Money | Timothy Geithner Wall Streeters Question Geithner's Role in Crisis Treasury pick has been at the table all along By Jason Farago Posted Nov 25, 2008 8:51 AM CST Copied Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke, right, and Timothy Geithner, president of the New York Fed, during lunch at the Economic Club of New York Wednesday, Oct. 15, 2008. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan) Markets surged yesterday when Barack Obama announced that Timothy Geithner would become treasury secretary as part of an all-star economic team. But Wall Street actually harbors some skepticism about Geithner, writes Andrew Sorkin in the New York Times. As chair of the New York Fed, Geithner was the point man during the critical days when Lehman Brothers collapsed, which many on Wall Street say exacerbated the crisis. "Geithner, in our view, deserves retirement, not promotion," says one risk analyst. That bitter assessment echoes the views of several who disdain the man charged with overseeing Bear Stearns, Merrill Lynch, and Citigroup, and who put together the botched bailout of AIG. As to the suggestion that Geithner wanted to save Lehman but was overruled by Hank Paulson, one banking executive at the NY Fed that weekend says, "If that’s true, he did a good job of hiding it." Read These Next James Carville has a new 4-word political mantra. "Theo" from The Cosby Show has died at age 54. Dog the Bounty Hunter shares unimaginably sad news. The weekend was full of not-so-great headlines about Delta. Report an error