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Fed's $1.2 Trillion In Financial Sector Loans 'A Classic Case Of Moral Hazard'

Federal Reserve

First Posted: 08/22/11 08:44 PM ET Updated: 10/22/11 06:12 AM ET

During the 2008 financial crisis, when the nation's banking system seemed on the verge of collapse, President George W. Bush authorized a $700 billion bailout of the financial industry. The U.S. Treasury implemented that program, known as TARP, in an effort to stave off economic catastrophe.

At the same time, and in the years that followed, the Federal Reserve was undertaking its own rescue operation, in the form of private, previously undisclosed loans to banks and other institutions -- lending as much as $1.2 trillion, nearly twice the amount of the Treasury bailout, according to a data analysis performed by Bloomberg News and published on Monday.

The scope of the Fed's private lending had previously only been guessed at, but figures obtained under the Freedom of Information Act by Bloomberg News show that the nation's central banker issued loans to more than 300 institutions between August 2007 and April 2010, including over 100 loans of $1 billion or more.

While the Fed's loans likely helped to prevent a complete implosion of the global banking system, analysts say they fear the loans may have contributed to an atmosphere of complacency on Wall Street. Banks that received emergency cash infusions during the crisis may now believe the Fed will always be there to bail them out of trouble, the thinking goes.

"It is a classic case of moral hazard," Dimitri Papadimitriou, president of the Levy Economics Institute of Bard College, told The Huffington Post.

The Federal Reserve itself had argued that the details of its emergency loans should be kept out of the public eye, claiming that the reputations of the firms involved could suffer if they were seen to be taking money from the government in order to stay afloat. Many of the banks that borrowed from the Fed had previously appealed to the Supreme Court to keep those records secret.

However, an invocation of the Freedom of Information Act forced the Fed to release more than 29,000 pages of documents, revealing the extent to which the financial sector relied on Federal Reserve dollars during the worst days of the crisis.

Given the extraordinary size of the loans, the public has a right to know what happened, said David Jones, an executive professor at the Lutgert College of Business at Florida Gulf Coast University.

"It's completely valid at some point to say, 'Who did the borrowing?'" Jones told The Huffington Post. "It was appropriate, under this special set of circumstances, to divulge the information."

Among the largest borrowers were Bank of America, which borrowed $91.4 billion; Goldman Sachs, which was in debt for $69 billion; JPMorgan Chase, which borrowed $68.6 billion; Citigroup, which borrowed $99.5 billion and Morgan Stanley, the biggest borrower of all, to which the Fed loaned $107 billion.

In addition, the Fed issued sizable loans to a number of foreign banks, including the Royal Bank of Scotland, which borrowed $84.5 billion; Credit Suisse Group, which borrowed $60.8 billion and Germany's Deutsche Bank, to which the Fed lent $66 billion. Nearly half of the 30 largest borrowers were European firms, according to Bloomberg News.

While the amount of lending that took place is remarkable, some argue that the Fed's error was not in issuing the loans, but rather in doing so without setting stronger policy reform conditions for the money.

Dean Baker, co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, told The Huffington Post that Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke could have attached a "quid pro quo" to the emergency loans -- stipulating, for example, that the money would only come through if the banks agreed to do business in a less risky way going forward.

"This is the moment all the banks were on their backs," Baker said. "The Fed ran to the rescue and got nothing in return."

A previous disclosure in December found that the Fed issued $9 trillion in low-interest overnight loans to banks and other Wall Street companies during the crisis. The $1.2 trillion figure represents the peak amount of outstanding loans, which occurred on December 5, 2008, according to Bloomberg News.

Some critics contend that while the Fed was right to support the financial sector, the government didn't do enough to help ordinary citizens who were also seeing their wealth evaporate during the crisis.

Papadimitriou told The Huffington Post that the Fed issued many of its biggest loans during the Bush administration, and that "they didn't appear to have any difficulty supporting the financial sector, but very much difficulty supporting the real sector, households."

Consumer spending suffered and unemployment spiked in the wake of the financial crisis, and the economy remains weak today. Output is low, consumer confidence is down and millions are still out of work -- factors that have some economists worried about the possibility of a double-dip recession.

The TARP bailout, led by the Treasury, was the subject of much popular ire when it occurred, since it was seen as a case of the government throwing money at the financial sector at the expense of everyday Americans. Similarly, the Fed's $1.2 trillion in emergency loans were primarily aimed at keeping major financial institutions on their feet.

"One would assume banks are too interconnected, you have to help all of them," Papadimitriou said. "But if you take households in total, they are also all interconnected. They are also too big to fail."

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During the 2008 financial crisis, when the nation's banking system seemed on the verge of collapse, President George W. Bush authorized a $700 billion bailout of the financial industry. The U.S. Treas...
During the 2008 financial crisis, when the nation's banking system seemed on the verge of collapse, President George W. Bush authorized a $700 billion bailout of the financial industry. The U.S. Treas...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jeromettaylor
The Aliens were here 1st!
08:22 AM on 09/30/2011
Mr.Eichler -

Informative. Excellent. Great explanation. Stunning data!

Thank you.
01:53 AM on 09/17/2011
Can YOU spot the moral hazard?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4ykh3WKhutw

[Chinglish video]
08:02 PM on 08/28/2011
America is not in a recession but thanks to Wall Street and our Biggest Banks the Nation's wealth has been reset to the 50's that is all Middle and lower class wealth is gone. See house values, 401K's etc. If you are near retirement you are screwed. Clinton had a chance to regulate wall street's new fat cow "derivatives" in his second term but did not however 8 years of Bush's deregulation fueled capital greed and fraud never seen before in history. Moral hazard went straight out the door when wall street, the banks, and yes our credit rating agencies hide the truth from their investor's for a quick"trillion" bucks with the fraudulent and nefarious "subprime loan bonds." Not one CEO on Wall Street or Bank was punished for setting our wealth back 50 years and eliminating a middle class. 70 percent of our nations income comes from the middle class consumer who is in default and wonder why there is not federal income? When I hear politicians preach they will cut government regulation I get ill. TARP barely touched the problem because it was only aimed at a small sector - infrastructure which is a hand full of blue collar jobs. Bernicke was too close to wall street and NO body quite understood the depth and magnitude of the subprime web and ties between wall street, banks, and the credit rating agencies.
08:43 PM on 08/26/2011
Fed did not loan tax payer money, treasury did. And yes that money was repaid. QEs which are often referred to as a back door bailout are probably keeping the system afloat. It amazes me how ignorant people are, the real culprit in this drama is the OCC, CFTC and to some extent FDIC and SEC. All these agencies suffer from two major problems, a) their hires come from within the industry( difficult to be solved given the complexity of the financial industry) and b) they operate on super thin budgets, leaving them with very little manpower to carry out the job. Besides, the biggest reason for the crisis was not the Fed or the other regulators it was our political leaders who over a period of 30 years systemically gutted every rule that was created for the safety and soundness of the system in the name of deregulation. It's way too late now, Fed is suffering from a complete loss of faith, banks are suffering from the same as well as no path forward of being able to grow(survive they will, but growing is out of question with interest rates near zero) and our elected officials would have to be completely blind and deaf to not know how much Americans despise them. No one will escape unscathed from this "greed is good" nonsense......no one!!!
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VANDERGRAAFK
Teacher
04:15 PM on 08/24/2011
Moral hazard, I fear, risks being bandied about too often. Yes, by not clawing back bonuses for Wall Street executives and traders who clearly brought the country to the brink of financial ruin after bailing out the big banks (regulated and shadow banks), we have not set up a Chinese wall to prevent these banks from repeating similar mistakes with new financial machinations.

Moral hazard is present, but powerless to prevent what happened to occur or even reoccur. Political power and influence, as well as the perceived importance of the financial sector to a nation's economy, held sway. The same cannot be said of homeowners. Giving the mortgage industry a substantial haircut in order to get many of these homeowners out from underwater on their homes will constitute a moral hazard. It may encourage other homeowners to gamble on ever rising housing prices in the future. But this moral hazard is theoretical. Homeowners do not have the political clout to accomplish what many economists view as necessary.
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Neets101
politely asking for mod squad approval
02:53 PM on 08/24/2011
Quite simple really, the folks at the top gain from the QE's purchased through the goldman sachs and rescue missions from the fed, they still get their bonuses as well, (and a nifty get out of j ail free card)

But they can also bet against the country or the securities they sell by placing a short bet as well.

It really makes so much more sense to directly inject money into the citizens accounts rather than the accounts of known thieves who will sit on the money in order to collect interest on it rather than spurring the economy into growth.

These guys actively bet and have worked a great crime against the U.S., they are not our friends. The citizens are better trusted with recovery as anyone can see, give them a tax holiday, let them use some money from their 401K without penalty, rather than a damn corporation that wants to bring in his money from the Bahamas for a tax holiday.

Folks will keep their homes, or go to the grocery store! (Wow!) Why they might even go out to dinner at a restaurant for a change!

Result: Economy starts to move again.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
blueken
Finger Picking blues man
10:14 AM on 08/24/2011
"It is a classic case of moral hazard," I have to agree. I have been working in corporate America for 30 years, and I'm here to say, as long as executives and equity people keep rakeing in the bucks, they think everything is fine, and nothing has to change. I'm sure the big banks and Wall Street are no different.
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09:26 AM on 08/24/2011
The bailouts, no interest loans and other handouts to Wall Street and the richest corporations has been the greatest heist in American history.

Do the math. $1 trillion is over $3,250 for every man, woman and child living in the United States today. Think of that number every time the government gives another no interest loan away, or subsidizes another oil company, or bails out a bank. That is thousands of YOUR dollars being taken from you and given to the rich.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ChasG
Unborn, unchanging, undying Universe
04:04 AM on 08/25/2011
The government gave away nothing. TARP loans were high interest loans. The Federal Reserve made very short-term loans at low rates, but the rates were higher than the rates on government securities of the same maturities. And for the sake of accuracy, the federal reserve did not give away anything, and it did not loan taxpayer money, it loaned banking system money. The Federal Reserve and the US Treasury are not the same. The Treasury is government, the Fed is privately owned, and has no access to taxpayer money. So the "$3,250 for every man, woman and child" analogy is false.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Steve001968
11:33 PM on 10/10/2011
The 1.2 Trillion is not "no interest loans". They are interest bearing and backed by collateral. Most sources are reporting around 13 Billion in interest payments to date. Also if money is loaned then it is not "given" to the rich or anyone else. It is loaned. I personally did not support the idea of providing banks with anything like what they got. That said I didn't notice any massive protests on wall street or anywhere else when Bush signed TARP into law or when Obama allocated his 350 Billion half of it. I also can't help but be amused when people who probably support social security and Medicare start going on about giving to the rich. The elderly are without question the richest age demographic in America and both SS and Medicare systematically take from minimum wage earners to pay benefits for wealthy retirees. On balance those receiving benefits from both programs are far more affluent than those making current payments into the system to keep it afloat.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Carolab
Just another hostage of the poopy heads
01:46 AM on 08/24/2011
The Market Has Spoken: Austerity Is Bad for Business
Ellen Brown
August 9, 2011

The interest burden will increase if the federal debt continues to grow, but that problem can be solved by mandating the Federal Reserve to buy the government’s debt. The Fed rebates its profits to the government after deducting its costs, making the money nearly interest-free. The Fed is already doing this with its quantitative easing programs and now holds nearly $1.7 trillion in federal securities.

If Congress must maintain its debt ceiling, there are other ways to balance the budget and avoid a growing debt. Ron Paul has brought a creative bill that would eliminate the $1.7 trillion deficit simply by having the Fed tear up its federal securities. No creditors would be harmed, since the money was generated with a computer keystroke in the first place. The government would just be canceling a debt to itself and saving the interest.

The most direct solution to the debt problem is for the government to fund its budget with government-issued money. One alternative would be for the Treasury to issue U.S. Notes, as was done in the Civil War by President Lincoln.

Another alternative was suggested in my book Web of Debt in 2007: the government could simply mint some trillion dollar coins. Congress has the Constitutional power to “coin money,” and no limit is put on the value of the coins it creates, as was pointed out by a chairman of the House Coinage Subcommittee in the 1980s.
This idea is now getting some attention from economists.
In an economic downturn, the government needs to spend more, not less, as history shows. This can be done while still balancing the budget, simply by taking back the government’s Constitutional power to issue money.
The budget crisis is an artificial one, and the current “solution” will only guarantee a deeper recession and more widespread suffering. Rather than obsessing over deficits and debt, the government needs to turn its focus to jobs, sales and quality of life.

http://seekingalpha.com/article/285840-the-market-has-spoken-austerity-is-bad-for-business
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jstrate
11:46 PM on 08/23/2011
The author should give the reader a definition: "Moral hazard is the reduced incentive that insurees have to prevent compensable losses (Weimer and Vining 2011:121). An average person who has nimbly avoided the field of economics might think the author was about to discuss financial sector loans for the purpose of visiting taverns, exotic dance clubs, and houses of prostitution.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Michael Ruiz
12:32 AM on 08/24/2011
hahaha, Yea, most have never heard that term before... but that definition might still might be a little heavy for people.
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09:28 AM on 08/24/2011
It's easier to say "moral hazard" is rewarding people for bad behavior.
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11:39 PM on 08/23/2011
The Ron Paul effect is in effect.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Michael Ruiz
12:27 AM on 08/24/2011
Ron Paul is definitely the man!
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cborgia
I throw my enemies in the Tiber
11:04 PM on 08/23/2011
Why do we have to give these people our money so that they can reward themselves for failure and continue abusive business practices that victimize the whole country? 'Too big to fail' in my book means 'big enough to nationalize' if there is really no way to let a failed business go under without creating chaos. We'd be better served by bankruptcy, temporary nationalization, and eventual reprivatization, either as an intact entity or a T. Boone Pickens type chop job. No need to pay bonuses or gold parachute money to crooks and failures; done well, it could even produce (gasp) a profit. Best choice of all: failed businesses fail.
Bank of America
Bank that I hate
Stand next to us
And screw us
With your lies and your high interest rate.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Steve001968
11:37 PM on 10/10/2011
LMAO Yeah, by all means, nationalize banks by a federal government that couldn't balance the budget of a damn lemonade stand. If you want to blame someone for the banks mistakes and poor loan practices blame the banks. If you want to blame someone for bailing out the banks then blame the government.
09:30 PM on 08/23/2011
The bailouts, any and all of them, violated the law.

Prompt Corrective Law (PCA) found at Cornell Law here: http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/12/usc_sec_12_00001831---o000-.html

For some layman's language in relation to the PCA see Bill Moyers and William K. Black discussing the PCA here: http://www.pbs.org/moyers/journal/blog/2009/04/william_k_black_on_the_prompt.html

What else needs to be said?
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Lotus19
Power Concedes Nothing Without a Demand..FD
10:08 PM on 08/23/2011
Yes..with a nod to the S&L scandal of yesteryear.

F&F
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09:34 AM on 08/24/2011
After the S&L scandal people actually did take the fall for it. They apparently have been making sure that such things wouldn't happen again... I mean accountability, not financial fraud and theft.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Julie Dahlman
Now a self employed, under
09:27 PM on 08/23/2011
It is very well know that this country is so corrupted by money and the corporate mafia monies infiltrate all level of government agencies in order for them to prevail and be able to wield more power and make more money. It is both parties, all three branches of government and there is no longer checks and balances.
Since I am an democrat/independent/progressives I know a few good ones of those who are elected officials or I think they are?? but with a litt
le more time in crosshairs of all the money thrown out there by corporations to PAC's and 501C who knows anymore. I used to think I knew a few good republicans but they either retired or changed colors i.e. McCain.
Divide and Conquer. United we Stand, Divided we Fall. Do you think they've done a good job of dividing the people? History proves that division and a huge inequality in nations in all cases lead to the destruction of that nation. I contend this is a worldwide efforts, so what happens to the planet? the people who are without basics life sustaining food and water? We've always have a percentage but as that grows?
United we Stand, Divided we Fall.
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09:05 PM on 08/23/2011
Perhaps the reason the Fed didn't want to disclose these loans is that they need to loan $ 7 trillion to unwind the MERS mess...

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/l-randall-wray/why-mortgagebacked-securi_b_802600.html
L. Randall Wray: Why Mortgage-Backed Securities Aren't (Backed by Securities): How MERS Toasted the Banks

"In a series of pieces I have argued that MERS, a creation of the mortgage banking industry, has effectively destroyed the institution of private property in America. Ironically, MERS was created to facilitate quick and easy and cheap securitization of mortgages -- what are called mortgage-backed securities. In fact, what it did was to eliminate any backing of the securities by mortgages. Of the total securitized asset universe, something like $7 trillion are (supposedly) backed by residential mortgages. However, MERS helped to delink the securities from the mortgages. At best, they are unsecured debt -- there is no property backing the securities. What this means is that foreclosure is not permitted. As I have said before, it is likely that most or even all foreclosures occurring in the US are illegal seizures of property -- home thefts. We are talking about 100,000 completed home thefts per month, with another 250,000 new foreclosures started to steal homes every month. Projections are that 13 million homes will have been "foreclosed" (read: stolen) by 2012.

Worse, from the perspective of the banks, they've got to take back all the fraudulent MBSs, most of which are toxic..."