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...weeks, Paulson had held off on direct investment, preferring instead to use the $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP), passed by Congress on its second go-round, to buy toxic mortgage-related assets from the banks. The bank bailout will be funded out of that budget, and the Treasury still plans to start buying troubled assets in the next month or so. But that wasn't soon enough for worried investors or for Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke, who according to inside reports had been advocating for a recapitalization for months. Money flowed out of the stock market, including that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Big Bank Bailout: Are You Next? | 10/16/2008 | See Source »

...problem only because they're in survivor mode, waiting to see if they're going to have customers tomorrow." David Guernsey, who owns an office-products firm in Chantilly, Va., knows the feeling. While less expensive items are selling, purchases of office furniture that are normally bank-financed are lagging. Customers are telling his sales staff, "We just need to circle the wagons and wait this thing out," Guernsey says. That's true among large corporations too. "People are putting projects on the shelf because the uncertainty came in so fast," a FORTUNE 100 CEO tells TIME. "Everybody...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Big Bank Bailout: Are You Next? | 10/16/2008 | See Source »

...ever had a public face, it was probably that of Lydia Lobsiger, the happy and relieved East Peoria, Ill., widow who in 1934 was the first American to get her little pile of savings back from the feds after a terrifying run on her local Fon du Lac State Bank. Now, almost 75 years later, the FDIC has been busy projecting a newer face, and it belongs to Sheila Bair, a 54-year-old lawyer from Kansas...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The FDIC's Boss: Sheila Bair, America's Passbook Protector | 10/16/2008 | See Source »

...reminder that Washington has all sorts of agencies that hum along unnoticed in good times but can become pivotal in a crisis. When that happens, the real fighting begins. In this case, the war between small depositors who have managed their money carefully and large, institutional banks that have gambled and lost is playing out across the American economy. So far, Bair has worried about Main Street while working overtime to limit the damage on Wall Street. In the past month, she's overseen the "resolution" (meaning, in a banker's lexicon, the "failure and sale") of the country...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The FDIC's Boss: Sheila Bair, America's Passbook Protector | 10/16/2008 | See Source »

...Even at the peak of the savings-and-loan crisis in the late 1980s, when thrifts were closing at the rate of one a day, the FDIC maintained its perfect record of returning every penny of every insured depositor's money, and Bair has preserved that record through 15 bank failures this year. That's partly because the FDIC by law gets to tap a failed bank's assets before any other creditors get a crack at the safe...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The FDIC's Boss: Sheila Bair, America's Passbook Protector | 10/16/2008 | See Source »

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