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$250bn Bank Rescue Will Encourage Acquisitions, Not Lending

Contrarian Profits (October 30th, 2008) Writes:

The Treasury’s plan to inject $250 billion in capital directly into US banks is underway. But William Patalon III says some of these taxpayer funds will be used by big banks to acquire junior competitors. This means the increase in lending that the plan is supposed to spark will be modest at best. And less competition in the banking sector could mean a rise in fees going forward.

This from Money Morning:

While the U.S. government’s plan to invest $250 billion into U.S. financial institutions has been billed as a strategy that will bolster the health of the banking system and also jump-start lending, the recapitalization plan is likely to have a secondary effect – one that whipsawed U.S. taxpayers likely won’t be very happy to learn about.

Those billions are a virtual lock to set off a merger tsunami in which the biggest banks use taxpayer money to get bigger

...
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Billions in Bank Rescue Funds are Fueling Buyout Deals, and not the Increase in Loans That Would Help Ease the Financial Crisis

William Patalon (October 30th, 2008) Writes:
While the U.S. government’s plan to invest $250 billion into U.S. financial institutions has been billed as a strategy that will bolster the health of the banking system and also jump-start lending, the recapitalization plan is likely to have a secondary effect – one that whipsawed U.S. taxpayers likely won’t be very happy to learn about. Those billions are a virtual lock to set off a merger tsunami in which the biggest banks use taxpayer money to get bigger – admittedly removing the smaller, weaker banks from the market, but ultimately also reducing the competition that benefited consumers and kept the explosion in banking fees from being far worse than it already is. One last point: Experts say that takeovers financed by the government infusions are likely to have less of a beneficial impact on the economy than an actual increase in ...
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U.S. Stocks Skid as Bailout Bogs Down, President to Address the Nation

Contrarian Profits (September 25th, 2008) Writes:

U.S. stocks dropped for the third straight day yesterday (Wednesday) on worries that increasingly rancorous debates will squelch a proposed $700 billion bailout of the U.S. financial system even as Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke warned Congressional leaders that the credit crisis was already damaging the American economy.

Credit Crisis Update: Markets Gain as Congress Nears Agreement on Proposed $700 Billion Banking Bailout Package

Money Morning (September 25th, 2008) Writes:
The three-pronged assault on Congress by President George W. Bush, U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke and U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry M. "Hank" Paulson to push for speedy passage of the proposed $700 billion banking bailout package is making headway, causing investors to turn bullish in anticipation of federal intervention. By 10:45 a.m. in New York today (Thursday), all three major U.S. indices had huge jumps, as optimism that Congress would soon come to an agreement on the proposed bailout legislation buoyed U.S. markets. The blue-chip Dow Jones Industrial Average Index gained 195.62 points (1.81%), to trade at 11,020.79. The tech-laden Nasdaq Composite Index shot up 35.05 points (1.63%), to 2,190.73. And the broader Standard & Poor’s 500 Index rose 19.61 points (1.65%), to reach 1,205.48. That same optimism had the opposite effect on oil, putting downward pressure ...

Credit Crisis Update: U.S. Stocks Skid as Bailout Bogs Down, President to Address the Nation

Money Morning (September 24th, 2008) Writes:
U.S. stocks dropped for the third straight day yesterday (Wednesday) on worries that increasingly rancorous debates will squelch a proposed $700 billion bailout of the U.S. financial system even as Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke warned Congressional leaders that the credit crisis was already damaging the American economy. As part of his most dire commentary about the U.S. economy since he became the central bank chief two years ago, Bernanke said the credit crisis posed "grave threats" to American financial stability and urged Congress to pass U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry M. Paulson’s $700 billion plan to excise devalued - and even worthless - assets from the banking system, Bloomberg News reported. Noting that "economic activity appears to have decelerated broadly," Bernanke told members of the Senate’s Joint Economic Committee that "stabilization of our financial system is an essential ...
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Foreign Bondholders – and not the U.S. Mortgage Market – Drove the Fannie/Freddie Bailout

William Patalon (September 11th, 2008) Writes:
For anyone who still doubted the growing global influence of such emerging powerhouses as China, consider this: The U.S. government’s decision to take control of foundering mortgage giants Fannie Mae (FNM) and Freddie Mac (FRE) was driven not by worries about the fading U.S. housing market, but by concerns that foreign central banks in China, Japan, Europe, the Middle East and Russia might stop buying our bonds. As the bailout announced Sunday is currently structured, more than $1.3 trillion worth of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac debt currently held by the central banks and other investors in those regions will be guaranteed by the U.S. government - even if one or both of the two government-sponsored enterprises (GSEs) were to fail. That means that U.S. taxpayers - government parlance for you and me - will ultimately foot a ...

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