Tim Geithner - Official Thread

Re: Geithner To Address Foreclosures At 12:15 EST

Sources close to me are shorting the whole market at noon :D

Noooo....the market went down -300 yesterday.

Couldn't Obama wait an extra day before putting this guy out there again.

And what is this plan? If the rates went up on your mortgage, and you're behind. The federal govt will step in and ....do a Section 8.

Keep your mortgage affordable. So, its within a certain range of your income.
 
Re: Geithner To Address Foreclosures At 12:15 EST

Newsflash, Bernanke is speaking at 12:30

roller-coaster-1.jpg
 
Re: Geithner To Address Foreclosures At 12:15 EST

<font size="5"><center>Obama's housing fix: help banks
modify loans — or allow judges to</font size></center>



McClatchy Newspapers
By Kevin G. Hall
Tuesday, February 17, 2009


WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama is expected Wednesday to take a carrot-and-stick approach with banks and other lenders when he unveils his new plan to stop the soaring nationwide home-foreclosure rate.

He's expected to announce in Phoenix a plan to use at least $50 billion in Wall Street rescue money authorized last year to provide subsidies when banks reduce interest rates for troubled homeowners to lower the monthly payments many Americans are now struggling to pay.

That subsidy plan, details of which have yet to be formally announced, would serve as the carrot for banks to help homeowners stay in their homes and halt foreclosures, which not only result in losses for individuals and the banks, but also drag down the values of nearby homes.

Banks have joined two prior voluntary efforts during the Bush administration — Hope for Homeowners and the Federal Housing Administration's FHA Secure — but these efforts have resulted in relatively few mortgage modifications.

Now they'll have a stick waved at them if they don't comply with the subsidy plan. It'll come in the form of Obama's support for legislation pending in Congress that would allow bankruptcy court judges to modify the terms of a mortgage.

That's forbidden right now, and banks and other lending institutions fiercely oppose what they call "cram down" legislation, warning that it'll bring uncertainty for lenders, who'll respond by restricting mortgage lending.

Banks may soon have to choose between the lesser of two evils. They could either modify loans — with a subsidy — to provide lower lending rates, and lose what they might've made from the higher lending rate over the life of the loan. Or they can do nothing and run the risk that a homeowner could file for bankruptcy and then have a judge order new loan terms that allow the borrower to stay in the home — and pay the lender less money.

The president's plan also is expected to offer payments to mortgage servicers, who collect mortgage payments on behalf of investors who own the mortgages originally issued by banks but were sold into a secondary market. Servicers apparently would be offered a payment for modification on par with what they'd collect in the case of foreclosure.

The Obama administration isn't providing details, but it promises a serious new approach.

"Ten thousand people face foreclosure every day in this country. And it's a problem that not only affects the individual homeowner and their family, but oftentimes has a direct impact to home values in the neighborhood that that house or homes are on," White House spokesman Robert Gibbs told said on Tuesday. "This is a tremendously important part of what the president believes has to be done next in order to move our economy forward."

More than 2.3 million mortgages entered foreclosure proceedings last year, and by year's end almost one in 10 mortgages in the U.S. were either delinquent or in foreclosure. Some prominent economists such as Harvard University's Martin Feldstein think that one in five homes nationwide is worth less than the mortgage that was arranged to purchase it.

http://www.mcclatchydc.com/227/story/62372.html
 
Re: Geithner To Address Foreclosures At 12:15 EST

The President is makiing introducing his proposals: NOW

QueEx
 
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/...backing-for-world-currency-stuns-markets.html

US Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner shocked global markets by revealing that Washington is "quite open" to Chinese proposals for the gradual development of a global reserve currency run by the International Monetary Fund.

The dollar plunged instantly against the euro, yen, and sterling as the comments flashed across trading screens. David Bloom, currency chief at HSBC, said the apparent policy shift amounts to an earthquake in geo-finance.

"The mere fact that the US Treasury Secretary is even entertaining thoughts that the dollar may cease being the anchor of the global monetary system has caused consternation," he said.

Mr Geithner later qualified his remarks, insisting that the dollar would remain the "world's dominant reserve currency ... for a long period of time" but the seeds of doubt have been sown.

The markets appear baffled by the confused statements emanating from Washington. President Barack Obama told a new conference hours earlier that there was no threat to the reserve status of the dollar.

"I don't believe that there is a need for a global currency. The reason the dollar is strong right now is because investors consider the United States the strongest economy in the world with the most stable political system in the world," Obama said.

The Chinese proposal, outlined this week by central bank governor Zhou Xiaochuan, calls for a "super-sovereign reserve currency" under IMF management, turning the Fund into a sort of world central bank.

The idea is that the IMF should activate its dormant powers to issue Special Drawing Rights. These SDRs would expand their role over time, becoming a "widely-accepted means of payments".

Mr Bloom said that any switch towards use of SDRs has direct implications for the currency markets. At the moment, 65pc of the world's $6.8 trillion stash of foreign reserves is held in dollars. But the dollar makes up just 42pc of the basket weighting of SDRs. So any SDR purchase under current rules must favour the euro, yen and sterling.

Beijing has the backing of Russia and a clutch of emerging powers in Asia and Latin America. Economists have toyed with such schemes before but the issue has vaulted to the top of the political agenda as creditor states around the world takes fright at the extreme measures now being adopted by the Federal Reserve, especially the decision to buy US government debt directly with printed money.

Mr Bloom said the US is discovering that the sensitivities of creditors cannot be ignored. "China holds almost 30pc of the world's entire reserves. What they say matters," he said.

Mr Geithner's friendly comments about the SDR plan seem intended to soothe Chinese feelings after a spat in January over alleged currency manipulation by Beijing, but he will now have to explain his own categorical assurance to Congress on Tuesday that he would not countenance any moves towards a world currency.
 
Re: US (Timmy G) Backs World Currency Run By The IMF - SELLOUT!

This is getting quite out of hand. I hope my son and his son in time have lived full rich lives before the New World Order begins to truly change this world, seriously heaven help us all. Praise Jesus Amen. If you don't believe there is absolutely no need to comment on those that do, trust one thing for certain, and that my friends is that someone is right.
 
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