http://goldismoney.info/forums/showthread.php?t=246326
You all that read iTulip had plenty of time to prepare... this will hit like a tsunami.
"We are encouraging financial institutions to continue to strengthen balance sheets by raising capital and revisiting dividend policies," Mr Paulson told the National Press Club. "We need those institutions to continue to lend and facilitate economic growth."
The remarks in Washington reflect a report released yesterday by the President's Working Group on Financial Markets, chaired by Mr Paulson. The group, whose members include representatives from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and permanent Treasury officials as well as Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke, has been looking at ways of preventing the sub-mortgage-led crisis from happening again.
Mr Paulson's comments, coming in the week the US Federal Reserve injected $200bn (£98.5bn) into the US banking system in an emergency measure designed to boost liquidity, send a clear warning that the worse of the banking crisis is far from over.
Rumours persist that one or more major banks may yet hit the wall, with Bear Stearns continuing to fend off market whispers that it is close to insolvency. Bear's shares fell a further $7.26 at $54.32 yesterday, in spite of ratings agency Standard & Poor's saying that the worst of the sub-prime mortgage mess was behind the majority of major banks.
The remarks in Washington reflect a report released yesterday by the President's Working Group on Financial Markets, chaired by Mr Paulson. The group, whose members include representatives from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and permanent Treasury officials as well as Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke, has been looking at ways of preventing the sub-mortgage-led crisis from happening again.
Mr Paulson's comments, coming in the week the US Federal Reserve injected $200bn (£98.5bn) into the US banking system in an emergency measure designed to boost liquidity, send a clear warning that the worse of the banking crisis is far from over.
Rumours persist that one or more major banks may yet hit the wall, with Bear Stearns continuing to fend off market whispers that it is close to insolvency. Bear's shares fell a further $7.26 at $54.32 yesterday, in spite of ratings agency Standard & Poor's saying that the worst of the sub-prime mortgage mess was behind the majority of major banks.
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