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U.S. Taxpayers Earn $14Bn Profit on Fed Bailout Loans

U.S Taxpayers Earn $14 Billion Profit on Fed Bank Bail-out Loans

U.S Taxpayers Earn $14 Billion Profit on Fed Bank Bail-out Loans

Ka-ching!!  According to reports in both the Financial Times of London, as well as the New York Times, the Federal Reserve has made a $14Bn profit on loan programs that have provided hundreds of billions of dollars in liquidity to the financial system since the start of the crisis two years ago, according to Fed officials. The internal estimate is based on the difference between the fees and interest on the lending facilities and the interest the Fed would have earned had it invested the funds in three-month Treasury bills. The central bank earned about $19bn in income from charging interest and fees to financial institutions and investors that tapped the new facilities to obtain much-needed funds during the turmoil. The interest the Fed would have earned by investing the same amount in T-bills was an estimated $5bn, leaving a $14bn gain since August 2007 for a handsome. The Fed assessment underlines the possibility that other central banks could make a profit on their crisis-fighting measures – at least before adjusting for the risk they assumed.

The taxpayers want their money back and they want the government out of our banking system,”

Who's paying back..??

Who's paying back..??

The profits, collected from eight of the biggest banks that have fully repaid their obligations to the government, come to about $4 billion, or the equivalent of about 15 percent annually, according to calculations compiled for The New York Times. These early returns are by no means a full accounting of the huge financial rescue undertaken by the federal government last year to stabilize teetering banks and other companies. The government still faces potentially huge long-term losses from its bailouts of the insurance giant American International Group, the mortgage finance companies Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and the automakers General Motors and Chrysler. The Treasury Department could also take a hit from its guarantees on billions of dollars of toxic mortgages. But the mere hint of bailout profits for the nearly year-old Troubled Asset Relief Program has been received as a welcome surprise. It has also spurred hopes that the government could soon get out of the banking business.

 

Author

Josh Hopkins

Josh Hopkins , is a political consultant with specific interest in international political economy and fiscal policy. Concentrating on global economic and leadership studies while an undergraduate, he authored an independent study on Chinese and Turkish economic reform and co-authored multiple North Carolinian industry competitiveness reports used in state policy recommendations. Josh has also done work with numerous non profits and campaigns to increase efficacy in community building and public interest efforts throughout the country. Josh holds a B.A. in International Comparative Studies from Duke University.

Area of Focus
International Political Economy; International Relations; Politics

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