http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=atEt2ELh7cZY&refer=home

Oct. 19 (Bloomberg) -- The leaders of the U.S., France and the
European Commission will ask other world leaders to join in a series
of summits on the global financial crisis beginning in the U.S. soon
after the Nov. 4 presidential election.

President George W. Bush, French President Nicolas Sarkozy and
European Commission President Jose Barroso said in a joint statement
after meeting yesterday that they will continue pressing for
coordination to address ``the challenges facing the global economy.''

The initial summit will seek ``agreement on principles of reform
needed to avoid a repetition and assure global prosperity in the
future,'' and later meetings ``would be designed to implement
agreement on specific steps to be taken to meet those principles,''
the statement said.

European leaders have pressed to convene an emergency meeting of the
world's richest nations, known as the Group of Eight, joined by others
such as India and China, to overhaul the world's financial regulatory
systems. The meetings are to include developed economies as well as
developing nations.

``The first task is to stabilize the financial markets in our own
countries,'' Bush said in welcoming Sarkozy and Barroso to the Camp
David presidential retreat in rural Maryland. ``Given that the world
has never been more interconnected, it is essential that we work
together because we're in this crisis together.''

Free Markets

He stressed that any steps to prevent future crises must maintain and
strengthen the free-market system.

``It is essential we preserve the foundations of democratic
capitalism,'' Bush said.

Sarkozy and Barraso are pressing Bush for a G8 agenda that includes
stiffer regulation and supervision for cross-border banks, a global
``early warning'' system and an overhaul of the International Monetary
Fund. Talks may also encompass tougher regulations on hedge funds, new
rules for credit-rating companies, limits on executive pay and
changing the treatment of tax havens such as the Cayman Islands and
Monaco.

Sarkozy and Barroso, in separate statements, welcomed Bush's offer to
host the first summit.

``We want to work hand in hand with the Americans to create the
capitalism of the 21st century,'' Sarkozy said. ``The meeting should
be held rapidly, perhaps before the end of November. Since the crisis
started in New York, maybe we can find the solution in New York.''

Need for Reform

Barroso said an ``unprecedented level of global coordination'' is
needed to address market instability.

``The international financial system -- its basic principles and
regulations and its institutions need reform. We need a new global
financial order,'' he said.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson and French Finance Minister
Christine Lagarde also attended tonight's meeting at Camp David.

United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon today offered to host a
summit at UN headquarters in New York City by early December.

The leaders decided to pursue a series of summits because the task was
too ambitious to be dealt with in a single meeting, White House
spokesman Tony Fratto told reporters later.

It was ``a reasonable expectation'' that the first summit would be
scheduled for November though ``not necessarily'' in New York, he
said. Fratto didn't name a location and said there are numerous
logistics hurdles in bringing together ``a large number of countries
in a very short time.''

He said it was ``premature'' to say whether a second summit would be
held before Bush left office in three months.

Banking Regulation

British Prime Minister Gordon Brown is pushing for greater cross-
border oversight of the global financial system. He has said each of
the world's top 30 banks should be under the supervision of a panel of
regulators from the countries where those institutions do business.

``The reform of the international financial system is not only
necessary to prevent a crisis happening again, it is essential to end
the current crisis,'' Brown said on Oct. 16.

Bush, 62, has cautioned that any revamping must not restrict the flow
of trade and investment or set a path toward protectionism. The G8
nations are Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Russia and
the United States. The U.S. hasn't committed itself to the sweeping
terms of Europe's agenda, White House press secretary Dana Perino said
yesterday.

``There are other countries that are going to have ideas, as well,''
she said.
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