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Obama Said to Pick Geithner as Treasury Secretary (Update3)
2008-11-21 22:16:07.200 GMT
(Adds investor comment in sixth paragraph and context on
Summers, Geithner, economy from 17th paragraph.)
By Rich Miller and Michael McKee
Nov. 21 (Bloomberg) -- President-elect Barack Obama picked
Timothy Geithner, head of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York,
to be his Treasury secretary, with Lawrence Summers getting a
senior White House role, a Democratic aide said.
Obama is also likely to nominate New Mexico Governor Bill
Richardson as Commerce Secretary, and to announce his picks on
Nov. 24, the person said on condition of anonymity.
Geithner has helped lead U.S. efforts to combat the deepest
financial crisis in seven decades, helping oversee the decisions
this year to take over American International Group Inc., rescue
Bear Stearns Cos. and leave Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. to
fail. Summers was Bill Clinton’s last Treasury secretary, and is
now a professor at Harvard University.
Both Geithner and Summers are veterans of managing financial
turmoil, having worked together on the Asian financial crisis of
1997-98 and helping prevent a Mexican default earlier that
decade. They will be charged with shepherding Obama’s plans for a
fiscal stimulus to cushion an economy that analysts say is in its
deepest recession in a quarter century.
Stocks rallied after news of Obama’s Treasury choice, with
the Standard & Poor’s 500 Stock index rising 6.3 percent to
800.03 at the close in New York. The index is still heading for
its biggest annual decline since 1931.
‘Resounding Yes’
“It’s a resounding ‘yes’ from Wall Street,” said Peter
Kenny, managing director for institutional sales at Knight Equity
Markets in Jersey City, New Jersey. “There’s confidence in a
person who is up and coming and recognized as an authority on a
very complex problem. There’s confidence in what he’s displayed
so far, in terms of his leadership and management skill.”
Geithner, 47, served as an undersecretary for international
affairs under Summers, 53, and has been at the helm of the New
York Fed since November 2003.
Kevin Warsh, a Fed Board governor, is a leading contender to
succeed Geithner at the New York Fed, a U.S. official said on
condition of anonymity.
Obama’s nominations would need to be confirmed by the Senate
after he takes office on Jan. 20. President George W. Bush’s
Treasury secretary, Henry Paulson, has pledged to work with his
successor during the transition. Summers, along with former Fed
Chairman Paul Volcker, were cited as candidates for the Treasury
job by people close to the Obama camp earlier this month.
As head of the New York Fed, Geithner has served as the
central bank’s top liaison with Wall Street. Geithner oversaw
meetings at his bank to attempt to head off Lehman’s failure in
September, later hosting gatherings on how to resolve AIG.
2008-11-21 22:16:07.200 GMT
(Adds investor comment in sixth paragraph and context on
Summers, Geithner, economy from 17th paragraph.)
By Rich Miller and Michael McKee
Nov. 21 (Bloomberg) -- President-elect Barack Obama picked
Timothy Geithner, head of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York,
to be his Treasury secretary, with Lawrence Summers getting a
senior White House role, a Democratic aide said.
Obama is also likely to nominate New Mexico Governor Bill
Richardson as Commerce Secretary, and to announce his picks on
Nov. 24, the person said on condition of anonymity.
Geithner has helped lead U.S. efforts to combat the deepest
financial crisis in seven decades, helping oversee the decisions
this year to take over American International Group Inc., rescue
Bear Stearns Cos. and leave Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. to
fail. Summers was Bill Clinton’s last Treasury secretary, and is
now a professor at Harvard University.
Both Geithner and Summers are veterans of managing financial
turmoil, having worked together on the Asian financial crisis of
1997-98 and helping prevent a Mexican default earlier that
decade. They will be charged with shepherding Obama’s plans for a
fiscal stimulus to cushion an economy that analysts say is in its
deepest recession in a quarter century.
Stocks rallied after news of Obama’s Treasury choice, with
the Standard & Poor’s 500 Stock index rising 6.3 percent to
800.03 at the close in New York. The index is still heading for
its biggest annual decline since 1931.
‘Resounding Yes’
“It’s a resounding ‘yes’ from Wall Street,” said Peter
Kenny, managing director for institutional sales at Knight Equity
Markets in Jersey City, New Jersey. “There’s confidence in a
person who is up and coming and recognized as an authority on a
very complex problem. There’s confidence in what he’s displayed
so far, in terms of his leadership and management skill.”
Geithner, 47, served as an undersecretary for international
affairs under Summers, 53, and has been at the helm of the New
York Fed since November 2003.
Kevin Warsh, a Fed Board governor, is a leading contender to
succeed Geithner at the New York Fed, a U.S. official said on
condition of anonymity.
Obama’s nominations would need to be confirmed by the Senate
after he takes office on Jan. 20. President George W. Bush’s
Treasury secretary, Henry Paulson, has pledged to work with his
successor during the transition. Summers, along with former Fed
Chairman Paul Volcker, were cited as candidates for the Treasury
job by people close to the Obama camp earlier this month.
As head of the New York Fed, Geithner has served as the
central bank’s top liaison with Wall Street. Geithner oversaw
meetings at his bank to attempt to head off Lehman’s failure in
September, later hosting gatherings on how to resolve AIG.