- Buy, Buy, Buy, Buy: Morgan Stanley Europe
- Unemployment Climbs to 6.5%, Higher Than Feared
- British Airways Lifts Revenue Target, Shares Jump
- Sprint Nextel Posts Loss as Customers Flee
- What the Pros Say: 300,000 Jobs Lost in October
- Obama Should Show International Leadership: El-Erian
- US Economy 'Has Fallen off a Cliff': El-Erian
- Euro Shares Trim Gains after US Jobs Data
- PC Maker Lenovo's Quarterly Earnings Plunge
- Governator Foes: 2 Guys and a Microphone
- 9 Solid Stocks for Rebuilding Your Portfolio
- Yahoo!'s Yang: The 'Height of Hubris'
- Lightning Round: Intel, ABB, Goldman Sachs and More
- Lightning Round OT: Quanta Services, Jacobs Engineering and More
- Sell Block: The Problem With Analysts
- Executive Decision: Tupperware CEO Rick Goings
- Buffett's Buying, But Should You?
- Your First Move For Friday November 7th
- Premarket roundup: Investment banks, Priceline.com
- DPL names Boyle chief financial officer
- Tenn. newspaper cuts 50 positions
- Ahead of the Bell: Huntsman
- Greenhill prices stock offer at $56 per share
- Ahead of the Bell: Priceline up after strong 3Q
- Mirant 3Q earnings double on hedging gains
- Dendreon 3Q loss grows on stock warrant charge
- Shuffle Master chief operating officer leaves
- Premarket roundup: Nvidia, natural gas
WASHINGTON - Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson pledged Thursday to work closely with President-elect Barack Obama to pave the way for a smooth transition as the country battles its worst financial crisis in decades.
"A methodical and orderly transition is in the best interests of the financial markets and Treasury is committed to making sure that the incoming team can hit the ground running in January," Paulson said in a brief statement.
That's especially important because the department is in charge of rolling out a $700 billion financial bailout package. The package — a massive federal intervention — _ was passed by Congress and signed into law by President Bush last month.
The Bush administration is already pouring $250 billion into banks in return for partial ownership. It also may use some of the money to buy rotten mortgages and other toxic debt held by financial institutions.
Many companies, including automakers and insurance firms, are pressing the government for some financial assistance. Much of the work in implementing the program — and crucial decisions — will be left to Obama's incoming administration.
Obama has shifted into the task of building a new Democratic administration. A priority will be quickly assembling his economics team led by the Treasury Secretary.
Former Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers, who served in the Clinton administration, Timothy Geithner, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, and New Jersey Gov. Jon Corzine, a former Goldman Sachs executive, are among the names being mentioned for that post.



