Wall Street Bailout: Too Big To Collect?

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Wall Street Bailout: Too Big To Collect?By EconMatters

In light of the recent S&P downgrade of the U.S. sovereign credit rating, the nation suddenly looks more dire financially than before the downgrade (at least psychologically, as the country still has the ability to borrow at its pre-downgrade low interest rates.)  So it would make tracking down Wall Street bailout money still outstanding a good start to reclaim some of the lost treasure.

However, more than two years after the bailout, there never seems to be a straight answer to these two questions:  (1) Where has Uncle Sams’ bailout money gone? (2) Has the money been paid back yet?

The Treasury Dept. already declared milestone reached in June, 2010 when  “Repayments to Taxpayers Surpass Tarp Funds Outstanding.”  New York Times andCNNMoney both keep stattistics of the bailout and tell a different story from the government’s account.  NYT says fund outflow has amounted to $550 billion, funds returned is $70.1 billion, that leaves amount outstanding $480 billion.  CNNMoney data suggest $475 billion out of the door, $118.5 billion returned, netted to $357 billion still needs to be collected.

Pro Publica also keeps track of a bailout list including the $700 billion TARP program, and the separate bailout of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.  According to Pro Publica,

“Altogether, accounting for both bailouts, $580 billion has gone out the door—invested, loaned, or paid out—while $273 billion has beenreturned.  The Treasury has been earning a return on most of the money invested or loaned. So far, it has earned $67 billion. When those revenues are taken into account, $239 billion is the net still outstanding as of August10, 2011.”

The spreadsheet downloaded from Pro Publica shows the top 5 bailout deadbeat recipients–Fannie Mae, AIG, Freddie Mac, General Motors, and GMAC (now Ally Financial)–account for almost 97% ($232 billion) of the total net amount still outstanding.

Now, the more jaw dropping numbers come from a recent analysis done by the Center for Media and Decmocracy (CMD), pointing to an actual total still outstanding at $1.5 trillion (See Chart),

“…..while the TARP bailout of Wall Street (not including the bailout of the auto industry) amounted to $330 billion, the government also quietly spent $4.4 trillion more in efforts to stave off the collapse of the financial and mortgage lending sectors. The majority of these funds ($3.9 trillion) came from the Federal Reserve, which undertook the actions citing an obscure section of its charter.”

“..$4.8 trillion went out the door to aid financial companies and repair the damage they caused to financial markets, and $1.5 trillion of that is still outstanding.”
Wall Street Bailout: Too Big To Collect?

CMD keeps a list of ‘Total Wall Street Bailout Cost’ here, but not down to the detail recipient level.  CMD’s analysis also shows that most of the bailout funds were comprised of aid to banks, in the form of loans with below-market interest rates and for questionable collateral to banks directly from the Treasury and Federal Reserve (See Chart).

The $4.8 trillion bailout of the financial sector, according to CMD, also dwarfs the $600 billion that the Federal Reserve spent on the QE2 that was intended to stimulate the broader economy.

Andrew Ross Sorkin at NYT also pointed out that when WSJ quoted the U.S. Treasury that “the projected cost of the bailout is shrinking” to $89 billion from an earlier estimate of $250 billion (see graph below),

“….there’s a small problem with all this happy Washington math: it doesn’t take into account the piles of cash we’re likely to lose on Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac….. The overall math also doesn’t account for themore than $1 trillion the Federal Reserve pumped into the system through loans to Wall Street that were virtually interest-free.”
Source: WSJ.com

So it looks like the bailout could have different ROIs (return on investments), depending on what you count as “investments.”

Fannie and Freddie just recently asked for $7 billion more bailout funds, and looking at the domestic housing market and the current economic outlook, American taxpayers probably should consider it a draw even if just no future funding will be directed to the two government-sponsored housing entities, let along expecting a single dime coming back form Fannie and Freddie.

But the sad thing is that even if Uncle Sam gets to collect the whole 1.5 trillion as calculated by the CMD, it would not have made a difference in the debt and deficit of the U.S. government (as the S&P Rating Agency has taught us.)

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