8:55 PM

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Wall Street critic Warren to shape consumer watchdog (Reuters)

Addison Ray

WASHINGTON (Reuters) � President Barack Obama named Wall Street critic Elizabeth Warren on Friday to oversee creation of a new consumer financial protection agency, drawing praise from liberals and an outcry from Republicans and the financial industry.

Obama announced Warren as a special adviser to steer the new agency's establishment, allowing him to avoid a bitter Senate confirmation fight if he had nominated her to be director. Republicans accused him of circumventing congressional oversight.

Calling Warren "one of the country's fiercest advocates for the middle class," Obama made clear the outspoken Harvard University professor would take the lead in shaping the powerful new watchdog, a centerpiece of the sweeping regulatory overhaul he signed into law in July.

"From now on, consumers will ... have a tough, independent watchdog whose job it is to stand up for their financial interests, for their families' future," Obama said in the White House Rose Garden with Warren at his side, as he highlighted her working-class roots as a janitor's daughter.

The White House hopes Warren's appointment will appeal to voters resentful of Wall Street excesses and help energize the president's liberal base before November 2 elections, when his Democratic Party faces the threat of big losses in both chambers of Congress.

Obama used Friday's announcement to highlight his financial reform legislation, which Republicans and Wall Street have largely opposed and voters have mostly ignored as they fret over an economy saddled with near double-digit unemployment.

The financial industry and many Republicans opposed Warren's selection, worried that she will bring a heavy-handed regulatory approach that could crimp business profits and global competitiveness.

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which is Warren's brainchild, will have broad powers to write and enforce rules covering mortgages, credit cards and other consumer financial products.

She has until July 2011 to get the agency up and running.

Warren, 61, becomes an assistant to the president and special adviser to Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner. Obama said she would have direct access to him.

"She will also play a pivotal role in helping me determine who the best choice is for director of the bureau," Obama said.

The White House said Obama hopes to name the agency's chief in the next several months but declined to say whether Warren would be a candidate.

"TOUGH COP"

Warren, whose grandmother drove a wagon in the Oklahoma land rush, said in a White House blog post that the new agency would act as a "tough cop on the beat" and declared that the time for financial "tricks and traps" was over. She did not make remarks at the Rose Garden ceremony.

Warren told U.S. television networks the post of agency director had been on the table but she had been anxious to get to work right away, which her new role allowed her to do.

The Senate confirmation process could have dragged on for up to 10 months, White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said.

"I'm coming to Washington to try to help get this agency started," she told Fox television. "And if I can be helpful, I don't care if you call me the dogcatcher."

Supporters hailed her appointment.

"I would like to congratulate American consumers, because nothing could be better news for them in terms of being protected in financial matters like home mortgages, bank accounts, and credit cards," said Representative Barney Frank, Democratic chairman of the House Financial Services Committee.

Warren's critics saw her appointment differently.

"The Obama administration's first priority should be ensuring that our financial institutions are operated in a safe and sound manner," Republican Representative Spencer Bachus said. "Instead they resort to a calculated political ploy to appoint a passionate, but inexperienced, advocate to run a new agency with unprecedented power."

Matt McCormick, a portfolio manager and banking analyst with Bahl & Gaynor, said Warren's appointment was done more for political reasons than for correcting financial industry ills.

"I really doubt she will have the ability to bring people together considering the political nature of her appointment," he said. "It is troubling."

There is also potential for friction with Geithner. Warren clashed with him when she headed the watchdog agency overseeing the government's $700 billion financial bailout program.

But Geithner attended her appointment ceremony and, in a statement issued later by the White House, praised her as a consumer protection pioneer.

While she may have the president's ear, there are questions about whether bypassing the confirmation process will put legal constraints on what she can accomplish.

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce slammed the method of her appointment as "an affront to the pledge of transparency and consumer protection."

(Additional reporting by Patricia Zengerle, Caren Bohan, Ross Colvin and Diane Bartz in Washington, Steve Eder in New York, and Joe Rauch in Charlotte, North Carolina; Writing by Matt Spetalnick; Editing by Stacey Joyce, Leslie Adler, Tim Dobbyn)



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8:12 PM

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Wall St critic Warren to shape consumer watchdog

Addison Ray

By Jeff Mason and Alister Bull

WASHINGTON | Fri Sep 17, 2010 10:28pm EDT

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Barack Obama named Wall Street critic Elizabeth Warren on Friday to oversee creation of a new consumer financial protection agency, drawing praise from liberals and an outcry from Republicans and the financial industry.

Obama announced Warren as a special adviser to steer the new agency's establishment, allowing him to avoid a bitter Senate confirmation fight if he had nominated her to be director. Republicans accused him of circumventing congressional oversight.

Calling Warren "one of the country's fiercest advocates for the middle class," Obama made clear the outspoken Harvard University professor would take the lead in shaping the powerful new watchdog, a centerpiece of the sweeping regulatory overhaul he signed into law in July.

"From now on, consumers will ... have a tough, independent watchdog whose job it is to stand up for their financial interests, for their families' future," Obama said in the White House Rose Garden with Warren at his side, as he highlighted her working-class roots as a janitor's daughter.

The White House hopes Warren's appointment will appeal to voters resentful of Wall Street excesses and help energize the president's liberal base before November 2 elections, when his Democratic Party faces the threat of big losses in both chambers of Congress.

Obama used Friday's announcement to highlight his financial reform legislation, which Republicans and Wall Street have largely opposed and voters have mostly ignored as they fret over an economy saddled with near double-digit unemployment.

The financial industry and many Republicans opposed Warren's selection, worried that she will bring a heavy-handed regulatory approach that could crimp business profits and global competitiveness.

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which is Warren's brainchild, will have broad powers to write and enforce rules covering mortgages, credit cards and other consumer financial products.

She has until July 2011 to get the agency up and running.

Warren, 61, becomes an assistant to the president and special adviser to Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner. Obama said she would have direct access to him.

"She will also play a pivotal role in helping me determine who the best choice is for director of the bureau," Obama said.

The White House said Obama hopes to name the agency's chief in the next several months but declined to say whether Warren would be a candidate.

"TOUGH COP"

Warren, whose grandmother drove a wagon in the Oklahoma land rush, said in a White House blog post that the new agency would act as a "tough cop on the beat" and declared that the time for financial "tricks and traps" was over. She did not make remarks at the Rose Garden ceremony.

Warren told U.S. television networks the post of agency director had been on the table but she had been anxious to get to work right away, which her new role allowed her to do.

The Senate confirmation process could have dragged on for up to 10 months, White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said.

"I'm coming to Washington to try to help get this agency started," she told Fox television. "And if I can be helpful, I don't care if you call me the dogcatcher."

Supporters hailed her appointment.

"I would like to congratulate American consumers, because nothing could be better news for them in terms of being protected in financial matters like home mortgages, bank accounts, and credit cards," said Representative Barney Frank, Democratic chairman of the House Financial Services Committee.

Warren's critics saw her appointment differently.

"The Obama administration's first priority should be ensuring that our financial institutions are operated in a safe and sound manner," Republican Representative Spencer Bachus said. "Instead they resort to a calculated political ploy to appoint a passionate, but inexperienced, advocate to run a new agency with unprecedented power."

Matt McCormick, a portfolio manager and banking analyst with Bahl & Gaynor, said Warren's appointment was done more for political reasons than for correcting financial industry ills.

"I really doubt she will have the ability to bring people together considering the political nature of her appointment," he said. "It is troubling."

There is also potential for friction with Geithner. Warren clashed with him when she headed the watchdog agency overseeing the government's $700 billion financial bailout program.

But Geithner attended her appointment ceremony and, in a statement issued later by the White House, praised her as a consumer protection pioneer.

While she may have the president's ear, there are questions about whether bypassing the confirmation process will put legal constraints on what she can accomplish.

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce slammed the method of her appointment as "an affront to the pledge of transparency and consumer protection."

(Additional reporting by Patricia Zengerle, Caren Bohan, Ross Colvin and Diane Bartz in Washington, Steve Eder in New York, and Joe Rauch in Charlotte, North Carolina; Writing by Matt Spetalnick; Editing by Stacey Joyce, Leslie Adler, Tim Dobbyn)



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4:59 PM

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GM IPO to be open to "all" investors: Treasury (Reuters)

Addison Ray

DETROIT (Reuters) � The upcoming initial public offering of General Motors Co will be open to the widest possible range of investors, including both overseas funds and U.S. retail buyers, the U.S. Treasury said on Friday.

The statement marked the first time the Obama administration has clarified the rules that will be applied in a landmark IPO intended to reduce the U.S. government's 61-percent stake in the automaker.

In the statement, the Treasury said that it would look to "maximize taxpayer returns" from the IPO while also looking to attract a stable base of investors and interest in the subsequent stock offerings that will be needed to eliminate U.S. government ownership.

"We expect that potential investors will be sought across multiple geographies with a focus on North American investors, in line with what is typical in similar transactions," the statement said.

The U.S. government will not become involved with the decisions about how many shares are allocated to specific investors, it said.



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4:57 PM

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GM IPO to be open to "all" investors: Treasury

Addison Ray

Thomson Reuters is the world's largest international multimedia news agency, providing investing news, world news, business news, technology news, headline news, small business news, news alerts, personal finance, stock market, and mutual funds information available on Reuters.com, video, mobile, and interactive television platforms. Thomson Reuters journalists are subject to an Editorial Handbook which requires fair presentation and disclosure of relevant interests.

NYSE and AMEX quotes delayed by at least 20 minutes. Nasdaq delayed by at least 15 minutes. For a complete list of exchanges and delays, please click here.



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11:35 AM

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UAL and Continental shareholders approve merger (Reuters)

Addison Ray

ELK GROVE VILLAGE, Illinois (Reuters) � Shareholders of United Airlines parent UAL Corp (UAUA.O) and Continental Airlines Inc (CAL.N) approved the merger of the two companies on Friday to form the world's largest air carrier.

More than 98 percent of the votes cast by Continental's shareholders approved UAL's $3.17 billion all-stock purchase of Continental during a special meeting in Houston. UAL investors approved the deal at a meeting in a suburb of Chicago.

"We would have a company that would be an investable company, a leading company and we've created what has every opportunity by almost every imaginable measure to be the best company in the industry," UAL CEO Glenn Tilton said during the meeting.

UAL and Continental announced their merger in May, two years after Continental spurned similar advances from United.

The merger, which won antitrust approval from the U.S. government in August and got clearance from the European Commission in July, is expected to close by October 1.

The new carrier will be known as United Airlines and will be based in Chicago with Continental Chief Executive Officer Jeff Smisek as CEO. UAL CEO Glenn Tilton will become nonexecutive chairman of the carrier.

The deal is the first major U.S. airline merger since Delta Air Lines (DAL.N) acquired Northwest Airlines in 2008 and comes after the airline industry has been hammered by a surge in oil prices followed by a deep recession.

During the meeting, Tilton cited a need for more cross-border airline partnerships. He added that the airline industry is better able to match available seats for sale with passenger demand.

"From economic collapse to pandemic to 9/11 to volcanic ash, it's an industry that is buffeted by forces beyond its control," Tilton said. "Because of that, it's going to require an industry of this resilience and this magnitude to weather all that."

Continental shares fell 16 cents to $23.16 on the New York Stock Exchange early Friday afternoon. United stock dropped 18 cents to $22.04 on Nasdaq.

(Reporting by Kyle Peterson in Elk Grove Village, Illinois, with added reporting by Deepa Seetharaman in New York; Editing by Lisa Von Ahn and Richard Chang)



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