- Nov 25, 2001
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Ever since Team Bush announced the TARP program, there's been a gnashing of teeth about how many bazillions of dollars we're spending, and oh my gawd, how much debt we're getting into, and oh geeze, how we should let the financial system implode, great depression redux be damned.
But get this. The TARP funds are being repaid. AND, the gov't is making a tidy profit. The treasury has cleared $8 Billion in profit thus far.
So NOW what do you think of this program?
Many big firms are exiting TARP and repaying their loans:
Hell, we, as in taxpayers, made a 23% annualized return on Goldman Sachs alone! Not bad, not bad at all. Stabilize the financial sector and make a profit while doing it. It's the American way!
But get this. The TARP funds are being repaid. AND, the gov't is making a tidy profit. The treasury has cleared $8 Billion in profit thus far.
So NOW what do you think of this program?
KAI RYSSDAL: Alisa mentioned that one of the drags on profits for Morgan Stanley was the cost of repaying TARP money. And it was, but there is more to it than just that. In addition to the billions in cash that Morgan and the other banks got and had to pay back, they also had to give the government stock warrants. Options, essentially, to buy company stock at a pre-determined price. Those warrant prices were way lower that what most bank shares are trading at now. Earlier today Goldman Sachs bought its warrants back from the Treasury Department. Cost 'em about a billion-and-a-half-dollars. For those of you keeping track at home, when you add up the interest on Goldman's $10 billion bailout, plus buying back the warrants, taxpayers got a 23 percent annualized rate of return. Marketplace's Steve Henn explains that presents Congress with an unexpected dilemma: What to do with the money.
STEVE HENN: OK, so not all of the Treasury's TARP investments are doing as well as Goldman Sachs but out of the banks that have paid us back, Treasury's already cleared close to $8 billion in profit.
JAMES CHESSEN: Taxpayers are getting a great return. It's over 12 percent.
James Chessen is the chief economist at the American Bankers Association. He admits that kind of return on investment might not hold up over the long haul but...
CHESSEN: This is a big success for the government.
Chessen says by passing the bailout last fall, Congress stabilized the markets and made some serious money doing it. But now politicians in Washington have a new problem. How should they spend their windfall?
http://marketplace.publicradio...eb/2009/07/22/pm-tarp/
Many big firms are exiting TARP and repaying their loans:
American Express received $3.39 billion from the Treasury Department under the program and paid back the government in June after it, along with other leading financial firms such as JPMorgan Chase (JPM, Fortune 500) and Goldman Sachs (GS, Fortune 500), was approved by regulators to exit TARP.
http://money.cnn.com/2009/07/2...postversion=2009072317
Hell, we, as in taxpayers, made a 23% annualized return on Goldman Sachs alone! Not bad, not bad at all. Stabilize the financial sector and make a profit while doing it. It's the American way!