Paulson cites progress in calming markets
By Glenn Somerville and David Lawder
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson cited encouraging signs of progress in calming financial markets, which he said made it possible to turn more attention to measures aimed at stimulating a slowing economy.
"I'm not going to make projections in terms of when we'll be through this period because there are a number of markets that aren't functioning as normal," Paulson said in an interview with Reuters News on Thursday.
"But in my judgment, we're making progress in working our way through this and I think the issue is now increasingly about the economy," he added, noting he saw signs that astute investors were coming back into markets to buy leveraged loans and mortgages at discounts.
"That's why a big part of our focus is getting the stimulus checks out, having the financial institutions raise the capital they need to raise and doing everything we can to avoid preventable (housing) foreclosures while not impeding this necessary correction," Paulson said.
"The faster we get this behind us, the faster housing is going to be once again contributing to growth," he added.
Paulson said the Treasury was accelerating its schedule for distribution of tax rebate checks under a $152 billion economic stimulus package, sending out the first payments on Monday instead of in early May.
Payments totaling more than $100 billion should be mostly in consumers' pockets by the end of June, he said.
Financial markets have been in turmoil since last August, when rising delinquencies in subprime mortgages caused credit markets to seize up, triggering losses among holdings of complex and illiquid mortgage-backed securities. Billionaire investor George Soros recently said such losses could top $1 trillion. Continued...






