Larry Summers may be named Fed chief soon, source says

Larry Summers likely will be named chairman of the Federal Reserve by  President Obama in the coming weeks, according to an unnamed White House insider.  Summers and Fed Vice Chairman Janet Yellen are widely thought to be the top two candidates to succeed current Fed chief Ben Bernanke.

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Jonathan Ernst/Reuters/File
Larry Summers looks into the audience at the Bretton Woods Committee International Council in Washington in 2011. A source within the Obama administration tells CNBC that Summers likely will be named Federal Reserve chairman in a few weeks.

A source from Team Obama told CNBC that Larry Summers will likely be named chairman of the Federal Reserve in a few weeks though he is "still being vetted" so it might take a little longer.

It's largely come down to a two-horse race between Summers, a former Treasury secretary, and Fed Vice Chairman Janet Yellen for the next Fed chief.

It is widely expected that the current Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke will resign by the end of the year as his term ends in January. President Obama has already said that Bernanke has "already stayed a lot longer" in the role than he expected. Those remarks came in an interview with Charlie Rose on PBS in June.

Who might take the reins from Bernanke has been an undertone in the market and at the Fed's recent meeting in Jackson Hole, Wyoming.

Summers didn't attend the Jackson Hole meeting but his name was tossed around the sidelines.

Several Fed officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity, told Reuters that they did think Summers was Obama's clear favorite, though they had a few doubts.

"Has he devised a strategy to be effective within the institution?" one asked.

Some insiders also expressed concern about Summers' close ties to Wall Street.

The race for the next Fed chief comes amid another big point of discussion for policy makers — when to begin tapering the Fed's $85 billion per month bond-buying program. There has been much speculation that it will begin in September.

— Reporting from CNBC's John Harwood, with contributions from Reuters

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