June 18, 2009 10:57 AM
- Text
Big Bank Bailout Money Goes To Small Banks
(AP)
The Obama administration will use bailout money repaid by large banks to provide additional capital infusions to smaller banks, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said Wednesday.
Banks with less than $500 million in assets will have six months to apply for the funds, Geithner said in remarks to the annual meeting of the Independent Community Bankers of America. They also will be able to apply for larger amounts than banks were allowed to request during the current round of investments.
The administration first indicated that the repaid funds would be used for further injections earlier this month when regulators announced the results of the "stress tests" conducted on the nation's 19 largest banks. Those tests found that 10 of the banks, including Bank of America Corp. and Citigroup Inc., needed to raise additional capital to survive a worsening recession.
Geithner also said the administration will propose an overhaul of the financial regulatory system in the "next couple" of weeks. The reforms will simplify and streamline the existing oversight structure, which he said is "too complex."
Due largely to the government's efforts, "the financial system is starting to heal" and "a substantial part of the adjustment process is now behind us," he said.
Still, the administration wants to move on an overhaul of the nation's financial rule book "while memory of the crisis is still acute," Geithner said.
Banks with less than $500 million in assets will have six months to apply for the funds, Geithner said in remarks to the annual meeting of the Independent Community Bankers of America. They also will be able to apply for larger amounts than banks were allowed to request during the current round of investments.
The administration first indicated that the repaid funds would be used for further injections earlier this month when regulators announced the results of the "stress tests" conducted on the nation's 19 largest banks. Those tests found that 10 of the banks, including Bank of America Corp. and Citigroup Inc., needed to raise additional capital to survive a worsening recession.
Geithner also said the administration will propose an overhaul of the financial regulatory system in the "next couple" of weeks. The reforms will simplify and streamline the existing oversight structure, which he said is "too complex."
Due largely to the government's efforts, "the financial system is starting to heal" and "a substantial part of the adjustment process is now behind us," he said.
Still, the administration wants to move on an overhaul of the nation's financial rule book "while memory of the crisis is still acute," Geithner said.
Latest Now in National
- Coroner in Ohio changes ruling in 1972 death
- APNewsBreak: Satellite spots tanks in Syrian city
- APNewsBreak: Satellite spots tanks in Syrian city
- Ill. Sen. Mark Kirk moved to stroke rehab center
- Comedian's BYU black history video goes viral
- Explosion at Fla. horse center kills worker, horse
- Explosion at Fla. horse center kills worker, horse
- Fight breaks out at a funeral in Phoenix
- Mom who threw tot in NY river can go home to India
- Schoolgirls excluded from Dallas movie screening
- Woman pleads guilty in NY newborn kidnap case
- Developer may open rival Philadelphia newspaper
- Developer may open rival Philadelphia newspaper
- Dad of NYC subway bomb plotter gets 4 ½ years
- Dispatcher on Powell call: Case a 'nightmare'
- Explosion at Fla. horse center kills worker, horse
- Serial killer's tip leads to remains of 2nd body
Latest CBS News Headlines
on Facebook
on CBS News
- Russians alarmed by rash of teenage suicides
- For pregnant women with cancer, chemo possible
- Socialist leader urges vote for austerity measures
- Lawyer: 6 Austrians were injected with malaria
on Facebook
- Adele sings a cappella for Anderson Cooper
- Beyonce and Jay-Z post first photos of Blue Ivy Carter
- Timothy Dolan: Birth control tweak a "first step"
on CBS News






