[obrolan-bandar] Geithner Bailout Plan May Speed Bank Failures

2009-03-08 Terurut Topik adjies2000

ARTINYACITICORP dan AIG tidak perlu  stress tests for bank


=didalam bahaya tersembunyi kesempatan

ada komentar ?

Regards,




Geithner Bailout Plan May Speed Bank Failures

02/12/09 - 11:22 AM EST
, BAC , WFC (Cramer's Pick) , JPM , C
Laurie Kulikowski
Laurie Kulikowski

More banks could fail as a result of the government's plan to test the health 
of prospective recipients before doling out new federal aid -- and maybe that's 
part of the point, analysts say.

* On the Brink
* Bank Failures: An Interactive Map
* Citi Stock's Wild Ride Explained in Arb Trade
* Bank Stocks to Buy Now (Maybe)
* Ken Lewis Says BofA Is Fine. Do We Buy It?
* 'Stress Tests' Will Expose Weakness
* Christopher Flowers Finds the Bloom May Be Off
* Geithner Bailout Plan May Speed Bank Failures
* BBT's Allison: A Free Market Could Have Prevented This
* Beware Banks' Unfunded TARP Talk
* Why Banks Aren't Lending
* The Next Financial WMD?
* E*Trade Aid Would Trickle Down to Citadel

* Market Activity
*
  Bank of America Corporation| BAC
*
  Citigroup Incorporated| C
*
  JPMorgan Chase  Company| JPM

The government will require so-called stress tests for banks with at least 
$100 billion in assets as a means of determining whether they need capital, 
Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said in unveiling the next stage of the 
financial bailout plan on Tuesday. While Geithner was vague on exact details of 
the plan, the stress test could be used as a way to allow certain financial 
institutions to fail, says Quincy Krosby, chief investment strategist at The 
Hartford.

There seems to be a growing concern that perhaps we do need to allow banks to 
fail if the systemic risk and the ensuing doesn't replicate what happened after 
Lehman Brothers' demise, she says.

Nancy Atkinson, a senior analyst at Aite Group, an independent research and 
advisory firm, also says she suspects there could be some more banks that, 
rather than be bailed out, could fail.

I think that the government is going to be looking very closely at the asset 
base of each of these banks and ... looking at the write-offs and reserves for 
loans and making sure they're adequate, Atkinson says. Where the surprises 
are going to come is when they really have to dig into these items.
Analysis

Discussion

TSC Ratings
Jim Cramer:
Geithner Bailout Offers More of the Same

You Ask, Dan Fitzpatrick Answers
(Add comment)


Bank Failure Roundup

Geithner said the new bailout plan sets up a Financial Stability Trust that 
evaluates pressure on banks and offers them capital assistance based on that 
evaluation. In addition, Geithner proposed a joint public-private investment 
fund of up to $1 trillion to begin valuing troubled legacy assets on banks' 
balance sheets. 



Re: [obrolan-bandar] Geithner Bailout Plan May Speed Bank Failures

2009-03-08 Terurut Topik Baso TAHU
Kalo saya punya pikiran 'beli bank di USA yg sudah bisa mengembalikan uang 
TARP!' 
Kita liat TARP I jaman Bush bank yg nggak butuh suntikan dipaksa telan! Nah ada 
beberapa sudah cicil mengembalikan dana TARP bulan lalu. Kalo bisa coninues, 
ini bank bisa lipat what 10 times!

--- On Sun, 3/8/09, adjies2000 ad2...@cbn.net.id wrote:

From: adjies2000 ad2...@cbn.net.id
Subject: [obrolan-bandar] Geithner Bailout Plan May Speed Bank Failures
To: obrolan-bandar@yahoogroups.com
Date: Sunday, March 8, 2009, 9:29 AM














ARTINYACITICORP dan AIG tidak perlu  stress tests for bank



=didalam bahaya tersembunyi kesempatan== ==



ada komentar ?



Regards,



 = = = = 



Geithner Bailout Plan May Speed Bank Failures



02/12/09 - 11:22 AM EST

, BAC , WFC (Cramer's Pick) , JPM , C

Laurie Kulikowski

Laurie Kulikowski



More banks could fail as a result of the government's plan to test the health 
of prospective recipients before doling out new federal aid -- and maybe that's 
part of the point, analysts say.



* On the Brink

* Bank Failures: An Interactive Map

* Citi Stock's Wild Ride Explained in Arb Trade

* Bank Stocks to Buy Now (Maybe)

* Ken Lewis Says BofA Is Fine. Do We Buy It?

* 'Stress Tests' Will Expose Weakness

* Christopher Flowers Finds the Bloom May Be Off

* Geithner Bailout Plan May Speed Bank Failures

* BBT's Allison: A Free Market Could Have Prevented This

* Beware Banks' Unfunded TARP Talk

* Why Banks Aren't Lending

* The Next Financial WMD?

* E*Trade Aid Would Trickle Down to Citadel



* Market Activity

*

  Bank of America Corporation| BAC

*

  Citigroup Incorporated| C

*

  JPMorgan Chase  Company| JPM



The government will require so-called stress tests for banks with at least 
$100 billion in assets as a means of determining whether they need capital, 
Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said in unveiling the next stage of the 
financial bailout plan on Tuesday. While Geithner was vague on exact details of 
the plan, the stress test could be used as a way to allow certain financial 
institutions to fail, says Quincy Krosby, chief investment strategist at The 
Hartford.



There seems to be a growing concern that perhaps we do need to allow banks to 
fail if the systemic risk and the ensuing doesn't replicate what happened after 
Lehman Brothers' demise, she says.



Nancy Atkinson, a senior analyst at Aite Group, an independent research and 
advisory firm, also says she suspects there could be some more banks that, 
rather than be bailed out, could fail.



I think that the government is going to be looking very closely at the asset 
base of each of these banks and ... looking at the write-offs and reserves for 
loans and making sure they're adequate, Atkinson says. Where the surprises 
are going to come is when they really have to dig into these items.

Analysis



Discussion



TSC Ratings

Jim Cramer:

Geithner Bailout Offers More of the Same



You Ask, Dan Fitzpatrick Answers

(Add comment)





Bank Failure Roundup



Geithner said the new bailout plan sets up a Financial Stability Trust that 
evaluates pressure on banks and offers them capital assistance based on that 
evaluation. In addition, Geithner proposed a joint public-private investment 
fund of up to $1 trillion to begin valuing troubled legacy assets on banks' 
balance sheets.