Obama Housing/Credit Plan Taking Shape

In a few weeks, President Barack Obama will lay out a comprehensive plan to stabilize the banks, revive credit markets and address the housing crisis, according to Timothy Geithner, the president's nominee to be Treasury secretary. The president of the New York Federal Reserve Bank told a Senate panel that the plan will include a bankruptcy provision to help struggling homeowners and possibly a proposal to move toxic assets off bank balance sheets into a "bad bank." Mr. Geithner stressed the comprehensive plan is still under development and he did not want to provide specific details. But he noted the administration wants to craft the bankruptcy proposal so it does not harm the mortgage market and drive capital away. "We are supportive of doing that in the most careful possible way," he said during his confirmation hearing. He also noted it's "enormously complicated" to draw up a bad bank plan that is cost effective. A team is looking at it today, he testified. "It is possible it will be part of the solution going forward." In stabilizing the banks, the administration wants to get the credit markets going again, including commercial and residential mortgage markets. "We also have to provide much more substantial direct support for credit markets," Mr. Geithner said.

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