Bank Bailout Fund: $328 Billion Still Remains

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ANNE FLAHERTY | July 9, 2009 06:01 PM EST | AP

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WASHINGTON — The government has tens of billions of dollars left in the eye-popping $700 billion bank bailout fund created last fall, prompting a debate in Congress over what to do with it.

The Treasury Department wants to keep the money at its disposal in case the economy gets worse. But fiscal conservatives like Sen. Judd Gregg of New Hampshire and Rep. Spencer Bachus of Alabama, both Republican, want the money kept to pay down the national debt.

Meanwhile, a group of liberal Democrats led by Massachusetts Rep. Barney Frank, chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, say at least a portion of it should be spent to help cash-strapped homeowners.

"We clearly face a new wave of foreclosures" because of rising unemployment, Frank said at a hearing Thursday.

The question of what to do with the money will grow more pressing in coming months as Congress takes a step back to consider the fate of the Troubled Asset Relief Program, or TARP.

Lawmakers had rushed to approve the money in October 2008 as Wall Street sat on the brink of collapse. Since then, even as the economy continues to wobble and high unemployment threatens the prospects for a speedy recovery, major banks have repaid $70 billion in assistance and expressed growing optimism about their ability to function without government assistance.

TARP is set to conclude at the end of the year unless Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner extends it through fall 2010.

The Government Accountability Office, the nonpartisan investigative arm of Congress, estimated on Thursday that the government has about $328 billion left in the fund that hasn't been spent or legally committed.

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According to GAO, the government has disbursed approximately $339 billion and promised $102 billion more. That leaves some $259 billion in the fund plus the $70 billion banks have repaid.

The Treasury Department says it already has plans for some of the remaining money and predicts the available funding in TARP will be much lower, about $127 billion.

Geithner also has indicated he wants any extra money in the program left to his disposal if it's needed. In a letter to Gregg, the secretary said any additional "headroom" under the program's $700 billion cap provides "additional flexibility to Treasury in its efforts to stabilize the economy and build the foundation for long-term economic growth."

But for many lawmakers, money already approved by Congress to aid the economy is ripe for the picking. Frank wants to use dividends earned through government-owned stock in ailing banks to go toward affordable housing programs.

Republicans on the House Financial Services Committee disagree.

"We need to end the bailouts and return that money to the taxpayer," said Bachus, R-Ala.

Meanwhile, the No. 2 official at the Federal Reserve resisted calls in Congress to subject the central bank to oversight by a federal watchdog agency.

Fed Vice Chairman Donald Kohn said such a proposal would insert politics into the Fed's role in overseeing monetary policy and introduce uncertainty into the market.

Kohn also weighed in on President Barack Obama's plan to overhaul the regulatory framework that governs financial institutions. Kohn said he supported the idea of giving the Fed the power to monitor risk across the system and regulate institutions that grow "too big to fail."

But Kohn suggested the Fed shouldn't lose its ability to protect consumers. Obama's proposal would hand that role to a new agency.

WASHINGTON — The government has tens of billions of dollars left in the eye-popping $700 billion bank bailout fund created last fall, prompting a debate in Congress over what to do with it. The...
WASHINGTON — The government has tens of billions of dollars left in the eye-popping $700 billion bank bailout fund created last fall, prompting a debate in Congress over what to do with it. The...
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- LinkSync I'm a Fan of LinkSync 23 fans permalink
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They should use that money to directly do loan modifications.
Do Not give it to the Bail Out Banks as they only play stock price and bonus games.
Take it straight to the folks that need help with loans and stop the fall of home values.
THEN since homes have become the new "gold standard" the economy might improve.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:27 AM on 07/10/2009
- jerichoj8 I'm a Fan of jerichoj8 2 fans permalink

Languishing? Really?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:38 AM on 07/10/2009

Give it to the lobbyists. They'll know how to spend it!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:39 PM on 07/09/2009
- research I'm a Fan of research 257 fans permalink

That's because the Credit Default Swaps without reserves are counting on that money to bail them out as the next tiny dip in the market causes a leveraged crash again.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:34 PM on 07/09/2009

Stimulus is a joke of a concept; it doesn't end up with real economic growth in the long
tem. Even the New Deal failed to increase private investment. It wasn't until 1941 that
domestic private investment reached 1929 levels. The fact that the first stimulus has failed
to stop the bleeding yet isn't surprising. Our government deficit for the year which is over
20% of GDP (when the omnibus bill, first stimulus, bailouts, and on-budget deficit are
summed) is unsustainable and something's gotta give, whether it be the lenders or the
interest rates.

hat tip to http://www.iamned.com

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:03 PM on 07/09/2009
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Obama had four principles for TARP when he went to Washington in September 2008!

So far he has done NEAR ZERO of them!

No Foreclosure help, No Bottom up Help, and No rebuilding Main Street Manufacturing Help (except GM and Chrysler).

Obama do what you promised with that money! Ignore the c_ry that it is unethical to help people who invested badly since the ones saying it are the ones who INVESTED the WORST in Modern History!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:48 PM on 07/09/2009
- SangZe I'm a Fan of SangZe 34 fans permalink

Give that unused money to a few CEOs and watch what happens.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:23 PM on 07/09/2009
- ThatOne4Me I'm a Fan of ThatOne4Me 4 fans permalink
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Watch the CEO's personal bank accounts expand?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:09 PM on 07/09/2009


Geithner blew his opportunity to use the stress-tests to force banks to sell their toxic assets and improve their balance sheets. Unfortunately, Geithner simply does not play hardball. Our economy could use some (preferably non-Wall Street biased) leadership from the Treasury.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:38 PM on 07/09/2009
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Time to do a few "GM's" to the Banking Industry and clean up some of the Zombie Mess hidden most "Off-The-Books" ENR0N Style!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:43 PM on 07/09/2009
- LinkSync I'm a Fan of LinkSync 23 fans permalink
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They can't.
The impact of actually bringing out the true depth of all the bad deals based on securitised toxic assets (many of which only became toxic due to other homes falling values) that were sold, insured, resold many times the world over would cause a total collaps of the system.
Last I heard it was somewhere north of 65 Trillion dollars worth of bad deals.
That's more than the entire planet makes in a year.

Instead they are waiting it out and hushing it up to try to keep it going so that profit and free enterprise can survive.

Good luck!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:39 AM on 07/10/2009
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Main Street has received $1 for every $306 that Wall Street GOT from the FED and Treasury!

It is time to use EVERY LAST DOLLAR ON MAIN STREET HELP!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:37 PM on 07/09/2009
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Fund every cost-benefit worthy High Tech and Green Energy Project!

Fund New Manufacturing Projects!

Anything that creates an "EXPORTABLE WEALTH CREATING" PRODUCT OR REAL SERVICE!

No More exported Toxic Paper!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:40 PM on 07/09/2009

ditto

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:45 PM on 07/09/2009
- Teritt I'm a Fan of Teritt 9 fans permalink

I vote for Jon Stewart's plan....give it to homeowners instead of banks. Create a 'super-max clean-up fund' with ties to Fannie/Freddie (that fund alone should create jobs). Let homeowners (not investors) borrow from this fund directly. It can be like a car loan, the bank pays the dealer directly, not you. In this case, the government will send the payoff to the bank. In the first phase, let existing homeowners that didn't qualify under the 'help for homeowners' or 'hope' get these loans. It will stop foreclosures, which will stabilize housing prices, which will save neighborhoods, which will give people confidence to spend again. Jobs will be created. Charge a nominal fee per month like social security/medicare taxes that you can't write off as a deduction even though you are paying for it. These fees will feed back into the fund to replenish it. Now the banks that are paid directly will have money to lend - after learning from their past mistakes - to new borrowers. With the direct competition from the government, maybe they won't be as greedy to get our business, and less mortgage interest deductions would be good for the Treasury (and fairer to renters). Too simple? Not enough money for lobbyists? What's wrong with this idea?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:09 PM on 07/09/2009
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You had me until you said "after learning from [the banks'] past mistakes."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:39 PM on 07/09/2009
- Teritt I'm a Fan of Teritt 9 fans permalink

I can be an optimist..­.sometimes­.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:14 PM on 07/09/2009
- LinkSync I'm a Fan of LinkSync 23 fans permalink
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It is a great Idea.
But the RepubliThugs will call it socialism and that willl be that.
Americans do not seem to understand what "We the People" means.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:51 AM on 07/10/2009
- IndieBlue I'm a Fan of IndieBlue 26 fans permalink

"Bank Bailout Fund: $328 Billion Still Remains"

Quick, how long does it take to set up a bank and lose some money?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:02 PM on 07/09/2009
- Kassandra I'm a Fan of Kassandra 97 fans permalink
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Well, take it out and put it toward Medicare for all without Part D

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:45 PM on 07/09/2009
- dnpvd51 I'm a Fan of dnpvd51 3 fans permalink

Barney Frank makes me sick.

Why do these guys keep wanting to give my tax money to loser homeowners that paid too much for their house.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:24 PM on 07/09/2009
- IndieBlue I'm a Fan of IndieBlue 26 fans permalink

Are you kidding? They just handed out the money to the loser banks that gave people loans they new the people couldn't afford.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:01 PM on 07/09/2009

Your viewpoint is too self-centered and arrogant. Have you ever made a mistake - Oh great one?

Furthermore, there was a lot of misrepresentation and misleading advice given to regular people in terms of homeownership and mortagages over the past 10 years.

You response -- is too limited for anyone to take it seriously.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:37 PM on 07/09/2009
- dnpvd51 I'm a Fan of dnpvd51 3 fans permalink

I have made plenty of mistakes.

And the government has yet to bail me out of any financial mistakes--I guess I lack political clout.

Also, I could easily have bought an overpriced house like the rest of these Yahoos. I was sorely tempted. Apparently I am just more financially responsible than most.

And it is not only my tax dollars going to homeowners. These bailouts hurt the value of the dollar. I have to pay these loser homeowners every time I go to the grocery store or pay my rent with devalued dollars.

And further all these bailouts kill any chance for economic recovery. Because once the economy tries to pick up, inflation will pick up even faster because of this massive government money creation.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:49 PM on 07/09/2009
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Many people facing foreclosure were responsible borrows, until the layoffs began.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:40 PM on 07/09/2009
- LinkSync I'm a Fan of LinkSync 23 fans permalink
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More than many.
MILLIONS.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:34 AM on 07/10/2009
- Tom95134 I'm a Fan of Tom95134 53 fans permalink
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Treasury should hold on to it. This ain't over yet.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:00 PM on 07/09/2009

Oh yeah, lets "trust" the Treasury with that money........funny!

Its over folks! This Depression will last years. Might as well start learning to grow your own food, its gonna be rough!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:19 AM on 07/10/2009
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