EvaLSeraphim_IHB
New member
<a href="http://norris.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/10/06/live-blogging-amid-panic/">I got your socialism right here, baby.</a>
<blockquote>
<strong>The Fed Is Worried: </strong>Now the government is talking about financing companies directly. If the banks and the markets cannot or will not do it, Uncle Sam will.
The Fed put out a statement this morning that said it would start paying interest on deposits and would increase the size of its Term Auction Facility auctions. Both are ways of getting cash out to banks.
But the banks are not lending very much, and the commercial paper market is in danger of closing up as investors seek safety above everything.
So the Fed added:
<blockquote>In addition, the Federal Reserve and the Treasury Department are consulting with market participants on ways to provide additional support for term unsecured funding markets.</blockquote>
The Fed added that it was prepared to do more ?as necessary to foster liquid money market conditions.?
So we may soon have the government deciding which companies deserve short-term loans, and at what interest rates. Does this remind anyone else of central planning systems?
</blockquote>
<blockquote>
<strong>The Fed Is Worried: </strong>Now the government is talking about financing companies directly. If the banks and the markets cannot or will not do it, Uncle Sam will.
The Fed put out a statement this morning that said it would start paying interest on deposits and would increase the size of its Term Auction Facility auctions. Both are ways of getting cash out to banks.
But the banks are not lending very much, and the commercial paper market is in danger of closing up as investors seek safety above everything.
So the Fed added:
<blockquote>In addition, the Federal Reserve and the Treasury Department are consulting with market participants on ways to provide additional support for term unsecured funding markets.</blockquote>
The Fed added that it was prepared to do more ?as necessary to foster liquid money market conditions.?
So we may soon have the government deciding which companies deserve short-term loans, and at what interest rates. Does this remind anyone else of central planning systems?
</blockquote>