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To: skr

See post #7. Most banks repaid TARP with cash and equity, with interest. AIG (non-bank) was the biggest drag on TARP but as pieces of it (AIA, ILFC etc.) are sold off it may even break close to even.

Biggest problem will be automakers and GMAC / ResCap, which should not have even been eligible for TARP, but George W. Bush has decided to use TARP funds to really bail out the UAW, so now we (the people) “own” them and their liabilities including union pension plans.


18 posted on 06/12/2010 3:28:22 AM PDT by CutePuppy (If you don't ask the right questions you may not get the right answers)
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To: CutePuppy; skr

Are you sure it Bush that had anything to do with the UAW and GM getting TARP funds ? I thought that diversion from the original intent of TARP happened after Zero took office.

skr: If your question was referring to where did the banks get the money to repay TARP, then I think the answer is that they didn’t really need the money in the sense that they didn’t need to “spend” it like GM and UAW did. The banks were forced to take it so they could meet cash requirements since their “assets” of mortgage backed securities and credit default swaps became so questionable. They wrote down those assets and cleaned up their balance sheets so they no longer needed to show as much “cash” on hand. As Congress’s TARP panel was intrusive, the banks got out by repayment as quick as possible.


24 posted on 06/12/2010 3:38:09 AM PDT by Kellis91789 (Democrat: Someone who supports killing children, but protests executing convicted murderers.)
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