Today's Trading

Small caps open flat as investors focus on bailout plan’s details

SMALLCAP MARKETPLACE
Jennifer Schonberger | Sep 23, 2008 9:57am EDT
Rating: Unrated

Small caps opened mostly flat, as Fed Chairman Bernanke, Treasury Secretary Paulson, and SEC Chairman Cox testify before Congress on the $700 billion mortgage bailout plan and the recent market turmoil.

At 10:10 a.m. ET the Russell 2000 (NYSE:IWM) was up 12.43, or 0.20%, to 721.87.

Fed Chairman Bernanke, Treasury Secretary Paulson and SEC Chairman's Cox all began testifying before the Senate Banking Committee at 9:30 a.m. ET. The market remains skittish and skeptical, as the administration’s officials paint the details of the plan and what dire consequences could result should Congress opt not to pass the bailout. In a prepared statement for the panel Bernanke said, “If financial conditions fail to improve for a protracted period, the implications for the broader economy could be quite adverse.”

The plan, in which the government would take ownership of all toxic mortgages from affected banks’ balance sheets, effectively rids banks of the poison that has thwarted their operation and enables them to begin shoring up their financial positions to begin lending again. Recent reception has been hostile by certain members of congress. The two most contentious areas include limiting executive compensation and amending the bankruptcy law to allow judges to change the terms of the toxic mortgages. One area of agreement is broader congressional oversight and taking equity stakes in firms which partake in the rescue efforts.

Today will be a day of waiting and listening. Some investors are concerned the plan could get hung up in Congress’ halls, while others remain curious about many of the plan’s details.

In its latest efforts to further shore up ailing banks, the Fed loosened the rules surrounding the ability of buyout shops and private investors to take stakes in them. This is a testament to the level of apprehension regulators have about banks’ liquidity positions.

Overseas, China’s market jumped a hefty 7.8%, as regulators took . . .

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