"In August 2007, asset-backed securities (ABS), particularly those backed by subprime mortgages,
suddenly became illiquid and fell sharply in value as an unprecedented housing boom turned into
a housing bust. Losses on the many ABS held by financial firms depleted their capital.
Uncertainty about future losses on illiquid and complex assets led to firms having reduced access
to private liquidity, sometimes catastrophically. In September 2008, the financial crisis reached
panic proportions, with some large financial firms failing or needing government assistance to
prevent their failure.
Initially, the government approach was largely ad hoc, addressing the problems at individual
institutions on a case-by-case basis. The panic in September 2008 convinced policy makers that a
system-wide approach was needed, and Congress created the Troubled Asset Relief Program
(TARP) in October 2008. In addition to TARP, the Treasury, Federal Reserve (Fed) and Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) implemented broad lending and guarantee programs.
Because the crisis had many causes and symptoms, the response tackled a number of disparate
problems and can be broadly categorized into programs that (1) increased financial institutions’
liquidity; (2) provided capital directly to financial institutions for them to recover from asset
write-offs; (3) purchased illiquid assets from financial institutions to restore confidence in their
balance sheets and thereby their continued solvency; (4) intervened in specific financial markets
that had ceased to function smoothly; and (5) used public funds to prevent the failure of troubled
institutions that were deemed systemically important, popularly referred to as “too big to fail.”.."
Financial crisis
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