When the nation’s biggest banks were bailed out in 2008 via the $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program, the money came with a few (very loose) strings, including restrictions on executive compensation and some requirements for the amount of capital the banks would have to raise in order to escape from TARP.
But as a new report from the Special Inspector General for TARP shows, even these restrictions were too much for some of the nation’s biggest banks — including Bank of America, Wells Fargo, and PNC — who lobbied for easier payback requirements so that they could be freed from restrictions on paying bonuses. And Treasury obliged their requests:
MoreFederal banking regulators relaxed the November 2009 repayment criteria only weeks after they were established, bowing at least in part to a desire to ramp back the Government’s stake in financial institutions and to pressure by institutions seeking a swift TARP exit to avoid executive compensation restrictions and the stigma associated with TARP participation. The large financial institutions seeking to exit TARP were notably persistent in their efforts to resist regulatory demands to issue common stock, seeking instead morecreative, cheaper, and less sturdy alternatives that provide less short- or long-term loss protection than new common stock. Bank of America, Wells Fargo, and PNC, for example, requested expedited repayment, but each institution balked at issuing the amount of common stock required by regulators.
2 comments:
I loved what one Russian Politician said when Obama was going on about how he bailed out the banks, he said, " if this had happened in my country, we would just take them out back and shoot them, not give them a bonus".....
And the "system" is working fine, that is, if by "system" you mean our elected "leaders" selling out the taxpayers to the people who bribed them to make these rules. Our government is now a ruling elite, protecting the rich and powerful and making laws and rules to accomplish that end. But keep voting. And keep believing that fairy tale about how YOU can "make a difference". LOL!! The ONLY way you can make a difference is by bribing the closest slimeball Congressman. Or starting a revolution.
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