![]()
MOST SHARED
- Solar Market Heating Back Up?
- Realty Execs See Pain Ahead
- Easy Money & Stocks
- Tommy Lee, Medical Tourism and Nasty Santa, Your Emails
- Buying Fear: How to Own Volatility
- Want the Homebuyer's Tax Credit? Here Are Some Tips
- Week Ahead: Stocks Search for Catalyst in Quiet Week
- Video Game Industry's Troubles Aren't Just in US
- Consumers Haven't Changed, They Are Just Pickier
- Week Ahead: Stocks Search for Catalyst in Quiet Week
- Outlook: Dollar Likely to Ride Higher on Bleak Jobs Report
- Health Bill Clears First Hurdle in House
- Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway Says Net Income Tripled
- Cramer: Earnings, IPOs Dominate Next Week
- Buying Fear: How to Own Volatility
- Administration Rejects Plan to Buy Fannie Mae Credits
- Consumers Haven't Changed —They Just Got Pickier
- Want the Homebuyer's Tax Credit? Here Are Some Tips
- Tommy Lee, Medical Tourism and Nasty Santa, Your Emails
- U.S. Markets Gain 3% for the Week Despite 10.2% Unemployment
- Disney's 'Carol' Tests Widest 3-D Release Ever
- Stimulus II? Jobs Tax Credit=Cash For Clunkers
- Rockwell Automation Earnings: What Options Are Saying
- Gold Will Touch Higher Lows and Higher Highs: Analyst
- Is Misery Alive And Well in Your Office?
- Consumers Haven't Changed, They Are Just Pickier
- Watch Foreclosures, Seriously
Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson defended his decision to change how the $700 billion
![]() |
AP Henry M. Paulson, US Treasury Secretary |
"By the time the process with Congress was completed, it was clear that we were facing a much more severe situation than we had envisioned earlier on," Paulson said in a live interview. "We have this limited pool of resources—big, but limited, $700 billion—and how do we use that, and get the maximum impact, and it's by putting capital in (banks)."
Paulson told a news conference on Wednesday that he would use the remaining funds in the $700 billion fund on a second round of purchases of preferred shares in both banks and non-bank institutions.
He also said the money could be used to shore up markets for securitized consumer debt such as car loans, student loans and credit cards, which could help restore credit flows to U.S. households.
"What changed was when we saw the commercial paper markets freeze up altogether, so good, mainstream corporations weren't able to raise money," Paulson said.
Setting up a system to buy up the bad mortgage debt from financial institutions also had become cumbersome, and Paulson said the Treasury needed to act quickly to stabilize the credit markets. As a result, the Treasury began to use the fund—known as the Troubled Asset Relief Program, or TARP—to inject capital directly into banks.
"The major purpose of the TARP was to stabilize the financial system, first and foremost, and the number two, to get lending going," Paulson added. "I think the system has been stabilized. I don't think people are going to bed at night wondering which major financial institution might have a problem."
Still, the change in strategy has been sharply criticized in Congress and Wall Street. Earlier Friday, a House committee took one of Paulson's deputies, Neel Kashkari, to task for what one member said was "a bait and switch."
Paulson again deflected such criticism, saying he was obligated to change strategies as the situation changed.
"You're never going to get me to apologize for being so prudent as to change a strategy when the facts change, and to do it in a way that protects the taxpayer," he said.
- Rumors abound that Oprah will leave her show to start a new network. What would this mean for daytime TV?
- Berkeley's Chez Panisse and the trend of eating locally grown, pesticide-free seasonal foods.
- Cramer did the research and found eight stocks that lead the pack. Read on to get his top picks.
- Did Hideki Matsui’s performance make it more likely that the Yankees will pay to have him back?
- Which wines should you bring—or serve—with holiday meals this year? Ask a connoisseur.
- Two competitors in this year’s World Series of Poker in Las Vegas have stories fit for Hollywood.












