- Zero China Growth Is ‘Probable’: Gordon Chang
- With Greece Nearing Euro Exit, Is Cash King?
- Euro Zone Battle Hinges On Greece’s Banks: Steil
- Will Congress Forge Budget Deal, Avoid ‘Fiscal Cliff’?
- Bob Lutz: Auto Bailout Was ‘Right Thing to Do’
- Will European Woes Trigger QE3, Death of Euro?
- Battle Over Congressional Budget Heats Up
- Extend the Bush Tax Cuts Now
- Sen. Coburn: There Will Be a Budget Deal
- Paul Ryan Blames Democrats for Debt Woes
SHOW TIMES
Weeknights 7p ET
CNBC Asia:
Saturday 07:00 SIN/HK
RSS FEED
MOST SHARED
- JPMorgan Trading Loss: Did Regulators Miss the Risk?
- RIM May Cut at Least 2,000 Jobs in Restructuring: Report
- Marc Faber: 100% Chance of Global Recession
- How Nasdaq Lost Control of Facebook IPO, by the Minute
- Bacon Tourism: From the Davos of Bacon to Bacon Mecca
- Heard in More US States: See You in Tax Court!
- 5 Spots Where the Dollar Buys a Great Vacation
- What College Tuition Will Look Like in 18 Years
CONTACT US
We want to hear from you!
E-mail:
Money & Politics
New York Fed president Tim Geithner has been chosen to lead Obama’s Treasury, according to news reports. The stock market cheered by rising 500 points on the announcement.
Geithner is generally well regarded on Wall Street in his handling of the banking crisis. He’s been the point man for both the Fed’s Ben Bernanke and Bush Treasury man Paulson in their various rescue efforts to deal with the ongoing credit crisis.
It is generally believed that Geithner would have bailed out Lehman Brothers, according to street gossip and some news speculations (although this has never been definitively confirmed). Nonetheless, Geithner has done a good job in dealing with the multitude of crises and setting up various lending facilities to keep the banking system afloat.
He was a protégé of Larry Summers in the Clinton Treasury and rose up through the ranks to become undersecretary for international affairs. Geithner collaborated closely with Robert Rubin and Summers in dealing with the Asian currency crisis and other fire drills in the late 1990s.
He is highly regarded by those who worked with him as a very smart, sharp, and insightful player. He has developed a strong working knowledge of markets and the economy as a central figure in the dramatic events of the past couple of years.
Presumably, as a former deputy to Rubin and Summers, Geithner shares their policy views on free-trade and a strong dollar. While it is too soon to know how trade and the dollar will play out in the Obama administration, it is likely that Geithner would represent a free-trade and strong-currency position.
Regarding tax policy, it is harder to say. When Bill Clinton finally signed a Republican capital-gains tax cut in 1997, it was reported that Rubin and Summers opposed the move. But I don’t know that with any certainty. And Geithner’s thinking on Obama tax policy — especially the threat to raise the capital-gains tax and upper-income tax brackets — is at this point unknown.
As for the TARP bailout story, it is generally believed that Geithner is a strong interventionist. And so we can expect him to move toward raising the second $350 billion tranche of the originally authorized $700 billion package by Congress.
Certainly, Geithner’s announcement today shows some movement by team Obama to fill the economic power vacuum that has taken over Washington during the transition. Stock market traders are cheering this movement. Nobody knows what Geithner might say about the GM/Detroit/carmakers bailout story. But Congress may actually take action on that in a couple of weeks — even before Obama is inaugurated.
It is interesting that Obama chose Geithner over Larry Summers and other names like Paul Volcker. Geithner is a young guy at 47 years old. And to the country at large and most of the Washington political establishment, he’s a new face.
- The Nasdaq has suffered the most from the EU crisis showing there's risk in the usual tech stocks.
- Targeting more Millennials is just one of the items brewing for consumers in the world of spirits.
- It seems many people may need a reminder of how NOT to act on a plane. Here are a few tips.
- Here are some very unusual roadside stops along American highways that might peek your interest.
- How three generations of Americans are dealing with the finances of retirement.









