New York - Bush administration officials warned an angry Congress on Wednesday that the US financial system would sink into Great Depression-style chaos unless it approved a $700 billion bailout plan, which has become a political football in the US presidential campaign.
A battle appeared to be brewing between the administration of George W. Bush and leaders of the Democratic-controlled Congress over the US government's request for US$700 billion to bail out financial institutions. [Agencies]
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While Congress considers how and when to act, US markets were in turmoil. Investors stampeded into cash and safe-haven assets, briefly sending short-term interest rates below zero. Experts said banks were hoarding cash, fearful that if they loaned money to other banks they might not get repaid.
Bush administration officials warned of a looming economic disaster if Congress failed to act swiftly to fund the US$700 billion bailout that would be larger than the total cost of the Iraq war.
Wrangling over the bailout overshadowed Berkshire Hathaway Inc's US$5 billion investment in embattled Wall Street titan Goldman Sachs Group Inc, which is transforming into a traditional bank to shield itself from the crisis. Goldman's shares closed 6.4 percent higher.
"I am to some effect betting on the fact that the government will do the rational thing and act properly," Berkshire's Warren Buffett, one of the world's richest men and preeminent investors, told CNBC.
US President George W. Bush will seek to convince the American public to support the plan, which empowers the government to buy toxic mortgages at the center of the crisis, in a televised address Wednesday night.
Republican presidential candidate US Sen. John McCain said he will break off from his campaign to return to Washington to help broker a deal, saying he feared legislation could not pass in its current form. The Arizona senator said he wanted to cancel Friday's presidential debate.
"McCain's gambit portends the further politicization of the crisis/bailout issue and thus could complicate efforts to enact (the) $700 billion (bailout) ... by as early as this weekend," Chuck Gabriel, managing director at Washington-based consultants Capital Alpha Partners, said in a note to clients.
Democratic candidate US Sen. Barack Obama indirectly accused McCain of playing politics and said the first of a series of planned presidential debates should go ahead.
"What is important is that we don't suddenly infuse Capitol Hill with presidential politics," Obama said.
"What I'm planning to do now is debate on Friday," the Illinois senator said from Florida. "It's my belief that this is exactly the time when the American people need to hear from the person who in approximately 40 days will be responsible for dealing with this mess.
While investors see an 80 percent chance that the US Congress will approve the bailout by the end of the month, according to Intrade, an online betting site, many lawmakers are demanding changes to the bailout plan.
The changes include more protections for taxpayers and restrictions on the pay of executive at companies that unload their bad assets.
US Rep. Barney Frank, chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, said Democrats would have their version of the bailout -- with changes -- ready by Thursday and would then start negotiations with Republicans.
The uncertainty has roiled markets.
"There's a tremendous amount of anxiety whether this (bailout) bill will get passed," said Thomas di Galoma, head of US government bonds at Jefferies & Co. in New York.
As Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke and US Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson toiled to convince Congress to approve the plan allowing the government to buy up toxic mortgages and other bad assets that have dried up global credit, financial markets showed extreme strain.