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May 16, 2008 1:05:47 AM CDT


Stories related to: Treasury Department

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20 Stories

  • April 2008
    • Will Tax Rebates Boost Economy? Test Starts Today

      Will Tax Rebates Boost Economy? Test Starts Today

      The first tax rebates designed to kick-start the economy should begin arriving in bank accounts today. The Treasury Department has begun sending electronic rebates to nearly 8 million people by the end of this week, and some 130 million checks will go out via snail mail in May. President Bush hopes taxpayers will spend the cash—up to $600 for individuals, $1,200 for couples—but economists say many will save it or pay off debts. More »

    • Small Banks, States Rip Paulson Plan

      Small Banks, States Rip Paulson Plan

      Small banks, credit unions, states, and assorted politicians wasted no time ripping into the Bush administration’s plans to rework federal regulation of the financial industry, calling it an amateurish attempt by a “bunch of guys from Wall Street,” reports the Wall Street Journal. “It’s because none of those guys ever worked in a regulated, chartered bank," said one lobbyist for small banks. More »

  • March 2008
    • 2 Probes Launched Into Bear Stearns Deal

      2 Probes Launched Into Bear Stearns Deal

      The controversial acquisition of Bear Stearns by rival JP Morgan Chase, aided by billions of dollars of government credit, is about to become one of the most scrutinized deals in Wall Street history. Two separate Senate investigations will soon be under way, one by the Banking Committee and another by the Finance Committee, reports the New York Times . More »

    • Paulson Wants Closer Tabs on Investment Banks

      Paulson Wants Closer Tabs on Investment Banks

      Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said today that investment banks owe the government more information about their financial condition if they are occasionally allowed to borrow money from the Federal Reserve, the New York Times reports. Paulson seemed to call for tighter regulations before calling the recent bailout of Bear Stearns "precedent only for unusual periods of turmoil." More »

    • Investors Urge Reluctant Fed to Buy Mortgage Debt

      Investors Urge Reluctant Fed to Buy Mortgage Debt

      The best way for the Fed to help reverse the sagging economy is for it to buy some of the $6 trillion in outstanding mortgage-backed securities that have Wall Street so nervous, investors say. The move would ease the credit crunch but put taxpayers at risk. It’s an option the Bush administration has been reluctant to take, reports Bloomberg. More »

    • JPMorgan in Talks to Boost Bear Stearns Bid

      JPMorgan in Talks to Boost Bear Stearns Bid

      JPMorgan Chase was in negotiations last night to quintuple its bid for Bear Stearns following a storm of angry protests by Bear shareholders over the initial bargain-basement deal for the investment banking giant, reports the New York Times . Under the new deal, JPMorgan Chase would pay $1 billion—$10 a share, up from the initial offer of $2 a share, which represented just one-fifteenth of Bear’s market price. More »

  • February 2008
    • Paulson Wants to Toss Pennies

      Paulson Wants to Toss Pennies

      Henry Paulson sees little point in pennies and would stop their production if he could, the AP reports. “The penny is worth less than any other currency,” the Treasury Secretary said today in a radio interview. But a sea change in change isn't imminent: Paulson says he has bigger challenges to tackle in the last year of the administration. More »

    • US, Iran Met on Terror Financing

      US, Iran Met on Terror Financing

      Senior Treasury Department official Daniel Glaser met last month with representatives from Iran to discuss "the significant threat Iran poses to the integrity of the international financial system," Reuters reports. The rare talks, which required special permission from the US government, took place during a meeting of the Financial Action Task Force, a coalition of 34 world nations. More »

  • January 2008
    • Paulson Calls for More Housing Relief

      Paulson Calls for More Housing Relief

      Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson advised the mortgage industry today to give help to millions of financially stressed homeowners whose mortgages are set to rise. His comments signal that the Bush administration is starting to push lenders to expand relief beyond subprime borrowers to homeowners with other adjustable-rate loans, reports the Wall Street Journal . More »

    • Social Security Debit Cards in the Works

      Social Security Debit Cards in the Works

      A new Social Security debit card, intended to replace paper checks for the millions of seniors who don’t have bank accounts, will be available by this spring, the Treasury Department said today. It's the latest phase in a shift from fraud-prone paper payments to safer, cheaper electronic ones, the Wall Street Journal reports. A paper check costs the government 89 cents; an electronic payment costs 9. More »

  • December 2007
    • Senate Blocks Tax Hikes

      Senate Blocks Tax Hikes

      The Senate has voted overwhelmingly to shield 23 million Americans from tax increases imposed by the alternative minimum tax—without replacing $50 billion in lost revenue. The vote to extend protection from the tax represents a retreat for Democrats who had pledged to meet the shortfall with spending cuts or by closing some tax breaks, reports the New York Times. More »

    • Bush to Offer Mortgage Freeze

      Bush to Offer Mortgage Freeze

      President Bush will detail tomorrow the Treasury Department's plan to hold interest rates steady for subprime borrowers at risk of defaulting on their mortgages when rates rise, Reuters reports. The plan, negotiated with mortgages lenders and investors, would freeze for five years adjustable loans due to jump to higher rates between Jan. 1, 2008, and summer 2010. More »

    • Mortgage-Rate Freeze Draws Backlash

      Mortgage-Rate Freeze Draws Backlash

      Not everyone is applauding Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson's plan to freeze adjustable mortgage rates on distressed home loans to help contain the spreading subprime crisis. Some analysts think the plan will only postpone foreclosures, rather than preventing them. And now that loans are bundled and sold to investors, some of those investors resent what they see as government interference with their property, the Wall Street Journal reports. More »

  • November 2007
    • Plan to Freeze Subprime Loans

      Plan to Freeze Subprime Loans

      The Treasury Department and a coalition of lenders are close to a deal to freeze interest rates on some subprime loans in a bid to bring the mushrooming mortgage crisis under control, reports the Wall Street Journal . A freeze would ease the burden on beleaguered borrowers and banks. Rates on some 2 million adjustable rate mortgages are scheduled to jump in the next two years. More »

    • WH Pares 2008 Economic Forecast, Hikes Jobless Rate

      WH Pares 2008 Economic Forecast, Hikes Jobless Rate

      The White House cut back its expectations for 2008 economic growth today and said unemployment rates are likely to worsen, citing the housing slump. GDP will grow only by 2.7% next year, down from an earlier 3.1%, said officials from Treasury and the Council of Economic Advisers; and the jobless rate is expected to hit 4.9%, worse than the previous forecast of 4.7%. More »

    • Big Banks Settle on Superfund Terms

      Big Banks Settle on Superfund Terms

      The country’s top three banks have finalized agreements for the $75 billion superfund they hope will cushion further blows to the credit market, reports the NY Times. After nearly two months of haggling, Bank of America, Citigroup, and JPMorgan Chase agreed to simpler conditions than outlined in the fund’s proposals, but some analysts still insist the fund won’t succeed. More »

  • October 2007
    • Paulson: Economy in Danger

      Paulson: Economy in Danger

      The ongoing housing implosion poses “a significant risk” to the economy, Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said in a speech at Georgetown University today, in a sobering about-face from earlier attempts to downplay the crisis. “The ongoing housing correction is not ending as quickly as it appeared,” he said. “It will continue to adversely impact our economy, our capital markets, and many homeowners for some time.” More »

  • September 2007
    • Social Security Fund Faces $13.6 Trillion Shortfall

      Social Security Fund Faces $13.6 Trillion Shortfall

      Slashing benefits or hiking taxes—or both—is the only way to make the Social Security system solvent, reports a Treasury Department briefing paper. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson warned that faster economic growth alone won't solve the money problems of  Social Security, which faces a $13.6 trillion shortfall in the "indefinite future," Bloomberg reports. More »

  • August 2007
    • The C-Note Gets a Facelift

      The C-Note Gets a Facelift

      Even Ben Franklin has a little work done every now and then. The $100 bill, which bears the founding father's image, is undergoing a state-of-the-art redesign aimed at thwarting counterfeiters who target the C-note more than any other denomination, the AP reports. The new security thread utilizes microprinting and 650,000 tiny lenses per bill that magnify the image. More »

    • Bush Ready to 'Push Hard' for Biz Tax Breaks

      Bush Ready to 'Push Hard' for Biz Tax Breaks

      President Bush is considering a new package of corporate tax breaks in a bid to perk up Wall Street, calm volatile markets and send a message the economy is sound, the Washington Post reports. At the same time he rejected Democratic proposals to allow Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac more leeway to buy mortgages to bolster the shaky housing market. More »

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