WSJ: Raft of Deals for Failed Banks Puts U.S. on Hook for Billions

Posted by Kendall Harmon

The biggest spur to deal-making among banks isn't private-equity cash or foreign investors. It is the federal government.

To encourage banks to pick through the wreckage of their collapsed competitors, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. has agreed to assume most of the risk on $80 billion in loans and other assets. The agency expects it will eventually have to cover $14 billion in future losses on deals cut so far. The initiative amounts to a subsidy for dozens of hand-picked banks.

Read it all.

Filed under: * Economics, PoliticsEconomyThe 2009 Obama Administration Bank Bailout PlanThe Banking System/SectorThe U.S. Government

3 Comments
Posted August 31, 2009 at 6:43 am [Printer Friendly] [Print w/ comments]



1. Sick & Tired of Nuance wrote:

And this is good for the taxpayer how?

August 31, 9:25 am | [comment link]
2. Ken Peck wrote:

Possibly the taxpayers will make money on the deal.

There was a report the other day that something like six of the largest banks that had received bailout loans have repaid the loans and that the treasury made a $48 billion profit.

There was another report a few days earlier about a bank that had paid bonuses with toxic assets—a really neat idea I thought. Turned out that the recipients were able to make a substantial amount of money by selling the assets.

August 31, 1:21 pm | [comment link]
3. John316 wrote:

New York Times:As Banks Repay Bailout Money, U.S. Sees a Profit

August 31, 6:13 pm | [comment link]
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