*Tema mítico* : (Hilo oficial) Plan de rescate EEUU. Análisis a fondo de la situación. Cárpatos

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"Too big to fail" must end for all: FDIC chief - Yahoo! News

ISTANBUL (Reuters) – The head of the U.S. Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. said on Sunday that she wanted to end the "too big to fail" doctrine and shrink the shadow banking system that operates outside the reach of regulators.

FDIC Chairman Sheila Bair, speaking to the Institute of International Finance meeting here, said a U.S. proposal to create the authority to shut down failing systemically important financial firms may need to be extended to insurers and hedge funds.

"We need to end 'too big to fail' and this needs to be an overarching policy that applies to everyone," Bair said.

Bair said she believed that bank holding companies with subsidiaries that are shut down by regulators also should be made to pay the price of failure by being subject to the same wind-down process.

"I believe that the new regime should apply to all bank holding companies that are more than just shells and their affiliates regardless or not whether they are considered to be systemic risks," she said, adding that including only systemically important firms in the shut-down regime could reinforce the 'too big to fail' doctrine.

Financial firms subject to systemic risk shutdown authority should likely also be required to publish "living wills" -- details on how an orderly wind-down would play out -- on their websites to provide more clarity to shareholders and customers.

And by applying the resolution authority more broadly outside of normal regulated bank holding companies, it would help shrink the shadow banking system by discouraging regulatory arbitrage under which financial firms shop for the most lenient supervisors.

"If you tighten regulation of the banks even more without dealing with the shadow sector you could make the problem even worse," she said.

Bair added that reducing the shadow banking system and regulatory arbitrage is her top priority for the U.S. Congress as it works on legislation to revamp U.S. financial oversight this fall.

She said there were some problems in extending resolution authority beyond banks to insurers and hedge funds, which she called a "sea change" in their oversight. But these could be overcome and it was appropriate to consider including them in the systemic risk resolution authority regulation.

"If the entity is systemic, that means if the entity gets in trouble it could create problems for the rest of us," she said.

Bair added that the FDIC is talking with the American Securitization Forum, a financial trade group, and others regarding the agency securitizing some of the assets that it has taken over from failed banks in order to help jumpstart U.S. securitization markets.
 

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EEUU lanza ayuda para agencias de vivienda locales y estatales | Reuters

EEUU lanza ayuda para agencias de vivienda locales y estatales
lunes 19 de octubre de 2009 14:49 GYT


WASHINGTON (Reuters) - El Gobierno estadounidense lanzó el lunes un nuevo programa de ayuda a las agencias de financiamiento hipotecario locales y estatales, en un intento por hacer asequibles cientos de miles de hipotecas y estabilizar el deprimido mercado de la vivienda.

El programa fue descrito como temporal por el Tesoro, el Departamento de Vivienda y Desarrollo Urbano y la Agencia Federal de Financiamiento de la Vivienda.

El plan es usar a las gigantes hipotecarias Fannie Mae y Freddie Mac, patrocinadas por el Gobierno, para proveer de financiamiento temporal a las agencias financieras de vivienda afectadas por la paralización de los mercados del crédito.

La ayuda consistirá en un nuevo programa de compra de bonos y créditos temporales.

La medida es el más nuevo intento del Gobierno del presidente Barack Obama para apuntalar el frágil mercado de la vivienda, lanzando una fuente de financiamiento para quienes compran casa por primera vez y para compradores de bajos ingresos.

"Mediante esta iniciativa, la administración apunta a ayudar a las agencias financiadoras de casas a relanzar nuevos préstamos a prestatarios que de otra forma no podrían ser atendidos y para darle un mejor respaldo a los costos de financiamiento en sus programas actuales de préstamos", dijo en un comunicado el secretario del Tesoro, Timothy Geithner.

Las agencias no revelaron la cantidad en dólares del programa, bajo el cual el Departamento del Tesoro comprará bonos respaldados por agencias locales y estatales de financiamiento y facilitará temporalmente el crédito y la liquidez para las agencias de viviendas.

(Reporte de David Lawder, Editado en español por Ignacio Badal)
 

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Obama anuncia nuevo plan de ayudas que incluye rescate a los bancos pequeños

Obama Said to Announce Plan to Boost Small Business Lending - Bloomberg.com

Obama Said to Announce Plan to Boost Small Business Lending

By Julianna Goldman

Oct. 20 (Bloomberg) -- President Barack Obama will announce tomorrow a new plan to increase credit and lending to small businesses, two administration officials said.

Obama’s proposal will increase caps for existing Small Business Administration loans and provide smaller banks with better access to the government’s Troubled Assets Relief Program, according to the administration officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

The officials didn’t provide additional details such as the cost of the proposal. Obama will make the announcement in Maryland at a small business site, they said.

White House officials in recent days have spoken about the need for banks and other financial institutions to boost lending to businesses after getting taxpayer-funded bailouts. Obama’s aides have been frustrated that major financial firms are fighting the president on his regulatory overhaul after taxpayers helped firms restore profits and near-record compensation for executives.

“The most offensive thing is, we haven’t seen the kind of increase in lending that -- that we should,” senior adviser David Axelrod said Oct. 18 on ABC’s “This Week.” “There are a lot of small businesses, creditworthy businesses around this country who still can’t get the capital they need to grow, which is important for our economy.”
 

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Gobierno EEUU duda extender crédito tributario a compra de casas | Reuters

Gobierno EEUU duda extender crédito tributario a compra de casas
martes 20 de octubre de 2009 12:14 GYT

Por Corbett B. Daly

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Un alto asesor de vivienda del presidente Barack Obama expresó el martes sus dudas de que Estados Unidos pueda extender el plazo de un popular crédito tributario para aquellos compradores de primera vivienda que expira el próximo mes.

El secretario de Vivienda y Desarrollo Urbano, Shaun Donovan, dijo que sabía que el programa era popular entre los legisladores, pero acotó: "al mismo tiempo, soy consciente de que estas propuestas pueden ser muy costosas, especialmente en momentos de significativos déficits presupuestarios".

En un discurso preparado para la Comisión de Bancos del Senado, Donovan se comprometió a "trabajar con el Congreso en diseñar incentivos apropiados y efectivos para los compradores de casas, consciente tanto de los beneficios de estimular más demanda como de los costos para los contribuyentes estadounidenses".

El senador republicano por Georgia Johnny Isakson y el presidente de la comisión Chris Dodd, demócrata de Connecticut, quieren que el Congreso extienda el crédito tributario de 8.000 dólares hasta junio próximo.

Isakson dijo al panel que no extender el popular crédito impositivo llevaría a una "dramática y terrible situación en Estados Unidos".

Isakson busca que la ley para extender el crédito tributario sea adjuntado a un proyecto de ley pendiente en el Senado que ampliaría los beneficios por desempleo. El Senado podría votar tales iniciativas esta misma semana.

Donovan agregó a la comisión que la Administración Federal de la Vivienda necesitará pedirle al Congreso fondos adicionales para incrementar sus niveles de capital.

"No hay necesidad de ningún 'rescate'", aseguró Donovan.

(Reporte de Corbett B. Daly; informe adicional de Andy Sullivan. Editado en español por Ignacio Badal)
 

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Greenspan dice algo sensato: si los bancos son demasiado grandes para caer igual es síntoma de que toca partirlos en pedacitos.

Greenspan Says U.S. Should Consider Breaking Up Large Banks

Bloomberg Printer-Friendly Page

By Michael McKee and Scott Lanman

Oct. 15 (Bloomberg) -- U.S. regulators should consider breaking up large financial institutions considered “too big to fail,” former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said.

Those banks have an implicit subsidy allowing them to borrow at lower cost because lenders believe the government will always step in to guarantee their obligations. That squeezes out competition and creates a danger to the financial system, Greenspan told the Council on Foreign Relations in New York.

“If they’re too big to fail, they’re too big,” Greenspan said today. “In 1911 we broke up Standard Oil -- so what happened? The individual parts became more valuable than the whole. Maybe that’s what we need to do.”

At one point, no bank was considered too big to fail, Greenspan said. That changed after the Treasury Department under then-Secretary Hank Paulson effectively nationalized Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and the Treasury and Fed bailed out Bear Stearns Cos. and American International Group Inc.

“It’s going to be very difficult to repair their credibility on that because when push came to shove, they didn’t stand up,” Greenspan said.

Fed officials have suggested imposing a tax or requiring higher capital ratios on larger banks to ensure the firms’ safety and reduce some of the competitive advantage from the implied subsidy. Greenspan said that won’t work.

“I don’t think merely raising the fees or capital on large institutions or taxing them is enough,” Greenspan said. “I think they’ll absorb that, they’ll work with that, and it’s totally inefficient and they’ll still be using the savings.”

‘Really Arbitrarily’

The former Fed chairman said while “just really arbitrarily breaking down organizations into various different sizes” goes against his philosophical leanings, something must be done to solve the too-big-to-fail issue.

“If you don’t neutralize that, you’re going to get a moribund group of obsolescent institutions which will be a big drain on the savings of the society,” he said.

“Failure is an integral part, a necessary part of a market system,” he said. “If you start focusing on those who should be shrinking, it undermines growing standards of living and can even bring them down.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Michael McKee in New York at mmckee@bloomberg.net; Scott Lanman in Washington at slanman@bloomberg.net
Last Updated: October 15, 2009 10:50 EDT
 

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http://www.finanzas.com/noticias/economia/2009-10-23/211018_apretara-tuercas-bancos-eeuu.html

La Fed apretará más las tuercas a los bancos de EEUU
23/10/2009 - 19:23
- Noticias EFE

Teresa Bouza

Washington, 23 oct (EFE).- El presidente de la Reserva Federal (Fed), Ben Bernanke, anunció hoy que el organismo que dirige reforzará las reglas y supervisión de los grandes bancos del país y vigilará más de cerca a las instituciones más pequeñas.

El objetivo es tratar de evitar una hecatombe financiera como la que tuvo lugar hace alrededor de un año, que dejó a la economía estadounidense al borde del colapso.

"No hace mucho más de un año, nosotros y nuestros socios internacionales afrontamos la crisis financiera más severa desde la Gran Depresión de los años 30", recordó hoy el responsable de la Fed durante un discurso en Chatham (Massachusetts)

Para que lo ocurrido no se repita, la Fed participa en una serie de "esfuerzos conjuntos" para asegurar que las instituciones "grandes y críticas desde el punto de vista sistémico" tengan "más capital y de mayor calidad".

Recordó que el Financial Stability Board, un organismo de supervisión internacional integrado por altos funcionarios de instituciones de distintos países, solicitó "estándares de capital significativamente mayores".

Subrayó, además, que el G20, que agrupa a los principales países desarrollados y en desarrollo, se ha comprometido a "desarrollar reglas para mejorar la cantidad y calidad del capital bancario".

Los citados esfuerzos conjuntos persiguen también mejorar las prácticas de gestión, unos sistemas de manejo de la liquidez más robustos, unas estructuras de compensación que lleven a asumir riesgos "apropiados" y un trato justo a los consumidores.

Además, la Fed está adoptando medidas para "reforzar la supervisión y el cumplimiento de las normas" que deberían ayudar a "anticipar y mitigar" las amenazas a la estabilidad financiera.

Con ese fin, la Fed estudia ampliar las "pruebas de resistencia" que aplicó a los 19 mayores bancos del país a otras instituciones.

El banco central estadounidense dio a conocer en mayo los resultados de dos meses y medio de un análisis exhaustivo de los balances de los mayores bancos estadounidenses, un proceso que se acuñó como "prueba de resistencia".

La autoridad monetaria concluyó entonces que 10 de esos 19 bancos necesitaban en conjunto cerca de 75.000 millones de dólares adicionales para reforzar su capital.

Bernanke indicó hoy que ante el "éxito" de esa iniciativa, la Fed planea llevar a cabo análisis "más frecuentes, más amplios y más exhaustivos".

El objetivo es detectar tanto riesgos generales como específicos, así como problemas relacionados con la gestión de las instituciones.

"Son necesarias medidas adicionales para asegurar que todas las organizaciones bancarias tienen el capital adecuado", insistió el responsable del banco central estadounidense.

Durante su discurso, pidió también celeridad al Congreso a la hora de aprobar una reforma de las regulaciones financieras.

"Con la crisis financiera aplacándose, ahora es el momento de que los legisladores tomen medidas para reducir la probabilidad e intensidad de cualquier crisis futura", afirmó.

La Fed y el Departamento del Tesoro anunciaron el jueves planes para regular las compensaciones de miles de compañías financieras del país e impusieron grandes recortes salariales en siete firmas que han recibido ayuda multimillonaria del Gobierno.

Esas siete firmas incluyen a Citigroup, Bank of America, American International Group, General Motors, GMAC, Chrysler Group y Chrysler Financial.

Pero Bernanke insistió hoy en que los legisladores también necesitan tomar cartas en el asunto.

"Aunque los reguladores pueden hacer mucho para mejorar la regulación y supervisión financiera, el Congreso también debe de actuar", dijo.

"Hemos visto numerosas instancias en las que la debilidad y los vacíos en la estructura financiera contribuyeron a la crisis", añadió Bernanke, quien subrayó que muchos de esos problemas sólo pueden resolverse con cambios aprobados por los legisladores.

El responsable de la Fed volvió a expresar su apoyo a un consejo para supervisar posibles riesgos en el sistema financiero.
 

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Extensión crédito fiscal vivienda EEUU con gran apoyo: senadores | Reuters

Extensión crédito fiscal vivienda EEUU con gran apoyo: senadores
miércoles 28 de octubre de 2009 12:56 GYT


WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Un proyecto para extender un crédito fiscal de 8.000 dólares para los compradores de casas por primera vez que vencerá el 30 de noviembre cuenta con un respaldo amplio en el Senado, dijeron el miércoles los principales representantes del hemiciclo.

"Ha habido un acuerdo general entre un número significativo de senadores, demócratas y republicanos, para llevar esto a cabo", dijo el líder de la mayoría en el Senado, Harry Reid, en comentarios al Senado.

El principal representante republicano en esta cámara, el senador Mitch McConnell, dijo también que la mayoría de los senadores apoyaba la medida.

"Yo comparto plenamente esta visión", dijo McConnell.

El crédito fiscal ha sido identificado por los actores del mercado inmobiliario como uno de los principales factores del repunte del sector de su peor caída desde la Gran Depresión.

Se espera que el Senado vote sobre este proyecto de extensión del crédito tributario dentro de un proyecto de ley para ampliar los beneficios por desempleo.

Pero el momento de la votación aún sigue siendo incierto debido a disputas sobre medidas no relacionadas que los republicanos quieren incluir en el proyecto de ley.

(Reporte de Andy Sullivan)
 

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Homebuyer Tax Credit Gets Final Congressional Approval - Real Estate * US * News * Story - CNBC.com

Homebuyer Tax Credit Gets Final Congressional Approval
Published: Thursday, 5 Nov 2009 | 2:38 PM ET

By: AP

Congress took further steps to right the staggering economy by expanding a popular tax credit for homebuyers and extending unemployment checks for the growing legions of people running out of benefits with few job prospects.

The House passed the bill on a 403-12 vote Thursday, a day after the Senate ended a monthlong stalemate with a 98-0 vote. With some 7,000 people exhausting unemployment benefits every day and the $8,000 tax credit for first-time homebuyers set to expire at the end of November, President Barack Obama is expected to quickly sign it into law.

The $24 billion package also contains tax credits aimed at struggling businesses.

The IRS says some 1.4 million people applied for the homebuyers credit through August, helping enliven the moribund housing market. The legislation would extend the program through June of next year, as long as the buyer signs a contract by the end of April. It also offers a $6,500 tax credit to those who have lived in their current residence at least five years.

The measure doubles the income ceiling for eligible individuals to $125,000. Homes must cost less than $800,000 to qualify.

The nearly 2 million who have exhausted their unemployment benefits or face termination of benefits, usually about $300 a week, before the end of the year would receive 14 weeks of additional benefits under the bill. The unemployed in those states where the jobless rate tops 8.5 percent would get six weeks on top of that.

House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer said the bill would also help the economy because the unemployed quickly spend their checks on living necessities. "We help people in very bad straits and we help our economy and help us all."

All but 12 Republicans voted for the bill, although several took the opportunity to swipe at the Obama administration's efforts to produce new jobs. "Make no mistake, the unemployment benefits are no substitute for a good job,"said Rep. Kevin Brady, R-Texas.

The extension would be the fourth since June of last year and the first since the $787 billion stimulus package was enacted last February. The unemployed in the hardest-hit states could, once the bill becomes law, receive a maximum of 99 weeks of benefits, well above the previous record of 65 weeks in the 1970s.

Lawmakers said aggressive measures are needed because the unemployment rate, now at 9.8 percent, is expected to hover around 10 percent into next year and more than one-third of the 15 million unemployed have been looking for work for at least six months, a record.

The nation has lost 8 million jobs since the "great recession" began at the end of 2007, said Rep. Jim McDermott, D-Wash., a chief sponsor of the legislation. Even with the recession winding down, "we know it will take considerable time to restore those lost jobs."

"A stunning 600,000 workers ran out of jobless benefits in the past two months alone, and thousands more are projected to by the end of the year," said Christine Owens, executive director of the National Employment Law Project. "Workers need this extension, the economy needs this extension."

The bill only applies to those running out of benefits before the end of the year, and McDermott reminded his colleagues that Congress may have to revisit the issue before it adjourns for the year.

The bill would also allow businesses that have incurred losses in 2008 and 2009 to seek refunds for taxes paid on profits over the past five years.

The two tax credits, each costing more than $10 billion over 10 years, are paid for by delaying enactment of a law giving international companies more leeway in how they allocate interest expenses between U.S. and foreign sources in determining tax liabilities.

The $2.4 billion cost of extending unemployment benefits is offset by extending through June 2011 the federal unemployment tax that employers pay for each employee.

The three measures would add $43 billion to the 2010 deficit and then be repaid over time.

© 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
 

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la última medida se la ha copiado a Salgado y Chacón :D

Internacional - El presidente de EE.UU. anuncia nuevas medidas de estímulo económico - ADN.es

El presidente de EE.UU. anuncia nuevas medidas de estímulo económico

* EFE
* ,
* Washington

El presidente de Estados Unidos, Barack Obama, anunció hoy la ampliación de las medidas de estímulo económico con inversiones en infraestructura y exenciones tributarias, gracias a que el programa de rescate financiero ha costado menos que lo previsto.

Obama dijo en un discurso en la Institución Brookings que pretende "acelerar la creación de empleo" con parte de los 200.000 millones de dólares que se ahorrarán en el programa de rescate financiero.

"La asistencia a los bancos, que se pensó que costaría a los contribuyentes miles de millones de dólares, está en camino de generar en realidad miles de millones de dólares en beneficios" para el erario público, informó el presidente.

El programa fue lanzado por la Administración de su predecesor, George W. Bush, para evitar el colapso del sistema financiero tras la quiebra del banco de inversiones Lehman Brothers.

No obstante, la estabilización de los mercados en los últimos meses ha hecho que muchos de los grandes bancos hayan devuelto el dinero al Gobierno con intereses y que el costo del programa haya caído.

"Esto nos da la oportunidad de reducir el déficit más rápido que lo que habíamos pensado antes y dedicar fondos que habrían ido a ayudar a los bancos de Wall Street a contribuir a la creación de empleo", dijo Obama.

La Casa Blanca no divulgó el volumen total de dinero que se usará para estimular la economía y un alto funcionario, que pidió no ser identificado, aclaró a la prensa que el costo del programa dependerá de las negociaciones con el Congreso.

Adelantó, sin embargo, que el Gobierno sopesa usar 50.000 millones de dólares adicionales en proyectos de infraestructura, en transporte y sistemas sanitarios, que tengan un impacto inmediato.

Entre las medidas anunciadas hoy por Obama también están rebajas de impuestos para las pequeñas empresas y un nuevo incentivo fiscal para promover las contrataciones, con el objetivo de reducir una tasa de desempleo que ahora se encuentra en el 10 por ciento.

También dará exenciones tributarias a los propietarios de viviendas que inviertan en aislar sus casas y en aparatos que consuman menos energía.
 

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Esto si que es rescatar... dejar dinero al estado al 0%....

Treasury sells 4-week bills at 0% rate - MarketWatch

NEW YORK (MarketWatch) -- The Treasury Department sold $29 billion in 4-week bills at a rate of 0.0%, the first sale of the maturities with no yield since late December 2008, as investors want to have safer assets on the books at year-end and just get their principal back next month. The government received $154 billion in bids for the auction - more than five times the amount being sold. The bill auction preceded the government's sale of $40 billion in 3-year notes . On the day, yields on benchmark 10-year notes fell 7 basis points to 3.36%.
 

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Geithner Says Treasury Faces Losses From Autos, AIG (Update4)


By Rebecca Christie and Robert Schmidt

Dec. 10 (Bloomberg) -- Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said the government is unlikely to recoup its investments in insurer American International Group Inc. or the automakers General Motors Co. and Chrysler Group LLC.

Geithner, in testimony today before the Congressional Oversight Panel, also said he chose to extend the $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program to give the Obama administration more time to unwind its bank-rescue efforts. The economy faces “significant headwinds,” and housing markets remain dependent on government support even as they are stabilizing, he said.

Still, U.S. financial and economic conditions have improved, Geithner told the panel in Washington. The Treasury now expects to make money on its banking investments, if not on its efforts to stabilize the automobile and insurance industries.

“It’s unlikely that we will be repaid for all of our investments in AIG, G.M. and Chrysler,” Geithner said.

The Government Accountability Office yesterday said that U.S. taxpayers will lose $30.4 billion from the auto-industry bailout, down from a prior estimate of $43.7 billion. The GAO report predicted a similar loss of $30.4 billion in AIG, down from a previous estimate of $31.5 billion.

Bank Repayment

Asked about future repayment by the largest banks still with government investments, Geithner said it is “generally desirable” that they raise all the money they need to repay in equity offerings.

“Cleaner exit is better than a staged exit,” he said. “I’m not sure that is going to be possible in every circumstance.”

While he didn’t discuss Citigroup Inc.’s efforts to extricate itself from the TARP, Geithner did note Bank of America Corp.’s repayment, which came yesterday. “I got a check for $45 billion,” he said, adding that was a “good thing.”

Under questioning by panelists, Geithner defended the government’s handling of last year’s AIG rescue, which has come under fire because banks were given the full value on credit- default swaps purchased from the New York-based insurer. Geithner was president of the New York Federal Reserve at the time and had a leading role in the bailout.

“You cannot selectively default on contractual obligations without courting collapse,” Geithner told the panel, explaining why the government paid banks 100 cents on the dollar. “There is no other way in the context of that storm to protect the economy from that failure.”

Extend TARP

The Treasury chief also faced skepticism about his decision to extend the TARP until next October.

The program is “essentially a blank check to finance any macroeconomic stimulus initiative that the executive branch can imagine, to the tune of hundreds of billions of dollars,” said panel member Paul Atkins, a former Republican member of the Securities and Exchange Commission.

“The economy would not be growing again without TARP,” Geithner said.


The U.S. economy expanded at a 2.8 percent annual rate in the third quarter after shrinking for a year. The economy will expand 2.6 percent in 2010, according to the median forecast of 58 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News this month. The jobless rate will average 10 percent next year.

Assisting AIG

While assisting AIG and the auto companies will cost taxpayers, the Treasury predicts a $19 billion profit on its banking investments, Geithner said.

Long-term TARP costs will be no higher than $140 billion, the Treasury said. The ultimate return will depend on how the economy fares, Geithner said.

The Treasury expects “substantial income” from sales of TARP warrants, received as part of the government’s investment in banks, in coming weeks, Geithner said. He said that auctions will often bring the highest returns for the government.

Banks that pay back their capital injections must also dispose of the warrants that the Treasury received, either by repurchasing them or allowing the department to sell them. Goldman Sachs Group Inc. redeemed its warrants for $1.1 billion, while JPMorgan Chase & Co. opted to allow the government to auction its warrants after the Treasury rejected an appraisal as too low.

Personnel Shift

Geithner appeared before the panel, led by Harvard law professor Elizabeth Warren, as it prepared for a personnel shift. Representative Jeb Hensarling, a Texas Republican, resigned yesterday.

Hensarling, who is being replaced by Dallas attorney Mark McWatters, has repeatedly criticized the bailout. George Rasley, a spokesman for the congressman, said Hensarling had agreed to stay on the panel for the expected duration of the TARP. The effort was set to expire Dec. 31 until Geithner extended it yesterday.

In his testimony, Geithner told the panel that the Treasury can’t force small banks to participate in initiatives aimed at stimulating small-business lending. He said these programs have been less successful than hoped because banks have been wary of submitting to the extra regulation that comes with taking TARP aid.

Geithner said parts of the securitization markets are “still impaired,” especially for securities backed by commercial mortgages. He also hailed improvements in the markets for asset-backed securities, which he said are no longer as dependent on publicly supported markets like the Federal Reserve’s Term Asset-Backed Securities Lending Facility.

To contact the reporter on this story: Rebecca Christie in Washington at rchristie4@bloomberg.net

Last Updated: December 10, 2009 17:08 EST

Geithner Says Treasury Faces Losses From Autos, AIG (Update4) - Bloomberg.com
 

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Las 10 principales maneras por las cuales la banca sigue masajeando del bote

The Top 10 Ways Banks Are Still Getting Secret Bailouts And Subsidies
The Top 10 Ways Banks Are Still Getting Secret Bailouts And Subsidies

The banks are mad as hell and they're not going to take it anymore. They paid back their TARP, which they didn't need anyway, and every dime they're making now is because of their own brilliance, not taxpayer subsidies. So they can pay themselves whatever they want and the hell with anyone who has a problem with that!

That's a common attitude on Wall Street these days.

And the part about the TARP being paid back is true (and it's surprising how fast it happened). And the bankers certainly aren't doing anything that any good capitalist would do when offered free money and gifts: Take them. So this isn't about bankers being bad people and other taxpayers being good people. (It's about government policy).

But that bit about how banks aren't being subsidized anymore is just a crock of sh$%.

Reggie Middleton at Zero Hedge has an excellent rant on this subject, in which he distills the 10 ways banks are still getting rich and drunk at a taxpayer subsidized bar:

1. What was the value for bank charter, to get cheap access to the Fed's funds? did they pay back this value yet? No!
2. How about the payment of interest on the banks' excess reserves at the Fed. Have the banks repaid that yet? No!
3. The Fed and the Treasury have purchased hundreds of billions of dollars of Agency debt, Agency mortgage-backed securities (MBS) and related securities through Treasury purchase programs. Have the banks paid back the capital behind those purchases yet? No!
4. How about the Term Auction Facility? Has the capital behind the benefits of that program been paid back? No!
5. Then there is the Primary Dealer Credit Facility (PDCF), has this been paid back? No!
6. Do you remember the Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility (TALF)? Have the funds behind that been paid back? No!
7. What about the PPIP? No!
8. Hey, there's the Foreign Exchange Swap programs (the currency swap lines, that saved not only our banks but out banks facing counterparties who were short on dollars), has that been paid back? No!
9. There's the Commercial Paper Funding Facility (CPFF), have the funds behind that been paid back? No!
10. Most importantly, the opportunity cost of ZIRP [Zero Interest Rate Policy], which hurts those who do not speculate (or have not speculated) with near free money! How do you pay that back to grandma and her .017% CDs?

The last one's a killer. David Stockman estimated this week that our zero interest rates have taken $250 billion from the pockets of savers and put it into the pockets of Wall Street.

Low interest rates have been used for years to stimulate economic activity and secretly recapitalize banks. So they're nothing new. But they are a huge subsidy that hurts savers and rewards banks (right now) for doing nothing more than buying Treasuries. So at the very least it's disingenuous for Wall Street to argue that it's through being subsidized.

And that's before you get to the 9 other gifts and subsidies Reggie Middleton outlines
 

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Obama congelará el gasto público durante tres años y reconoce el 'gran agujero fiscal' de EEUU | Economía

Obama congelará el gasto público durante tres años y reconoce el "gran agujero fiscal" de EEUU
28/01/2010 - 05:37
- Noticias EUROPAPRESS

NUEVA YORK, 28 (EUROPA PRESS)

El presidente de Estados Unidos, Barack Obama, reconoció este miércoles que el país norteamericano tiene ante sí un "gran agujero fiscal", por lo que va a congelar parte del gasto público durante tres años para tratar de ahorrar 250.000 millones de dólares (unos 176.000 millones de euros).

La medida entrará en vigor a partir del año fiscal de 2011, que comienza en octubre, pero no afectará a las partidas de seguridad nacional, asistencia sanitaria o seguridad social. "Si tengo que forzar esta medida mediante un veto, lo haré", advirtió durante su primer discurso sobre el Estado de la Unión.

Estados Unidos tiene ante sí, como el propio mandatario reconoció, un déficit de 3 billones de dólares. "Tomamos el mando en mitad de una crisis y nuestros esfuerzos para prevenir una segunda Gran Depresión han añadido otro billón a nuestra deuda nacional", admitió.

"Ya hemos identificado 20.000 millones de dólares que podremos ahorrar el próximo año", indicó Obama. Además, anunció la suspensión de los recortes impositivos a las compañías petrolíferas, fondos de inversión o a quienes ganan más de 250.000 dólares al año. "No podemos permitirlo", apostilló.