Posts Tagged ‘TARP’

U.S. Taxpayers Actually Profit From TARP

Friday, October 22nd, 2010

The mere mention of TARP sends many people into grumble-mode, but the emergency measure to bail out large financial institutions has actually turned the government a profit.

  • The Troubled Asset Relief Program traded banks much-needed capital in exchange for partial government ownership.
  • Now that two-thirds of TARP recipients have paid the money back, the government has seen a profit of about 8.2%. That’s more than the return on any U.S. Treasury bond, high-yield savings account, money-market fund, or CD.
  • Despite the return on investment, the public is not happy about TARP. Several politicians have lost primary elections this year because they voted in favor of the program, and authorities say the return rate is misleading because it doesn’t take into account the other costs of the bailouts.

Facts & Figures

  • The government has earned about $25.2 billion so far on $309 billion in TARP investments.
  • The return rate on 30-year Treasury bonds averaged 4.1% during the last two years.
  • Over the same period of time, high-yield savings rates averaged 0.36% – 0.92%.

Best Quote

“From the perspective of the taxpayers getting their money back, TARP has been a great success. But there are other costs as the government made it possible for the banks to pay back TARP. Those costs can turn out to be larger, and their legacy could last longer.” – Todd Petzel, Chief Investment Officer at Offit Capital Advisors LLC

Goldman Takes One For The Team, Offers $500,000,000 Olive Branch

Thursday, November 19th, 2009

In an unusual display of corporate responsibility, Goldman Sachs admits its part in the financial crisis and tries to make nice with the small business community.

  • Goldman CEO Lloyd Blankfein made a statement acknowledging his company’s role in the global meltdown and offering an apology for its actions.
  • Attached to the apology is a $500 million donation to go toward supporting small businesses, which will be administered by rock star investor and Berkshire Hathaway CEO Warren Buffet.
  • The company has recently been the object of public outrage for issuing record executive bonuses after accepting bailout funds funded with taxpayer money (which it has since repaid).

Facts & Figures

  • Goldman’s compensation and bonuses this year already total $17 billion and could reach $23 billion by the end of the year.
  • The $500 million pledge represents approximately 2% of compensation funds set aside for 2009.
  • In the third quarter of 2009, Goldman Sachs earned more than $100 million on 36 different trading days.

Best Quote

“We participated in things that were clearly wrong and have reason to regret. We apologize.” – Lloyd Blankfein, CEO of Goldman Sachs

Pay Slashed at Firms That Received TARP Funds…Sort of

Monday, October 26th, 2009

The Obama administration appears to be punishing some executives at the financial institutions it helped bail out… except for those firms that have already repayed their TARP loans.

  • Despite the fact that pay for the top executives will be cut by roughly 50% of total compensation this year, in some cases salaries could still be multi-million dollar packages.
  • The “Pay Czar” – Kenneth Feinberg of the Treasury Department – created this compensation plan for the 7 companies that borrowed the most TARP funds.
  • The companies that have paid back their TARP funds, including JPMorgan Chase, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley will not face restrictions on pay.

Facts and Figures

  • Executive perks that are worth more than $25,000 will require government approval.
  • The 7 companies where pay is restricted are: Bank of America, Citigroup, American International Group, General Motors, Chrysler and the two financing arms of GM and Chrysler.
  • The departing CEO of Bank of America won’t receiving a salary or bonus this year (his pension is still more than $50 million).


Bailing Out From The Bailout…

Friday, September 25th, 2009

Some banks are doing their best to free themselves of the regulatory requirements imposed on them to ensure the TARP bailout money is put to good use.

  • Early repayment of bailout funds may be a sign that the financial industry is recovering from last year’s crisis, but it’s not yet clear whether banks that repay will change any of their business practices.
  • These ten companies will no longer be subject to TARP-related oversight and restrictions by the government, giving them a potential competitive advantage over companies that have not repaid.
  • The U.S. Treasury began buying stakes in struggling financial institutions in October 2008, with the expectation that it would hold onto those investments for at least 3 years. But Congress recently forced the administration to allow some banks to exit the arrangement just eight months later.
  • The federal government will no longer have a direct stake in banks that repay, but it will continue owning warrants and, according to President Obama, will continue to closely monitor the business practices of all financial institutions.

Facts & Figures

  • Since October, the government has spent $199 billion on TARP funding for 600 different companies. The 10 companies now repaying the funds represent $68 billion of that total.
  • The big ten: J.P. Morgan, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, U.S. Bancorp, BB&T Corp., American Express Co., Capital One Financial Corp., Bank of New York Mellon Corp., State Street Corp., and Northern Trust Corp.
  • TARP restrictions addressed: “executive pay, dividend increases, hiring certain foreign workers for U.S. jobs, and lavish spending on corporate jets and conferences, which fueled a public backlash.”

Best Quote

“These are challenging times, and that’s not going to change simply because we repaid TARP.” – Michael Cavanagh, CFO at J.P. Morgan

TARP is…

Friday, July 17th, 2009

TARP, which stands for the Troubled Asset Relief Program, is the program that started in 2008 through which the U.S. government has been buying assets and equity from struggling financial institutions to strengthen the stability of the financial sector and of the financial markets.