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Harold Maass of The Week, The Best of Today's Business

Bailout Takes Shape, WaMu Speed-Dates

by Harold Maass of The Week

Excellent (53 Ratings)
4.415096/5
Posted on Thursday, September 25, 2008, 12:00AM

NEWS AT A GLANCE

Bailout plan comes into focus

Congressional leaders and the Bush administration are getting close to a deal on the massive Wall Street bailout plan, with the White House agreeing to restrictions on executive pay at participating firms. Sticking points include whether to phase in the $700 billion and if the government gets any equity in the firms it bails out. (AP in Yahoo! Finance) President Bush is convening a meeting with key players in Congress, including presidential candidates Sens. John McCain and Barack Obama. (Reuters) Money market rates rose as banks hoarded cash, in a sign that the markets think the bailout package could be delayed or diluted. (Bloomberg)

Washington Mutual looks for a buyer

Washington Mutual, the top U.S. savings and loan, has approached private equity funds about a potential takeover, after banks started to lose interest, The Wall Street Journal reported. One possible deal includes Carlyle Group and Blackstone teaming up with Texas billionaire Gerald J. Ford. (Reuters) Federal regulators have also stepped in to try to help broker a deal for the ailing bank. Washington Mutual's position became more tenuous after Standard & Poor's downgraded its shares further into junk status. (The New York Times) Washington Mutual says it's "well capitalized." The potential suitors "are all kind of playing a wait-and-see game right now," said Joe Heider at Dawson Wealth Management. (AP in CNNMoney.com)

Oracle enters hardware market

Oracle, the No. 2 software maker, is entering the hardware market, pairing up with Hewlett-Packard to make servers. The HP Oracle Exadata server and separate Database Machine, designed to run on Oracle software, will help Oracle push into the expanding data warehousing market. (San Francisco Chronicle) Database software has been a big money-maker for Oracle -- it controls about half the $17 billion market -- helping it survive a broader falloff in business software. Oracle said it is selling servers to help speed up performance for companies running Oracle database software. "Anything you can do to reduce the cost of plumbing is a big win for customers," says Bruce Richardson at AMR Research. (BusinessWeek.com)

U.S. prestige, intact so far

The fact that the U.S. needs to rescue Wall Street in a $700 billion bailout might, you'd think, lead other countries' business communities to lose faith in the U.S. financial system. Surprisingly, it hasn't, at least so far. That's partly because many foreigners see the U.S. more in Silicon Valley and Hollywood than in Wall Street. It's also because if the U.S. model fails, there isn't another good one ready to take its place. "When it comes to democracy and free market economics, the U.S. is still the original article," says Ulf Mark Schneider, the CEO of German health care provider Fresenius. "Nobody wants to see it fail." (BusinessWeek.com)

BEST COLUMNS OF THE DAY

Buffett and the bailout

Economists "overwhelmingly agree" that we "need quick, bold action" to stave off a deep recession, says David Leonhardt in The New York Times. But few of them agree that Henry Paulson's plan is the right action. A main concern is that taxpayers don't get any stake in the firms their dollars help. Paulson says that demanding ownership stakes would keep healthier banks from participating, keeping credit markets paralyzed. But he has a problem: Warren Buffett, who convinced relatively healthy Goldman Sachs to sell him a stake with very healthy returns. Paulson could be right, but he needs to sell his plan better. Otherwise "maybe the American taxpayers should be asking Warren Buffett to be negotiating on their behalf."

About that $700 billion . . .

The U.S. needs to "unlock the capital markets," and quickly, says Chad Gray in Seeking Alpha, but let's be honest about what our actions will cost us. The "Paulson & Co. talking points" now assure us that the bailout ultimately won't really cost us $700 billion, and that "Heck, taxpayers could turn a tidy profit!" The logic is that the assets we buy will have greater value than what we pay for them, because they're tied to "a representative cross-section of American real estate," both good mortgages and bad ones. That logic is flawed. "When Paulson opens up his financial waste treatment plant," the debt thrown in will be the "most putrid" assets out there. The $700 billion is an expense, not an investment.

GOOD DAY FOR: Portable fantasies, as the boom in smart phones and other mobile devices is creating a new source of fantasy-sports revenue, with people able to check on their team players anytime they want. "It's like you've combined the old macho notion of knowing more than anybody about sports with Dungeons and Dragons," said professor Robert Thompson at Syracuse University. "It turns out that's a pretty good marriage." (Reuters)

BAD DAY FOR: Running on empty, after U.S. gasoline inventories fell to their lowest level since 1967, in the wake of supply disruptions from Hurricanes Ike and Gustav. Five refineries are still closed from Hurricane Ike, leading to long lines at gas stations throughout the South and Ohio. In 1967, the U.S. consumed 5 million barrels of fuel a day; today, daily U.S. consumption is 9 million barrels. (Reuters)

NOTED: General Electric, widely seen as a U.S. economic bellwether, cut its annual earnings forecast, citing "unprecedented weakness and volatility" in the financial services market. (Bloomberg) GE also halted a stock buyback. With the U.S. economy slowing, it's normal for a broad conglomerate like GE to warn, said Philippe Gijselst at Fortis Bank in Brussels. "I fear that there will be more of the same in the industrial sector in a not too distant future." (Reuters)

This column was written by Peter Weber and edited by Harold Maass of TheWeek.com.

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28 Comments

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  • Yahoo! Finance User - Thursday, September 25, 2008, 11:09AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 5/5

    It sounds like that if you really screwed up country economy in a bigger way enough so that a bailout will come, instead of jail term to those economy thefts and criminals.

  • Pin Code - Thursday, September 25, 2008, 10:52AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 5/5

    "The logic is that the assets we buy will have greater value than what we pay for them, because they're tied to "a representative cross-section of American real estate," both good mortgages and bad ones." Right...and were we not told the Iraqi war would be paid for with profits from Iraqi oil? Maybe the schools should go back to teaching the "old" math...this new math is costing me and my children every dime we have to our names.

  • Grant - Thursday, September 25, 2008, 10:45AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 4/5

    It is time to let the banks go. I work at a bank with minimal bad loans and we still have plenty of money to lend. There are rich people all over the world making a killing on buying up the assets of the banks..i.e. Buffet. They are the smart ones. Let the market sort out the assets. What happens to the economy when a large bank falls, smaller banks get bigger faster. Smarter banks profit. Let the risk takers take their falls and lets have the rest of the county devour their assets. This should be a feeding frenzy for smart people world wide. For people who over extended yourselfs- sorry, take your lumps like a man and pay your debts as best you can. For banks that let the money to allow people to over extend themselves- Sorry take your loses and close your doors if you caused this. For mortgage brokers and Realtors who sold these homes and loans to people and banks - We need to criminalize your activity. But if you watch your area, most of the foreclosures and job losses are from these individuals who thought they could fleese America for ever. For a bail out - If the country really thinks they need an "economic bail out". Here is the plan that needs to be implemented... The government should spend $700 billion dollars in renewable energy production. The US imports that much every year in oil. In essence that oil we import is a tax on the economy. If we could get that down to $200 billion per year, the savings would more than pay for the investment now in 2 years. The government doesn't have close to that paln with the proposed bail out. Lets do some great things with America, increasing jobs and sustainability in the future. Please remember that less than 20 years ago, we were that worlds largest creditor and we now are the worlds largest debtor. If that continues we will go the way of the Roman Empire. We need to get bank to real sustainable growth.

  • notasperfectasyou - Thursday, September 25, 2008, 10:04AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 3/5

    Let's see ....... Yesterday, George said there were weapons of mass destruction, he sent Condi out to tell America we must fear Iraq. He sent Colin to the United Nations to tell the world we must fear Iraq's weapons of mass destruction. Today, George says there is financial calamity, he sends Henry out to tell America we must fear financial meltdown. He sends Ben to the Senate to tell the country we must fear the financial crisis. In my book, the president needs to take the responsibility more seriously. You only get to cry wolf once, if at all when you are president. He sends others out to lie for him. It’s the grand finale, he’s going out with a bank, I mean bang. His speech, if you paid attention, told us we must save the businesses. He did not talk about saving families; his message for families was ….. be afraid.

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Thursday, September 25, 2008, 10:02AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 5/5

    "Many foreigners see the U.S. more in Silicon Valley and Hollywood than in Wall Street." Many others see the US in New York City when they travel here. They then leave thinking the whole country is full of a**holes.

  • CareyA - Thursday, September 25, 2008, 9:57AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 5/5

    "Commi-andos"? "Demolitioncrats"? What are you, in third grade? Is that the best political commentary you have to offer? Jesus H. Christ in a chicken basket, I hope you don't vote.

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Thursday, September 25, 2008, 9:17AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 5/5

    This is an excellent, intelligent and brief recap of important events.

  • Worker72a - Thursday, September 25, 2008, 9:09AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 3/5

    Paulson and Bernanke are LYING. We are being played. I am still asking "Why the mad rush to judgment?" The financial world will not end if we delay passage. However, it may end if we pass a $700 billion boondoggle that morphs into a $1.8 trillion boondoggle. Scrap this proposal and start with a genuine look at real alternatives. This plan is nothing more than a $700 billion tax, a tax that will not provide a single job, not one. I cannot and will not vote for any member of Congress who votes for this bill in its current form or anything remotely close to the current form. It's time to kill this bill and start all over.

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