened an already miserable situation. And I have to admit that I voted for them both times, so I guess I'm partly to blame. "