The U.S. government is considering using the Fed's Term Asset Backed Securities Lending Facility to remove toxic assets from the balance sheets of financial institutions, according to sources cited by Bloomberg News.
The comments come ahead of the Federal Open markets Committee' monetary policy announcement, which economists and strategists believe could include an official expansion of the Fed's $1 trillion program to insure the purchase of consumer debt, including mortgage backed securities and automobile debt.
The U.S. Treasury reportedly plans to announce the details of its bank rescue plan sometime this week along with Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner's private-public toxic debt plan.
The source also told Bloomberg that the U.S. government planns to broaden the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation's role in rescue plan to include the possible establishment of an aggregator bank to purchase some illiquid assets directly from financial institutions.
By Erik Kevin Franco and edited by Stephen Huebl
©CEP News Ltd. 2009