Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Paulson, Bernanke,.Bair, Et al, Take Actions to Stabilize Financial Markets VIDEO

Henry M. Paulson, Jr., Ben Bernanke, Sheila C. BairThe President's Working Group on Financial Markets made a statement today on a series of comprehensive actions to strengthen public confidence in our financial institutions and restore functioning of our credit markets.
President's Working Group Announcement on Market Stability Initiative: Treasury Secretary Henry M. Paulson, Jr., Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke, FDIC Chairman Sheila C. Bair, SEC Chairman Christopher Cox, CFTC Chairman Walter Lukken, OCC Comptroller John Dugan, OTS Director John M. Reich.

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Statement by Secretary Henry M. Paulson, Jr. on Actions to Protect the U.S. Economy

Washington, DC-- Treasury today issued the following statement by Secretary Henry M. Paulson, Jr. on actions to protect the economy and restore confidence and stability to our financial markets:

America is a strong nation. We are a confident and optimistic people. Our confidence is born out of our long history of meeting every challenge we face. Time and time again our nation has faced adversity and time and time again we have overcome it and risen to new heights. This time will be no different.

Today, there is a lack of confidence in our financial system – a lack of confidence that must be conquered because it poses an enormous threat to our economy. Investors are unwilling to lend to banks, and healthy banks are unwilling to lend to each other and to consumers and businesses.

In recent weeks, the American people have felt the effects of a frozen financial system. They have seen reduced values in their retirement and investment accounts. They have worried about meeting payrolls and they have worried about losing their jobs. Families all across our Nation have gone through long days and long nights of concern about their financial situations today, and their financial situations tomorrow. Without confidence that their most basic financial needs will be met, Americans lose confidence in our economy, and this is unacceptable.

President Bush has directed me to consider all necessary steps to restore confidence and stability to our financial markets and get credit flowing again. Ten days ago Congress gave important new tools to the Treasury, the Federal Reserve and the FDIC to meet the challenges posed to our economy. My colleagues and I are working creatively and collaboratively to deploy these tools and direct our powers at this disruption to our economy.

Today we are taking decisive actions to protect the US economy. We regret having to take these actions. Today's actions are not what we ever wanted to do – but today's actions are what we must do to restore confidence to our financial system.

Today I am announcing that the Treasury will purchase equity stakes in a wide array of banks and thrifts. Government owning a stake in any private U.S. company is objectionable to most Americans – me included. Yet the alternative of leaving businesses and consumers without access to financing is totally unacceptable. When financing isn't available, consumers and businesses shrink their spending, which leads to businesses cutting jobs and even closing up shop.

To avoid that outcome, we must restore confidence in our financial system. The first step in that effort is a plan to make capital available on attractive terms to a broad array of banks and thrifts, so they can provide credit to our economy. From the $700 billion financial rescue package, Treasury will make $250 billion in capital available to U.S. financial institutions in the form of preferred stock. Institutions that sell shares to the government will accept restrictions on executive compensation, including a clawback provision and a ban on golden parachutes during the period that Treasury holds equity issued through this program. In addition, taxpayers will not only own shares that should be paid back with a reasonable return, but also will receive warrants for common shares in participating institutions. We expect all participating banks to continue and to strengthen their efforts to help struggling homeowners who can afford their homes avoid foreclosure. Foreclosures not only hurt the families who lose their homes, they hurt neighborhoods, communities and our economy as a whole.

While many banks have suffered significant losses during this period of market turmoil, many others have plenty of capital to get through this period, but are not positioned to lend as widely as is necessary to support our economy. Our goal is to see a wide array of healthy institutions sell preferred shares to the Treasury, and raise additional private capital, so that they can make more loans to businesses and consumers across the nation. At a time when events naturally make even the most daring investors more risk-averse, the needs of our economy require that our financial institutions not take this new capital to hoard it, but to deploy it.

Nine large financial institutions have already agreed to participate in this program. They have agreed to sell preferred shares to the US government, on the same terms that will be available to a broad array of small and medium-sized banks and thrifts across the nation. These are healthy institutions, and they have taken this step for the good of the U.S. economy. As these healthy institutions increase their capital base, they will be able to increase their funding to U.S. consumers and businesses.

I am joined here this morning by Chairman Bernanke and Chairman Bair, who have also taken extraordinary actions to support investor confidence in our financial system, so that funds will again flow through our banks to the U.S. economy. Each of them will describe their actions.

Combined, our actions are extensive, powerful and transformative. They demonstrate that the government will do what is necessary to restore the flow of funds on which our economy depends and will act to avoid, where possible, the failure of any systemically important institution.

These three steps significantly strengthen financial institutions and improve their access to funding, enabling them to increase financing of the consumption and business investment that drive U.S. economic growth. Market participants here and around the world can take confidence from the powerful actions taken today and our broad commitment to the health of the global financial system.

We are acting with unprecedented speed taking unprecedented measures that we never thought would be necessary. But they are necessary to get our economy back on an even keel, and secure the confidence and future of our markets, our economy and the economic well-being of all Americans. -30-

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Monday, October 13, 2008

Neel Kashkari Biography

"I'm a free-market Republican."
Kashkari, at an American Enterprise Institute conference, 09/19/08
Neel Kashkari Biography

US Department of Treasury photo of the assistant secretary for financial stability (hi-res) High Resolution Image
Neel Kashkari (born July 30, 1973) Interim Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for Financial Stability and Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for International Economics and Development.

Neel Kashkari was designated as the Interim Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for Financial Stability on October 6, 2008. In this capacity, Mr. Kashkari oversees the Office of Financial Stability including the Troubled Asset Relief Program.
Mr. Kashkari also continues to hold the position of Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for International Economics and Development, but his International Affairs responsibilities are delegated to Assistant Secretary for International Affairs Clay Lowery while Mr. Kashkari serves as Interim Assistant Secretary for Financial Stability.

Mr. Kashkari joined the Treasury Department in July 2006 as Senior Advisor to U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry M. Paulson, Jr. In that role, he was responsible for developing the President’s Twenty in Ten energy security plan, enhancing Treasury’s engagement with India, particularly in the area of infrastructure development, and developing and executing the Department’s response to the housing crisis, including the formation of the HOPE NOW Alliance, the development of the subprime fast-track loan modification plan, and Treasury’s initiative to kick-start a covered bond market in the United States.
Prior to joining the Treasury Department, Mr. Kashkari was a Vice President at Goldman, Sachs & Co. in San Francisco, where he led Goldman's IT Security Investment Banking practice, advising public and private companies on mergers and acquisitions and financial transactions.










Neel Kashkari Explains Covered Bond Mortgage Finance
Prior to his career in finance, Mr. Kashkari was a R&D Principal Investigator at TRW in Redondo Beach, California where he developed technology for NASA space science missions such as the James Webb Space Telescope. Neel helped create a key latch that was meant to keep the telescope from shaking apart in the "mini-earthquakes" it would experience while in orbit, according to his TRW boss, Scott Texter.

Kashkari rigged devices in the company's Smart Structures Lab that measured distances to a precision of "an atom or two" and proved the telescope would remain stable. "He's a guy who tries to prevent dynamical disturbances, whether they were structural or financial," said Texter, who managed the telescope portion of the project for Northrop Grumman, which acquired the division of TRW working on the NASA contract.

Neel was born in Akron, Ohio, and grew up in Stow, a suburb, his first name can be translated as "blue" but is also an ancient Indian mathematical term for the number 10 trillion. His parents, Chaman and Sheila are Hindus who immigrated from the disputed region of Kashmir in the 1960s. Chaman retired from the University of Akron as an engineering professor has a doctorate in engineering, and won a Presidential award for his work in getting water to African villages, his mother is a pathologist. Neel's older sister Dr. Meera Kelley works with infectious diseases.

Neel attended Stow–Munroe Falls schools and then Western Reserve Academy in Hudson, Ohio, where he participated in football, wrestling and acting. He received departmental honors in mathematics was the Class of 1991's graduation speaker. He was a fan of heavy metal bands like AC/DC, whose lyrics dot his high school yearbook

At the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Kashkari led the mechanical-engineering portion of the school's entry in the 1997 "Sunrayce", teams designing and building solar-powered vehicles to race from Indianapolis to Colorado Springs. He earned his bachelor's degree and a masters in engineering from the University of Illinois amd his MBA from the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania.

Neel and wife Minal live in Silver Spring, Maryland with their dog Winslow and also own a home near San Francisco. Minal is employed as an engineer at Lockheed Martin Corporation which is based in Bethesda.

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