WASHINGTON, Jan. 27, 2009

Treasury Doles Out $386M To 23 Banks

Money Is First Chunk Of $700 Billion Bailout Package Distributed Under Obama

  • Play CBS Video Video Obama Faces Bleeding Banks

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  • Video Notebook: The Opaque TARP

    Katie Couric questions the rather murky handlings of the massive bailout agenda known as the Troubled Assets Relief Program, or TARP for short. Couric calls for more clarity with this initiative.

  • Video Bailout Bait And Switch?

    The financial industry bailout was supposed to help troubled mortgage holders and free up credit lending. So why have the firms used the money to buy up smaller banks? Sharyl Attkisson reports.

  • Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner is seen during his confirmation hearings last week. Geithner said that the Obama administration was implementing new rules to limit special-interest influences on the bailout program the same day it doled out another $386 million to banks.  (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

(AP)  The Treasury Department said Tuesday it has distributed another $386 million to 23 banks, the first awards from the federal bailout fund since President Barack Obama took office.

The department said the latest capital infusions went to banks in 16 states, bringing the total number of institutions that have been helped to 317.

The new distributions were made Friday and mark the first money from the $700 billion bailout fund distributed since Obama became president last week. Under the law that established the fund, the administration has to publicly disclose its funding actions within two business days after the money is disbursed.

The latest capital infusions ranged from $111 million for 1st Source Corp. in South Bend, Ind., to $1.04 million for Calvert Financial Corp. in Ashland, Mo.

With the new awards, a total of $194.2 billion has been provided in the program that is purchasing bank stock as a way to bolster banks' capital reserves and get them to resume more normal lending patterns. The money has gone to 317 institutions in 43 states and Puerto Rico.

Separately, the Federal Reserve - as required by a 2008 law that set up the $700 billion bailout fund - adopted a policy Tuesday aimed at preventing home foreclosures. The goal is to avoid foreclosures on residential mortgages that are held, owned or controlled by any Federal Reserve bank. The Fed said it will apply the policy to residential mortgage assets that serve as collateral for emergency loans provided by the Fed as well as to special entities it set up to hold certain assets of Bear Stearns and insurer American International Group.

Also on Tuesday, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner announced on his first full day in office that the administration was implementing new rules to limit special-interest influences on the bailout program.

The new rules will restrict the contact that government officials can have with lobbyists for the financial institutions seeking awards. They also will require reports in which the officials operating the rescue fund will have to provide Congress with a detailed description of how their review process was conducted.

The Bush administration committed the first $350 billion of the rescue fund in ways that left many lawmakers fuming about a lack of accountability and transparency in the program. While lawmakers failed in an effort to block release of the second $350 billion, the Obama administration said it would institute a number of reforms.

© MMIX The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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Add a Comment See all 31 Comments
by tincup356 January 30, 2009 1:29 AM EST
there is not a word that comes out of the mouth of any politician that is not a lie...not one.
Reply to this comment
by tincup356 January 30, 2009 1:26 AM EST
party blind fools....they are working together to destroy the middle class Both parties could care less what happens to the people, people screamed bloody murder at the thought of the government helping common people try to keep what they have.....but give billions to greedy bankers who will not loan out that money they got at almost NO interest and charge as much as they can ,,when they loan it and then normal citizens wont be included,,,,,not to mention 118 billion in bonuses to execs.....congress is committing TREASON.
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by luvcomments January 28, 2009 5:31 PM EST
panacam

You are absolutely correct. Decades ago I had a genius IQ boss who said the same thing about the corporations and commercial greed in general. However, he went on to say that people are too flock of sheep indoctrinated to use their clout and, besides, they''re too busy making their refrigerator payments and watching their favorite show. We moan about our freedoms being taken away but....they aren''t; they''re given away.
Reply to this comment
by panacam January 28, 2009 5:12 PM EST
I think we as American''s forget just how much clout we have againest these financial institutions. Let''s consider this: Everyone goes out and max''es out thier credit cards and at the same time, hold off paying their morgtgage. How long will it take before the entire financial system falls on its butt? Banks and financial institutions think they have problems now, what if...? I think it''s about time the B & F''s start lending the money given to them and quit worring about their "bottom lines" otherwise the American Public will get wise and fix their ''bottom lines'' but good!
Reply to this comment
by panacam January 28, 2009 5:00 PM EST
Why are they giving it to the banks who are the ones responsible for the financial mess to begin with. Why don''''t they just give every American $1,000,000.00 dollars in which they decide what to do with it and as we all know many will spend it and have nothing but junk to show for it yet thats what we call an economic boost putting money back into the system by spending. Giving it to the banks does nothing giving it to the people is the right thing they can buy those homes, new cars..etc etc with it and stimulate the markets


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Posted by cusefan21 at 11:48 AM : Jan 28, 2009

cusefan21 echos the same things many of us have said. What good does it do the banks to have the money? Many people out of work and out of money can''t pay their debts so filling the back-end of the problem is going to fix the problem? Not by my math! Cusefan21 is right when he says it may just get spent on "junk" but at least it will get spent! Now I don''t agree $1M is the right amount but at the current bail out levels, #10,000 would not be unrealistic.
Reply to this comment
by cusefan21 January 28, 2009 2:48 PM EST
Why are they giving it to the banks who are the ones responsible for the financial mess to begin with. Why don''t they just give every American $1,000,000.00 dollars in which they decide what to do with it and as we all know many will spend it and have nothing but junk to show for it yet thats what we call an economic boost putting money back into the system by spending. Giving it to the banks does nothing giving it to the people is the right thing they can buy those homes, new cars..etc etc with it and stimulate the markets
Reply to this comment
by luvcomments January 28, 2009 12:41 PM EST
According to Nouriel Roubini, RGE Monitor Chairman, banks are getting the money but they are hoarding it, not lending it, as they expect higher losses.
Reply to this comment
by luvcomments January 28, 2009 11:46 AM EST
I am curious (as well as obviously uneducated in economics :) Since the banks still aren''t lending money to consumers or businesses, what would be the ramifications - to the presently rich and non-rich - if we just let the banks go belly-up instead of pouring money into them for their undisclosed agenda?
Reply to this comment
by dumdnc January 28, 2009 10:54 AM EST
texhillgirl-don''t forget the brown shirts and jack boots. I hear they voted for the taper cut shirt with tab collar. They should look dandy.
Reply to this comment
by dumdnc January 28, 2009 10:52 AM EST
And 12million went to a little bank in Mass. that''s a pet of barney frank. But hey, that''s ok, isn''t it.
The only holdings this bank has are the subprime mortgages that are being brought to us by the dems. I also understand that fannie and freddie are getting a bunch of money so they can continue the practice of subprime lending. And, love the fact that acorn, the chosen one''s special pet project is gettin funds.
But, hey, it''s the dems and that''s the way business is being conducted.
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by jsilver2th January 28, 2009 7:53 AM EST
They should include a list of the banks in this story.
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by b4ucmyi January 28, 2009 5:03 AM EST
I love it when people without jobs buy corporate jets for the wealthy. And the rich say, "Let them drink jet fuel!" It used to upset me, but now I find it hilarious.
More popcorn please. This is a GREAT movie!
Reply to this comment
by whitemale08 January 28, 2009 3:51 AM EST
state prints the money the state can keep control of it as well if that helps to fight our excessive greed...


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Posted by ballpen1 at 12:25 AM : Jan 28, 2009--

Exactly,

The quadrillions in worthless derivatives is what hampers us from going foward and as long as our banking system is private then the banks will demand that we bailout those quadrillions in worthless derivatives.

Reality is already taking over fantasy whether the banksters like it or not. They know that a sovereign people will not bow down to a private cartel of bankers who demand that we continue to bailout their endless derivatives.

Nationalization is around the corner and we shouldn''t be afraid of it but embrace it so we can stop all of this consumption and start needed ''development'' of the Nation-state.
Reply to this comment
by ballpen1 January 28, 2009 3:25 AM EST
Posted by whitemale08 at 12:16 AM : Jan 28, 2009

Well, i''ve been to Sweden once, and i could''n tell if the banks were private or nationalised (they seem to compete for customers, offering different interesst rates etc.), so why not. If the state prints the money the state can keep control of it as well if that helps to fight our excessive greed...
Reply to this comment
by ballpen1 January 28, 2009 3:19 AM EST
From the article:

"Under the law that established the fund, the administration has to publicly disclose its funding actions within two business days after the money is disbursed."

OH YEAH? So how come we never got told where the first $350B (Bush/Paulson money) got? The Fed blocked all FOIA requests, citing all kinds of BS. If not for the media (reports about bonuses, jets) we''d have no clue at all.

Under Obama we finally get SOME information, just as the law demands, and he is very cautions with the money ($286M is less then a tenth of a percent of what''s left).

But the first half, the Bush/Paulson half, is gone. And then some people here urge "restraint" with the rest and demand this and that. Hypocrits! Get your men Bush and Paulson to reveal where they hid the first half, then we can talk!
Reply to this comment
by whitemale08 January 28, 2009 3:16 AM EST
Don''t give up on Obama too soon.

He and his administration knows that it is inevitable to ''nationalize'' the banks which is what has to happen.

Nationalizing the banks will shut down the private banks that make up the Federal Reserve System and put them through ''bankruptcy re-organization'' like Sweeden did last decade.

Under bankruptcy re-organization they can seperate the ''worthless assets'' of ''derivatives'' and ''credit-default-swaps'' from the vital banking functions that keeps the banks open for business.

The banksters know their days are numbered under Obama and will just wait it out until they can install another Republican or naive Democrat like Wilson to re-instate a private Federal Reserve System.

But trust me folks, the Obama administration can hear us loud and clear and he has to be careful in how transforms our economy away from the Keynesian, private central banking system of the British East India Company.

He''s only been in power for a week, it will take at least 4 years or his first term to undue decades of damage from Wall Street/City of London.

Be patient my fellow Americans.
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by ctla567 January 28, 2009 3:05 AM EST
What kind of reform have they agreed on before they spend the rest of the bail out money? Is it another give away?
Reply to this comment
by jefglazer January 28, 2009 3:02 AM EST
hi guys
a new era has emerged.
this brave journalism
Unbeleivable!
please watch and share it with others.
http://www.cbsnews.com/video/wa
tch/?id=4752349n
Reply to this comment
by pharoah_ill January 28, 2009 2:32 AM EST
THE BAILOUT MONEY

The first $350 bil to the banks was fine (with a watchful eye) but after that to give money to the "money maker" instead of the "money spenders" is foolish. Unless they''re forced to,or its a grand blue chip investment,they are not going to spend money.They
have a bottom line to watch.The only time they spend
money is to make more(investing). Guess who they make that money off of,thats right,"the money spender".
The American Economy traditionally works that way,money floats upward. Money from a mass of people on the bottom,floats upward to a small group on top (The Rich). So to get the economy moving you must
distribute the on the bottom to "The Spenders".
It should be distributed in the form of assisted purchase programs. Starting with the best credit applicants,and go down. applicant,or small businesses
would have to be under a certain income level. If they
rise above that same income level in the future they would start pay back installments.Purchases could be for cars,houses,furniture,equipment, everything.
This results in comsumer confidence ,spending,bank business,merchant business etc.
eanderson
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by niceface19 January 28, 2009 1:54 AM EST
sorry ,
my key got stuck
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