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Sen. Bernie Sanders

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A Real Jaw Dropper at the Federal Reserve

Posted: 12/02/10 12:43 PM ET

At a Senate Budget Committee hearing in 2009, I asked Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke to tell the American people the names of the financial institutions that received an unprecedented backdoor bailout from the Federal Reserve, how much they received, and the exact terms of this assistance. He refused. A year and a half later, as a result of an amendment that I was able to include in the Wall Street reform bill, we have begun to lift the veil of secrecy at the Fed, and the American people now have this information.

It is unfortunate that it took this long, and it is a shame that the biggest banks in America and Mr. Bernanke fought to keep this secret from the American public every step of the way. But, the details on this bailout are now on the Federal Reserve's website, and this is a major victory for the American taxpayer and for transparency in government.

Importantly, my amendment also required the Government Accountability Office to conduct a top-to-bottom audit of all of the emergency lending the Fed provided during the financial crisis to be completed on July 21, 2011, which will take a hard look at all of the potential conflicts of interest that took place with respect to this bailout. So, in many respects, details that the Fed was forced to divulge on Wednesday about the $3.3 trillion in emergency loans that until now were totally kept from public scrutiny, marked the beginning, not the end, of lifting the veil of secrecy at the Fed.

After years of stonewalling by the Fed, the American people are finally learning the incredible and jaw-dropping details of the Fed's multi-trillion-dollar bailout of Wall Street and corporate America. As a result of this disclosure, other members of Congress and I will be taking a very extensive look at all aspects of how the Federal Reserve functions and how we can make our financial institutions more responsive to the needs of ordinary Americans and small businesses.

What have we learned so far from the disclosure of more than 21,000 transactions? We have learned that the $700 billion Wall Street bailout signed into law by President George W. Bush turned out to be pocket change compared to the trillions and trillions of dollars in near-zero interest loans and other financial arrangements the Federal Reserve doled out to every major financial institution in this country. Among those are Goldman Sachs, which received nearly $600 billion; Morgan Stanley, which received nearly $2 trillion; Citigroup, which received $1.8 trillion; Bear Stearns, which received nearly $1 trillion, and Merrill Lynch, which received some $1.5 trillion in short term loans from the Fed.

We also learned that the Fed's multi-trillion bailout was not limited to Wall Street and big banks, but that some of the largest corporations in this country also received a very substantial bailout. Among those are General Electric, McDonald's, Caterpillar, Harley Davidson, Toyota and Verizon.

Perhaps most surprising is the huge sum that went to bail out foreign private banks and corporations including two European megabanks -- Deutsche Bank and Credit Suisse -- which were the largest beneficiaries of the Fed's purchase of mortgage-backed securities.

Deutsche Bank, a German lender, sold the Fed more than $290 billion worth of mortgage securities. Credit Suisse, a Swiss bank, sold the Fed more than $287 billion in mortgage bonds.

Has the Federal Reserve of the United States become the central bank of the world?

The Fed said that this bailout was necessary to prevent the world economy from going over a cliff. But three years after the start of the recession, millions of Americans remain unemployed and have lost their homes, life savings and ability to send their kids to college. Meanwhile, big banks and corporations have returned to making huge profits and paying their executives record-breaking compensation packages as if the financial crisis they started never happened.

What this disclosure tells us, among many other things, is that despite this huge taxpayer bailout, the Fed did not make the appropriate demands on these institutions necessary to rebuild our economy and protect the needs of ordinary Americans.

For example, at a time when big banks have nearly a trillion dollars in excess reserves parked at the Fed, the Fed did not require these institutions to increase lending to small- and medium-sized businesses as a condition of the bailout.

At a time when large corporations are more profitable than ever, the Fed did not demand that corporations that received this backdoor bailout create jobs and expand the economy once they returned to profitability.

I intend to investigate whether these secret Fed loans, in some cases, turned out to be direct corporate welfare to big banks that used these loans not to reinvest in the economy but rather to lend back to the federal government at a higher rate of interest by purchasing Treasury Securities. Instead of using this money to reinvest in the productive economy, I suspect a large portion of these near-zero interest loans were used to buy Treasury Securities at a higher interest rate providing free money to some of the largest financial institutions in this country. That is something that we have got to closely examine.

At a time when Wall Street executives are now making more money than before the financial crisis, how many big banks that paid back TARP funds in 2009 to avoid limits on executive compensation received no-strings-attached loans from the Federal Reserve?

At a time when millions of Americans are paying outrageously high credit card interest rates, why didn't the Fed require credit card issuers to lower interest rates as a condition of the bailout?

The four largest banks in this country (Bank of America, JP Morgan Chase, Wells Fargo, and Citigroup) issue half of all mortgages in this country. We now know that these banks received hundreds of billions from the Fed. How many Americans could have remained in their homes, if the Fed required these bailed-out banks to reduce mortgage payments as a condition of receiving these secret loans?

We have begun to lift the veil of secrecy at one of most important agencies in our government. What we are seeing is the incredible power of a small number of people who have incredible conflicts of interest getting incredible help from the taxpayers of this country while ignoring the needs of the people.

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At a Senate Budget Committee hearing in 2009, I asked Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke to tell the American people the names of the financial institutions that received an unprecedented backdoor bailout from...
At a Senate Budget Committee hearing in 2009, I asked Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke to tell the American people the names of the financial institutions that received an unprecedented backdoor bailout from...
 
 
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07:23 PM on 01/11/2011
Too bad every state doesn't have a Senator Bernie Sanders.
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springsm
07:54 PM on 01/11/2011
Yes, I was thinking that if he and Leahy would live forever I would move to Vermont.  My Dad was raised in that state...I would claim in mine.  Alas, we have Bernie and how fortunate we do.
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Siebenstein
> there is no endless growth
04:28 AM on 01/12/2011
x 2
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Eileenla
Author, "Sacred Economics"
07:02 PM on 01/11/2011
I can't help but wonder what the world would look like today if instead of bailing out the banks, the Fed used those mega-trillions to pay off the mortgages of every American homeowner who had an outstanding loan. All the money that now goes to service those mortgages monthly would then be free to flow into the larger economy. All the stress and energy that has gone toward foreclosure avoidance and refinancing could be directed toward providing homes for the rest of our citizens who don't yet own their own home. Instead of socializing losses and privatizing gains, we'd have privatized the losses and socialized the gains with the social funding being used to socialize the losses. What a concept!

A dream...but a pleasant one...
12:59 AM on 01/24/2011
Okay, here's the thing: if the Fed used the money to pay-off mortgages, it would not be a LOAN. The banks will pay it back. At near 0%, the discount on these loans makes them worth 3 or 4% over a market rate loan. So really, instead of a trillion-dollar giveaway, these loans are worth about 3 or 4% of a trillion $ per year. That's 30 or 40 billion a year, nothing to sneeze at, but not enough to pay off the trillions in outstanding loans, or even just the one trillion $ worth of mortgages in default. Just sayin'.
dave1111
My macro-bio is empty.
11:11 PM on 01/02/2011
Dear Ben,
I am not Toyota, Credit Suisse, or Deutsche Bank. I am an American. I don't need a Trillion.
All I need is $1 Billion, I will invest it in an American company, collect a big fat dividend, and pay back the loan, with interest. Sound like a deal?
Yours truly
An American
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Eileenla
Author, "Sacred Economics"
07:04 PM on 01/11/2011
Me too...and I'll settle for an easy $5 million.
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MikeyJaii
Free $$ For Everyone.
09:39 PM on 12/25/2010
Crooks, that's the only way to describe.
05:32 PM on 12/23/2010
wait ....there's a double whammy often left out of the scam

the FED creates 1trillion in loans from 100billion in bond reserves

that's 900% profit .....all day long

it's the fractional reserve banking laws - from the Jekyll Island Boys

the top 2% did not make it on hard work like the American dream

they are a legalized mafia organization sitting on their criminal posteriors
dave1111
My macro-bio is empty.
11:16 PM on 01/02/2011
No, it's not 900% profit.
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StJames
In absentia luci tenebrae vincunt
10:40 AM on 01/23/2011
Should I tell z-truth it's 1000% or will you?
05:18 PM on 12/23/2010
they always lift the veil after they are done with the crime

common bank robbers do the same thing
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maserati2
Finally an honest politician! ELIZABETH WARREN!
12:08 PM on 12/17/2010
ocoastpers­on "Whatever the actual charter of the Fed, it is stretching it plenty to hand out free money to foreign banks."

Please correct me if I'm wrong here.

The Fed is not a part of our government but a privately owned entity that has been given the power to manage our money supply. Privately owned = no exclusive loyalty to us or our economic welfare. If the principals include foreign interests, does that not also enable them to "Hand out free money to foreign banks" or anywhere else they G-d please?

Anyone else notice the problem built into the system here?
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jwilson1
07:29 PM on 12/16/2010
The FED of the united states has cheated the people by not revealing this .0037% interest rate that went to many banks and they used the money to buy up companies invest in securities and pay out big bonuses. If you follow the money you realize that the banks made a lot of money having almost O % and investing it all about 2% to 26%. I wish the people of the us had known. The FED got around this by passing a law that only 2 members out of 12 had to be present to give away as much money as they saw fit. They did not even have to get permission and they have no oversite. Unbleivable...crooks.
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Florence Baumgartner
12:46 AM on 12/16/2010
Dear Bernie,

Could I adopt you ?
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springsm
07:55 PM on 01/11/2011
Dear Bernie, would you adopt ME?  :-)
07:21 AM on 12/15/2010
Hats off to the people of Vermont due to their senator, B. Sanders.
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LeLoup
Res ipsa loquitur, ergo tace!
10:44 PM on 12/14/2010
"What this disclosure tells us, among many other things, is that despite this huge taxpayer bailout, the Fed did not make the appropriate demands on these institutions necessary to rebuild our economy and protect the needs of ordinary Americans."

That, plus the refusal to recognize losses (thank to the mark-to-fantasy accounting trick permitted by the FASB) is why there will be another banking crisis. As per Chris Whalen, Yves Smith and others not beholden to official-dumb, it could very well happen in 2011.

This time, it'll be essential to reing in the BoD and top execs of the big banks (read: fire them all for cause) and revisit Frank-Dodd.
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PaiaGirl
Progressive Engineer
10:29 PM on 12/14/2010
I'm stunned...just stunned. The TARP bailout was bad enough....but this is outrageous. And the same people behind bailing out these multinational corporations with trillions and trillions of dollars oppose bailing out our people who have lost their jobs and are losing their homes? I'm speechless.
12:53 PM on 12/13/2010
If citizens want to understand why these same big banks keep appearing at the trough, and really want an answer that makes sense, one need to go through about 60 years of history, during which these banks rose to their current status above the thousands of other banks that might have achieved the same, but did not. These banks are linked in history, by a string of US officials and presidents that oversaw the illegal (by international law) confiscation and use of German and Japanese gold, which has been held off book, and jointly used for various politically motivated programs such as 'Project Hammer", or the bankruptcy of the Soviet Union. The history of how this gold flooded the monetary markets through the Federal Reserve desk operations in the aftermath of September 11, 2001,during which the Federal Reserve used its emergency powers to lift audit restrictions, should be reviewed by anyone who wants to understand this systemic monetary explosion. Everyone likes to blame the mortgage crisis for the series of Federal Reserve debacles, but fail to ask where the cheap money for that crisis came from.
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12:07 PM on 12/13/2010
There seems to be no shame and no limit.
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Daniel Malo
09:20 AM on 12/13/2010
hemp economy.
www.facebook.com/free.the.leaf
cannabis=industry.medicine.peace.