Sunday, November 23, 2008

What DOES the future hold? Our Country could be Done for.

My Way
home | my page | my email

.
news home | top | world | intl | natl | op | pol | govt | business | tech | sci | entertain | sports | health | odd | sources | local
APNew York TimesMSNBCUSA TODAYFOX NewsGen FinancialBusiness News Videos

Bernanke says he erred in gauging mortgage fallout

Email this Story

Nov 23, 3:30 PM (ET)

By JEANNINE AVERSA
Google sponsored links
Short Sales Step-by-Step - New Real Estate Guide shows you how to buy mortgages discounted 50%!
www.ShortSaleMagic.com

Financial Crisis Info - Find Out Everything You Need To Know About The Financial Crisis
www.Vanguard.com


WASHINGTON (AP) - Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke acknowledges he was wrong in believing that there would be limited fallout to financial markets from risky mortgages that soured after the housing market's collapse.

"I and others were mistaken early on in saying that the subprime crisis would be contained," Bernanke said in an article in the Dec. 1 issue of The New Yorker magazine.

"The causal relationship between the housing problem and the broad financial system was very complex and difficult to predict," he said in the piece titled "Anatomy of a Meltdown."

Subprime mortgages made to people with tarnished credit or low incomes were especially hard hit once the housing boom went bust. Foreclosures spiked and financial companies wracked up huge losses as these investments turned bad.

The mortgage meltdown started in the United States in the summer of 2007 and rapidly spread to other countries, as well as to other types of lending, affecting even more creditworthy customers. The problems with risky, subprime mortgages touched off what many call the worst financial crisis to hit the world since the 1930s.

To protect the economy from damage and help ease Wall Street turmoil, Bernanke and his colleagues cut a key interest rate in September 2007 - the first reduction in four years. Some critics at the time thought the Fed should have acted sooner.

Now more than a year into the crisis, Bernanke has taken a flurry of unprecedented - and some controversial - steps to help bolster the banking system and to get banks to lend money more freely again.

The Fed is providing short-term cash loans to banks, is letting financial companies swap shunned mortgage securities for super-safe Treasury securities and is buying mounds of short-term debt from a host of companies. It also expanded its emergency lending facilities to investment firms, provided financial backing in JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM)'s buyout of Bear Stearns and threw a financial lifeline to insurer American International Group.

Critics worry the Fed's actions could put billions of taxpayers' dollars in jeopardy and encourage financial companies to take excessive risk on the belief that the Fed will bail them out.

The Fed halted its rate-cutting campaign in late June out of fears it would worsen inflation. But it was forced to do an about-face in early October as economic and financial conditions deteriorated sharply, lessening the threat of inflation. The Fed joined with other central banks on Oct. 8 to slash rates, the first coordinated action of its kind in the Fed's history. It lowered rates again on Oct. 29 and is expected to cut rates yet again on Dec. 16.


Google sponsored links

Fed Cuts Rates - Government Refinance Help Now Available.
www.FHA.com

Coffee Exposed - A shocking secret coffee co's don't want you to know.
www.coffeefool.com

Current Mortgage Rates - Mortgage Rates Hit 46 Month Lows! See Rates - No Credit Check Needed.
www.CompareInterestRates.com




other general financial news


CEOs to speak at national summit in Detroit in '09
Singapore inflation eases to 6.4 pct in October
Oil prices rise above $50 on Obama economy team
Obama aide promotes job plan, warns automakers
Government unveils plan to rescue Citigroup
Japanese markets closed Monday for holiday
Reports: Chinese appliance tycoon in share probe
Thai economy slows sharply in third quarter
More customers resume using old-fashioned cash
Consumers cautious about effect of auto bankruptcy


email this page to a friend


Copyright 2008 Associated Press. All right reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.






Spread the Word | We're Hiring

My Settings: Overview | Search | Email | Chat | Portfolio | Calendar | Groups | Profile

IMPORTANT: We do not present our users with pop-ups or any other non-contextual advertising. Nor do we send email to
our users. If you see or receive one of these items, it is coming from an outside source, either as a result of something you
have previously downloaded or as an "exit" pop-up from the site you just visited. It is not coming from our site.

Privacy Policy Terms of Service About Us Our Mission Sign In Sign Out Help Center

© 2008 IAC Search & Media. All rights reserved.

Partner Sites: Citysearch | MerchantCircle | Insiderpages | CollegeHumor | Pronto | LiveDaily | Expedia | Hotels | Hotwire
Evite | Excite | Fun Web Products | iWon | Smiley Central | Life123

No comments: