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Personalize Ticker | Updated 4:02 PM, 10/1/2008 Disclaimer | © MarketWatch Inc.
Source: Interactive Data Corp
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, October 1, 2008; 5:26 PM

The U.S. finanical crisis last month appears to have led to a major pullback by investors who withdrew billions of dollars from equity mutual funds and bonds, according to an analysis released today by a financial research firm.

During September, investors pulled $22 billion from U.S. equity mutual funds, compared with $2 billion in August, according to the data from TrimTabs Investment Research, which publishes detailed coverage of U.S. stock market liquidity. At the same time $24 billion was also withdrawn from bonds during September, the largest extraction in a single-month.

"Usually when people leave equities they go to bonds, this time they are leaving bonds as well. Because of the credit problems, they are worried about defaults on bonds, everybody is going to the safest forms of cash they can find," said Conrad Gann, president and chief operating officer of TrimTabs. "People are scared they don't want risky investments, there is risk aversion -- everybody is averting risk in all of its forms, credit or equity."

Such apprehension appeared to be playing out today on Wall Street where the markets stalled as investors kept an eye on Washington to see if Congress would be able to pass the $700 billion financial rescue plan. 

Investors are hopeful that the plan, which the House defeated Monday, will pass the Senate tonight. But many remain wary about whether it has enough support to pass the House on a second try, analysts said.

The Dow Jones industrial average, which fell as much as 200 points early in the day, closed down nearly 20 points while the technology heavy Nasdaq lost more than 22 points and the broader Standard & Poor's 500 stock index fell nearly 4 points.

U.S. stocks, which recorded historic sell-off Monday after the House action, soared yesterday as investors regained confidence that some form of the bailout package would gain approval. Some analysts said today's lackluster trading might be a result of investors taking their profits from yesterday.

"US equity markets clawed back in the afternoon and recouped most of the early losses, but remain vulnerable to the bailout news stream," a Brown Brothers Harriman research note concluded today.

"People were taken by surprise the last time when the House didn't pass" the financial rescue plan, said Bill Stone, chief investment strategist for PNC Wealth Management. "You can say, once bitten, twice shy."

The legislation is considered central to keeping credit markets flowing as banks remain reluctant to loan money to each other. It would allow the government to buy the toxic mortgage assets weighing down financial firms balance sheets. But opponents have balked at the price and called it a bailout of the Wall Street firms that caused the current turmoil.

The Senate version is expected to include a provision allowing the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation to raise the government's guarantee of bank deposits beyond the current limit of $100,000 on each standard account. Advocates of that effort, including both presidential candidates, say it will provide bank depositors with a better sense of security.

Wall Street may be buoyed today by a move by securities regulators and accounting rule-makers to allow banks greater power to decide the value of their investments, even if market data suggest that prices should be lower. That could allow some banks to report smaller losses.

Posted by CEOinIRVINE
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PHOTOS: Lawmakers Struggle With Bailout
Protesters demonstrate against the proposed bailout outside of a Bank of America in Washington. (Getty)

Washington Post Staff Writers
Wednesday, October 1, 2008; 6:09 PM

The Senate today took up a revised rescue package for the U.S. financial system amid new warnings from the White House, congressional leaders, the two presidential candidates and the American business community that the nation's economy faces dire consequences if the plan fails again in Congress.

Two days after the House voted down a $700 billion bailout plan, the Senate began debating a package that includes additions designed to appeal to House Republicans, two-thirds of whom voted against the plan. A Senate vote on the package is expected tonight.

The revised package includes a one-year increase in Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. caps for bank and credit union accounts, extensions of numerous business tax breaks that have expired and a fix to the alternative minimum tax for individual taxpayers.

The FDIC and tax provisions could make the bill more appealing to House Republicans, but they could also prove unpalatable to a coalition of conservative Democrats who have long opposed the tax changes. The Senate Banking Committee's chairman, Christopher J. Dodd (D-Conn.), who helped negotiate the revised package, yesterday expressed confidence that the revisions would yield a majority of House votes.

President Bush said this afternoon that the "bill has been improved" by the additions in the Senate and that he was hopeful it would pass.

"It's very important for us to be able to pass this piece of legislation so as to stabilize the situation so it doesn't get worse and that our fellow citizens lose wealth and worth," Bush said during a brief appearance in the Oval Office with the U.S. general commanding NATO forces in Afghanistan.

Campaigning in Missouri, Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), the Republican presidential candidate, warned today that "if we fail to act, the gears of our economy will grind to a halt." He said Congress has "awakened to the danger" of a full-fledged financial "disaster" if the bill fails. But he expressed confidence that the new version would be passed with bipartisan support.

Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.), the Democratic candidate, said in Wisconsin that Congress must act "to prevent a crisis from turning into a catastrophe." He urged Democrats and Republicans who have opposed the plan to "step up to the plate" and "do what's right for the country, because the time to act is now." If they do not, the country could slip into a "long and painful recession," he warned, adding: "Thousands of businesses could close. Millions of jobs could be lost."

Both McCain and Obama then headed back to Washington to vote on the package tonight.

Obama later said in a floor speech during the debate, "This is not just a Wall Street crisis; this is an American crisis. And it's the American economy that needs a rescue plan." He added, "This is not a plan to just hand over $700 billion of taxpayer money to a few banks." If handled correctly, he said, the program could recoup most or all of the outlay and may even turn a profit.

Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.) said in the debate, "I don't think any of us want to see irresponsibility on Wall Street compounded by ineffectiveness in Washington." She said the package has been improved considerably since the Treasury Department first introduced its $700 billion bailout plan.

"This is a sink-or-swim moment for our country, and we cannot simply catch our breath," Clinton said. "We must swim for the shores."

Posted by CEOinIRVINE
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