Dec
06
US Bailout Hits $8.5 Trillion
Posted by
Roz
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Central Bank News,
Economics News,
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Key dates in the federal government's campaign to alleviate the economic crisis:
- March 11: The Federal Reserve announces a rescue package to provide up to $200 billion in loans to banks and investment houses and let them put up risky mortgage-backed securities as collateral.
- March 16: The Fed provides a $29 billion loan to JPMorgan Chase & Co. as part of its purchase of investment bank Bear Stearns.
- July 30: President Bush signs a housing bill including $300 billion in new loan authority for the government to back cheaper mortgages for troubled homeowners.
- Sept. 7: The Treasury takes over mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, putting them into a conservatorship and pledging up to $200 billion to back their assets.
- Sept. 16: The Fed injects $85 billion into the failing American International Group, one of the world's largest insurance companies.
- Sept. 16: The Fed pumps $70 billion more into the nation's financial system to help ease credit stresses.
- Sept. 19: The Treasury temporarily guarantees money market funds against losses up to $50 billion.
- Oct. 3: President Bush signs the $700 billion economic bailout package. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson says the money will be used to buy distressed mortgage-related securities from banks.
- Oct. 6: The Fed increases a short-term loan program, saying it is boosting short-term lending to banks to $150 billion.
- Oct. 7: The Fed says it will start buying unsecured short-term debt from companies, and says that up to $1.3 trillion of the debt may qualify for the program.
- Oct. 8: The Fed agrees to lend AIG $37.8 billion more, bringing total to about $123 billion.
- Oct. 14: The Treasury says it will use $250 billion of the $700 billion bailout to inject capital into the banks, with $125 billion provided to nine of the largest.
- Oct. 14: The FDIC says it will temporarily guarantee up to a total of $1.4 trillion in loans between banks.
- Oct. 21: The Fed says it will provide up to $540 billion in financing to provide liquidity for money market mutual funds.
- Nov. 10: The Treasury and Fed replace the two loans provided to AIG with a $150 billion aid package that includes an infusion of $40 billion from the government's bailout fund.
- Nov. 12: Paulson says the government will not buy distressed mortgage-related assets, but instead will concentrate on injecting capital into banks.
- Nov. 17: Treasury says it has provided $33.6 billion in capital to another 21 banks. So far, the government has invested $158.6 billion in 30 banks.
- Sunday: The Treasury says it will invest $20 billion in Citigroup Inc., on top of $25 billion provided Oct. 14. The Treasury, Fed and FDIC also pledge to backstop large losses Citigroup might absorb on $306 billion in real estate-related assets.
- Tuesday: The Fed says it will purchase up to $600 billion more in mortgage-related assets and will lend up to $200 billion to the holders of securities backed by various types of consumer loans.
Sources :
- by Kathleen Pender: Government bailout hits $8.5 trillion
- Associated Press
- Conquer The Wallstreet: Breakdown of US $8.5 trillion of the government rescue packages
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