Money | Ben Bernanke Fed, Treasury Fall Back on Existing 'Inadequate' Tools With no federal deal, agencies limited to ad hoc solutions By Clay Dillow Posted Sep 30, 2008 11:42 AM CDT Copied Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, left, accompanied by Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke, testifies on Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday, Sept. 24, 2008. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta) With yesterday’s failure of the $700 billion bailout, the Fed and Treasury are reconsidering their options, the New York Times reports. Fearful of cutting interest rates, they're back to rescuing struggling institutions on a case by case basis, and printing money—offering $150 billion in emergency loans to banks and $330 billion to foreign central banks yesterday. “The problem is that these are just a series of ad hoc solutions on a business-by-business basis, and they aren’t addressing the systemic problems in any basic way,” one economist says. With bailout uncertain, the agencies have no choice but to draw from a toolkit Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson called “substantial but insufficient.” Treasury yields sank to a meager 0.29% yesterday, and interbank lending rates soared, underscoring banks’ fear of lending. Read These Next The Wall Street Journal is naming more names tied to Epstein. The White House and South Park are having a tiff. Trump isn't talking about a Ghislaine Maxwell pardon. The first video of an earthquake fault slip led to a major discovery. Report an error