- ABB Profit Rise Hits Expectations, Ups Guidance
- European Shares Seen Lower, Results Flurry Dominates
- India's Bharti Airtel Profit Beats Forecast, Shares Up
- Singapore's MAS Ups 2008 Inflation View to 6% - 7%
- SK Telecom Profit Falls on Marketing, Outlook Weak
- Japan Exports Fall for First Time in Nearly 5 Years
- Weaker Oil Prices Lift Asian Markets, Tokyo Gains 2%
- Baidu.com Posts 87% Profit Gain, Shares Surge
- Oil Hits 7-Week Low at $124 on Demand Woes
- Mad Mail: Buy a House – Now
- Lightning Round OT: Las Vegas Sands, CapitalSource and More
- Lightning Round: FuelCell, Microsoft, eBay and More
- Fast & Furious Trades: Microsoft, Lilly, Dow...
- Market Pans Panera Bread
- Commander Planet: Unexpected Green Trade!
- Emerging Money: These Colors Don’t Run
- Is GE the New Citigroup?
- Pops & Drops: Hershey, Pepsi...
Congressional leaders have reached a deal with the White house on a bipartisan economic stimulus package that is expected to move swiftly through Congress and give most tax filers rebates of $600 to $1,200.
WHAT'S IN
- Tax rebates: Checks of at least $300 for almost everyone earning a paycheck, including low-income earners who make too little to pay income taxes, so long as they earned at least $3,000 in 2007.
Families with children would receive an additional $300 per child, while those paying income taxes could receive higher rebates.
The full rebate would be limited to individuals earning $75,000 or less and couples with incomes of $150,000 or less, but a partial rebate would go to individuals earning up to $87,000 and couples earning up to $174,000. The caps are higher for people with children.
- Business tax write-offs: Spurring business investments with so-called bonus depreciation and more generous expensing rules.
- Housing rescue: Allow more subprime mortgage holders to refinance into federally insured loans by raising the limit on Federal Housing Administration loans from $362,000 to as high as $729,750 in expensive areas. Increase the availability of mortgages by providing a one-year boost to the cap on loans that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac can buy, from $417,000 up to $729,750 in high-cost markets.
_____________________________________________
Reader Sound Off:
Cotton Candy or Oatmeal: What do YOU think of the Stimulus Plan?
__________________________________________________
WHAT'S OUT
- Permanent tax cuts: Republicans conceded that their top priority would have to be left out.
- Unemployment insurance: Democrats wanted to extend benefits past 26 weeks.
- Food stamps: A boost for benefits.
- Medicaid: Democrats gave up on including Medicaid payments to states.
- Low-income heating subsidies: Democrats are surrendering the fight to include them.
- Infrastructure spending: Spending on transportation or repair projects already under way is off the table.
- Republicans' proposal to allow businesses suffering losses now to reclaim taxes previously paid was dropped.
__________________________________________________
Investor Takeaway |


