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Friday, October 10, 2008
Bush says financial rescue plan big enough to work
By TERENCE HUNT
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President Bush said Friday that the government's financial rescue plan was aggressive enough and big enough to work, but would take time to fully kick in. "We can solve this crisis and we will," he said in brief remarks from the White House Rose Garden.

Bush spoke as leaders of the world's top economies gathered in Washington amid frozen credit markets, panic selling in stock markets and a looming global recession.

The president noted that major Western countries were working together in an attempt to stabilize markets and end the spreading panic, including coordinated cuts in interest rates.

"Through these efforts, the world is sending an unmistakable signal. We're in this together and we'll come through this together," Bush said.

Finance ministers and central bankers from the Group of Seven _ the United States, Japan, Britain, Germany, France Italy and Canada _ were here for a weekend meeting. Bush plans to meet with the leaders on Saturday.

Bush said he understood how Americans could be concerned about their economic future. "That anxiety can feed anxiety and that can make it hard to see all that's being done to solve the problem," he said.

But despite a relentless sell-off that has seen the Dow Jones industrials plunge 20 percent in the past seven trading days, Bush said, "We are a prosperous nation with immense resources and a wide range of tools at our disposal."

The president said the new $700 billion rescue plan that he signed into law a week ago authorizes the Treasury Department to use a variety of measures to rebuild their balance sheets including "purchasing equity of financial institutions."

It was the first time the president has mentioned suggestions that the government buy shares of banks, although it has been mentioned by other administration officials.

Since the bailout package was signed into law, the conversation about how it will be used has shifted from taxpayers buying troubled mortgages to taxpayers buying troubled banks. Or at least pieces of them.

Such a move would amount to a partial nationalization of the U.S. banking industry, a move once considered unthinkable.

The government is authorized under the law to buy "troubled assets."

Those assets include mortgages, but according to the law, they may also include "any other financial instrument" that is "necessary to promote financial market stability ... ."

It is the government's position that this authority extends to bank stocks. Continued...

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Subject: Advise to investors, savers, etc.
BUY STOCKS NOW - WHILE THEY'RE STILL LOW! LIKE A FIRE SALE AT WAL MART... All this panic and impulsive unloading of stocks is to your benefit - unless, of course, you are one of the foolish few who put all your eggs in one (stock market) basket!

Yes Michael, BO Rises Market Falls
In the 20s, no one had TV or Computers and Wall Street was a foreign entity to most people it was only for the rich
In the 80s, no one had Home Computers, buying stock went through brokers, and people were scared of the market
In the 08s people have computers, people are bold, the market will rebound fast and high, however many fools will lose because they would not wait
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