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"I have hundreds of indicators that I follow, and we're in an environment where standard indicators tested throughout history should not be applied," he said. "We've never seen this kind of volatility, these kinds of declines, and its a market not to be a hero in." Worries about more volatility this week may have had a hand in the announcement of Paulson's plan to buy equity in troubled banks. The new approach would take a matter of weeks to benefit banks, while the previously announced initiative to buy banks' troubled assets could take months. Under the plan announced Friday, the Treasury will use authority granted by Congress in the $700 billion bailout to primarily buy nonvoting common or preferred shares of banks. Investors so far have greeted the news with cautious optimism, a marked shift in sentiment that may have helped limit Friday's losses on Wall Street. In Britain, officials are also drawing up a plan to take major stakes in the Royal Bank of Scotland, Lloyds TSB and HBOS under a $500 billion financial rescue. At a meeting Sunday of European leaders, the continent's single-currency zone agreed to temporarily guarantee bank refinancing and pledged to prevent banks failing as part of a raft of emergency measures designed to get credit flowing again. Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., chairman of the Joint Economic Committee, said the proposal to inject federal money directly into certain banks "is gaining steam." "I am hopeful that (Monday), the Treasury will announce that they're doing it. And they have to do it quickly. ... Markets are waiting," Schumer said. Some questions do remain about how quick banks will be to sell stock to the government, analysts said. Most of the nation's banks remain well capitalized, but those that are struggling might try at least in the short term to manage their way out of balance sheet problems. "What banker, if they can avoid it, wants to have the federal government as its partners after witnessing the results over the past year?" Kotok said. "You'd instruct your management to do everything you can to avoid it, and only folks that would want them as a partner are the ones who have no other choice." He said bank CEOs would not want to "gravitate toward fast recognition of losses" by prematurely going to the government without trying to solve problems on their own. Getting capital from the government might undermine the financial company's management and make shareholders nervous. Instead, banks without drastic problems would likely wait out the financial crisis and hope the markets begin to turn around. There are also still have a number of tools, such as borrowing money directly from the Federal Reserve, that financial institutions can employ to shore up their balance sheets.
[Associated
Press;
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