Why is the Fed Discriminating Against Investment Banks?

In ES Browning’s WSJ

stocks report today, he mentions something I haven’t seen anywhere else:

Traders pointed to several culprits for the stock pullback: warnings from

Bank of America and Wachovia of more credit-loss provisions to come, a gloomy-sounding

comment from Canada’s central bank governor, rumors of more write-downs at

other financial institutions, surging oil prices and a comment from

the Federal Reserve that its new bailout program wouldn’t be available to

investment banks.

Let’s not get into the question of whether the Fed’s new facility is a bailout

for the time being. The big question is: why on earth isn’t it available to

investment banks? And where can I find this comment?

The policy certainly seems weird to me, since many of the biggest investment

banks (JPMorgan, UBS, Deutsche, Citi, etc) are also commercial banks and therefore

will have access to the new facility – thereby giving them what seems

to be an unfair advantage over the pure investment banks like Goldman, Lehman,

and Bear. Or am I missing something here?

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