Geithner says less need for government in markets
U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said on Thursday a strengthening economy means the government can end some of the extraordinary support it put in place for markets and prepare for a slow recovery.
Appearing before the Congressional Oversight Panel for the $700-billion Troubled Asset Relief Program, Geithner said the economy was in far better shape now than a year ago when it was “on the verge of collapse,” though it still had problems.
“As we enter this new phase, we must begin winding down some of the extraordinary support we put in place for the financial system,” he said. “We are now in a position to evolve our strategy as we move from crisis response to recovery.”
Geithner faced a grilling from the TARP panel members, who wanted to know why taxpayer-provided aid was so available for financial firms but not to other types of businesses. He suggested the decision to aid banks was paying off.
Geithner said banks that received capital injections have repaid more than $70 billion, reducing the government’s total investment to $180 billion. and estimated another $50 billion will be repaid over the next 12 to 18 months.
STILL A ROCKY ROAD
“We still have a long way to go before true recovery takes hold,” he told the panel, adding it will be necessary to keep applying stimulus measures as necessary to get growth firmly back on track.
Another senior Treasury official told reporters earlier that Treasury will allow its money market mutual fund guarantee program to expire on September 18.
The backstop program was created a year ago to prevent panic withdrawals of $3.4 trillion in savings after a key fund “broke the buck” when its net asset value per share fell below $1. The program took in $1.2 billion in fees from funds, but has not had any payouts.
Geithner boasted that the economy now was “back from the brink” of the free fall that it was in when the Obama administration took office in January even though recovery likely will be gradual at best.
Still, he cited several signs of progress, including the fact that the government no longer feels it needs a contingency in the budget for another $750 billion in stabilization funds.
TOXIC ASSETS AN ISSUE
Treasury does intend to press ahead with so-called public-private investment funds to buy toxic assets. The senior Treasury official predicted that the first purchases should occur by early October.
The official said there was a “great deal of interest” in purchasing toxic assets among investors and money managers running the funds, but the appetite among banks to sell their toxic assets has been less than anticipated.
“We thought it would be necessary for banks to sell some of these assets in order to attract private capital. It turned out that they were able to raise the capital without selling the assets,” the official said.
Filed under: finance by Wolf