
On September 27th, investors thought the $700 bailout package was on the verge of passing the House. Hank Paulson and George W. Bush pushed that bill as the way to avoid financial calamity -- and "heaven help us" if it failed to pass. Last Monday, the bill was voted down -- and the Dow fell a record 778 points. Last Friday, an $810 billion version of the bill passed -- with added sweeteners.
So, did the clouds in the heavens part to reveal sunshine and rainbows? Not exactly. Since the market closed on the 27th -- the day before the bailout to save the world was expected to pass -- the Dow has lost 1,188 points, wiping out $2 trillion in stock market value. I wonder whether anyone actually believed the government when it said the bailout bill would fix things.
I didn't, because I did not expect the bailout to work. The good news is that with the market regularly tanking so much every day, our leaders are getting ever more desperate to try something that will work. This increases the odds that they will try what I think is a better plan. And if it would kindly supply a $25 billion guarantee to the $1.7 trillion Commercial Paper (CP) market. This would help companies finance payroll and buy inventory. (How hard would that be to do this after the government has already set aside $50 billion to guarantee the $3.4 trillion money market industry?)