ap

Skip to content

Breaking News

PUBLISHED:
Getting your player ready...

WASHINGTON — Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner could announce as soon as Monday his much-anticipated plan to get toxic assets off the books of the country’s struggling banks, administration and industry officials said.

The plan will use the Federal Reserve and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. to make the resources of the government’s $700 billion financial rescue fund go further, the officials said Friday.

Geithner is being forced to tap the Fed and the FDIC for support because the prospects for getting additional support from Congress for the bailout effort have dimmed given the recent uproar over millions of dollars in bonuses provided to troubled insurance giant American International Group Inc.

The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly about Geithner’s plan.

Geithner’s initial proposal last month to overhaul the financial rescue program was panned by investors, who were disappointed in a lack of specifics. The Dow Jones industrial average tumbled 380 points on the day the original program was announced.

Geithner’s new plan would tap the resources of the Fed and the FDIC to attack what many analysts see as the major failing of the bank rescue effort so far: the failure to rid banks’ of more than $1 trillion in bad loans and other toxic assets weighing down their books.

As a result, banks have been unable to shake off the effects of the worst financial crisis to hit the country in seven decades.

Three components

Geithner’s plan will have these major parts:

• One program will use the bailout fund to create a public-private partnership to back purchases of bad assets by private investors.

• A second portion will expand a recently launched program being run by the Federal Reserve called the Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility. That program is providing loans for investors to buy assets backed by consumer debt in an effort to make it easier for consumers to get auto, student and credit-card loans. Under Geithner’s proposal, this program would be expanded to support investors’ purchases of banks’ toxic assets.

• The third part of the Geith ner plan would utilize the resources of the FDIC, the agency that guarantees bank deposits, to purchase toxic assets.

RevContent Feed

More in News