The Home Front

The $700 Billion Bailout Plan (Take Two)

By Luke Mullins

Posted: October 14, 2008

When the controversial $700 billion bailout plan made its awkward spin through Congress, Treasury officials focused mainly on its authority to allow the government to buy up vast quantities of mortgage and other assets that were gumming up the credit markets.

But Tuesday, the Feds issued details on an amended bailout plan, which includes making equity investments in U.S. banks and guaranteeing bank debt. The changes come after European officials undertook similar measures last week.

As a result, the largest financial bailout since the Great Depression now has three distinct components:

1. Direct Equity Investments: The government will buy up to $250 billion of nonvoting, senior-preferred shares in U.S. banks. The shares will pay an annual dividend rate of 5 percent for the first five years and 9 percent thereafter. "Institutions that sell shares to the government will accept restrictions on executive compensation, including a clawback provision and a ban on golden parachutes during the period that Treasury holds equity issued through this program," Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said in a statement.

The goal here is to ensure that banks have enough capital to start lending again. Bloomberg reported on Tuesday that "nine companies will get $125 billion: Citigroup Inc., Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Wells Fargo & Co., JPMorgan Chase & Co., Bank of America Corp., Merrill Lynch & Co., Morgan Stanley, State Street Corp., and Bank of New York Mellon Corp."

2. Bank Debt Guarantee: At the same time, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. will begin guaranteeing the senior debt of U.S. banks. The measure is designed to ensure that banks have access to the short-term lending they need to operate smoothly. In the aftermath of the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers, interbank lending has frozen up.

3. Troubled Asset Purchases: The previously announced initiative to purchase troubled assets from banks isn't scrapped but will instead be used in tandem with the measures listed above. Under this program, the government will buy distressed, hard-to-value assets from banks and sell them to private investors at a later date. The measure is designed to relieve banks of the assets that have been rotting on their balance sheets since the credit crisis hit last summer.

I agree with a better bailout plan!!

I'm a 35 year old man with 14 years vested in the local labor union 727. I built my home 10 years ago with my own two hands. I have been struggling to make payments for a few years .I have recently tried to refinance but my credit is to low. I hear and read about the billions and trillions of dollars loaned to try and help out the economy ,so when am I going to see a piece of it. I mean common, 300&500$ bursts of cash isn't doing much once a year. As the article said above. Why not give home owners a stimulus check of more money. I would be able to get back on my feet with even 5 or 7 thousand. Certainlly out of the billions & trillions the gov. is spending on bailing out banks .Banks that won't loan the money to people whom are trying to better themselves . The government needs to take a more aggressive plan of attack. Be more personalized with the people in helping. Instead of going through all these other business routs.

jason law of IL @ Mar 24, 2009 21:53:48 PM

$ 700 Billion Bailout???

Could some one investigate how many billions went out of US in bulk just 6 months prior to this bailout arrangement?

of @ Dec 25, 2008 08:16:19 AM

A better bailout plan

Take the current value of your property,distressed or otherwise, subtract it from it's value at it's peak..... cap this difference (so it isn't a 12 trillion bailout plan). Divide the capped difference by two - give half to the home owner and the other half to the bank and the same amount in the form of a tax credit to the bank/lender. The loan is then renegotiated at the lower amount. So if it's capped at $100,000 loss, the home owner would get $50K and the lender would get $50K cash and a $50K tax credit. Thisresets the value of the home, keeps banks liquid, jump starts the economy (they thought $300 would help - image $30,000!) becuase people would save (more liquidity), buys things like cars or whatever; the real estate market would be shored up somewhat and there wouldn't be a HUGE gov't organization needed to manage properties...

Steve of AZ @ Dec 04, 2008 10:00:03 AM

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The Home Front

The Home Front

Associate Editor Luke Mullins tracks the treacherous housing market and explains how to unload a five-bedroom McMansion or even find that dream home.

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