How a Loophole Benefits GE in Bank Rescue
Industrial Giant Becomes Top Recipient in Debt-Guarantee Program
General Electric, the world's largest industrial company, has quietly become the biggest beneficiary of one of the government's key rescue programs for banks.
At the same time, GE has avoided many of the restrictions facing other financial giants getting help from the government.
The company did not initially qualify for the program, under which the government sought to unfreeze credit markets by guaranteeing debt sold by banking firms. But regulators soon loosened the eligibility requirements, in part because of behind-the-scenes appeals from GE.
As a result, GE has joined major banks collectively saving billions of dollars by raising money for their operations at lower interest rates. Public records show that GE Capital, the company's massive financing arm, has issued nearly a quarter of the $340 billion in debt backed by the program, which is known as the Temporary Liquidity Guarantee Program, or TLGP. The government's actions have been "powerful and helpful" to the company, GE chief executive Jeffrey Immelt acknowledged in December.
GE's finance arm is not classified as a bank. Rather, it worked its way into the rescue program by owning two relatively small Utah banking institutions, illustrating how the loopholes in the U.S. regulatory system are manifest in the government's historic intervention in the financial crisis.
The Obama administration now wants to close such loopholes as it works to overhaul the financial system. The plan would reaffirm and strengthen the wall between banking and commerce, forcing companies like GE to essentially choose one or the other.
"We'd like to regulate companies according to what they do, rather than what they call themselves or how they charter themselves," said Andrew Williams, a Treasury spokesman.
GE's ability to live in the best of both worlds -- capitalizing on the federal safety net while avoiding more rigorous regulation -- existed well before last year's crisis, because of its unusual corporate structure.
Banking companies are regulated by the Federal Reserve and not allowed to engage in commerce, but federal law has allowed a small number of commercial companies to engage in banking under the lighter hand of the Office of Thrift Supervision. GE falls in the latter group because of its ownership of a Utah savings and loan.
Unlike other major lenders participating in the debt guarantee program, including Bank of America, Citigroup and J.P. Morgan Chase, GE has never been subject to the Fed's stress tests or its rules for limiting risk. Also unlike firms that have received bailout money in the Troubled Assets Relief Program, or TARP, GE is not subject to restrictions such as limits on executive compensation.
The debt guarantee program that GE joined is administered by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., which was reluctant to take on the new mission, according to current and former officials who were not authorized to speak publicly. The FDIC also initially resisted expanding the pool of eligible companies, fearing it would add more risk to the program, the officials said.
Despite those misgivings, there have been no defaults in the loan guarantee program. It has helped buoy confidence in the credit markets and enabled vital financial firms to raise cash even during the darkest days of the economic crisis. In addition, the program has raised more than $8 billion in fees.
"The TGLP program has been a moneymaker for us," FDIC chairman Sheila C. Bair has said. "So I think there have been some benefits to the government and the FDIC."
For its part, GE said that it properly applied for and qualified for the program. "We were accepted on the merits of our application," company spokesman Russell Wilkerson said.
The Cash Cow
The current good fortune of General Electric, ranked by Forbes as the world's largest company, has roots in the Great Depression, when it created a consumer finance arm so that cash-starved families could buy its appliances.
What grew from those beginnings is now a powerful engine of profit, accounting for nearly half of its parent's net earnings in the past five years. GE may be better known for light bulbs and home appliances, but GE Capital is one of the world's largest and most diverse financial operations, lending money for commercial real estate, aircraft leasing and credit cards for stores such as Wal-Mart. If GE Capital were classified as a banking company, it would be the nation's seventh largest.
Unlike the banking giants, GE Capital is part of an industrial company. That allows GE to offer attractive financing to those who buy its products.
At the height of last fall's financial crisis, GE's cash cow became a potential liability. As credit markets froze, analysts feared that GE Capital was vulnerable to losing access to cheap funding -- largely commercial paper, or short-term corporate IOUs sold to large investors.
Company officials projected confidence. "While GE Capital is not immune from the current environment," Immelt said in October, "we continued to outperform our financial-services peers." Behind the scenes, they urgently sought a helping hand for GE Capital. One key hope was a rescue plan taking shape at the FDIC.
The program emerged during a hectic weekend last October as regulators scrambled to announce a series of rescue efforts before the markets opened.
They found a legal basis for the program in a 1991 law: If a faltering bank posed "systemic risk," then the FDIC, the Fed, the Treasury secretary and the president could agree to give the FDIC more authority to rescue a failing institution. The financial regulators applied the statute broadly, so it would cover the more than 8,000 banks in the FDIC system.
The FDIC hurried to approve the program Oct. 13.
"This was crisis management on steroids," said a person familiar with the process. "A lot was made up on the fly."
The author of the systemic-risk provision, Richard Carnell, now a law professor at Fordham University, says it was intended to apply to a single institution, and that in their rush to find legal footing for unprecedented new programs, regulators "turned the statute on its head."
The FDIC launched the program Tuesday, Oct. 14, the same day Treasury officials announced large capital infusions into nine of the country's banking giants under TARP. That day, the FDIC also expanded its deposit guarantees to a broader range of accounts.
Within days, the FDIC held conference calls with bankers to explain the program. Agency officials explained that not all companies that owned banks were eligible. "The idea is not to extend this guarantee to commercial firms," David Barr, an FDIC spokesman, said during one of the calls.
A Broader Program
GE was watching closely. Though GE Capital owned an FDIC-insured savings and loan and an industrial loan company, they accounted for only 3 percent of GE's assets. Company officials concluded that GE couldn't meet the program's eligibility requirements.
So the company requested that the program "be broadened," GE's Wilkerson said. GE's main argument was fairness: The FDIC was trying to encourage lending, and GE Capital was one of the country's largest business lenders.
GE deployed a team of executives and outside attorneys, including Rodgin Cohen, a banking expert with the New York firm Sullivan & Cromwell.
"GE was among the parties that discussed this with the FDIC," along with the Treasury and Fed, according to FDIC spokesman Andrew Gray. He said the details about eligibility "had not been specifically addressed" in the beginning.
Citigroup, the troubled banking giant, also was pressing for an expansion of the FDIC program. Though Citigroup was included in the debt guarantee program, its main finance arm, Citigroup Funding, appeared ineligible. Fed Vice Chairman Donald L. Kohn wrote to the FDIC's Bair on Oct. 21, arguing that debt issued by Citigroup Funding should be covered "as if it were issued directly by Citigroup, Inc."
Two days later, the FDIC announced a new category of eligible applicants -- "affiliates" of an FDIC-insured institution. Bair explained that "there may be circumstances where the program should be extended" to keep credit markets flowing. That meant "certain otherwise ineligible holding companies or affiliates that issue debt" could apply, she said.
GE Capital now was eligible.
Raising Billions
GE Capital won approval to enter the FDIC program in mid-November with support from its regulator, the Office of Thrift Supervision. The company used the government guarantee to raise about $35 billion by the end of 2008. By the end of the first quarter of 2009, the total reached $74 billion, helping to cover the company's 2009 funding needs and about $8 billion of its projected needs for 2010.
Despite government support, GE lost its Triple-A rating for the first time in decades this year and was forced to sharply cut its dividend. But the outlook could have been much worse.
The debt guarantee program has "been of critical importance" to the fiscal health of GE Capital, said Scott Sprinzen, who evaluates GE's finance arm for the Standard & Poor's credit-rating company. He said the FDIC program enabled GE to "avoid an exorbitant price" for its debt late last year.
GE has not disclosed how much the company has saved because of TLGP backing.
Like other companies in the program, GE pays the FDIC fees to use the guarantees -- a little more than $1 billion so far. But as Bair explained to bankers last fall, the fees, while "healthy," are "far below certainly what the cost of credit protection is now in the market."
Not every finance company has had that peace of mind. One of GE's competitors in business lending markets, CIT Group, a smaller company, has had a harder time raising cash. It has been unable to persuade the FDIC to allow it into the debt-guarantee program, at least in part because of its lower credit ratings. A recent Standard & Poor's analysis cited CIT's "inability to access TLGP" as a factor in the company's declining financial condition.
The 'Cliff' Ahead
Two weeks ago, the Obama administration said it would seek to eliminate the Office of Thrift Supervision and force companies like GE to focus on commerce or banking, but not both. That could require the industrial giant to spin off GE Capital.
Last week, Immelt said GE had no intention of doing that. "GE is and will remain committed to GE Capital, and we like our strategy," he said in a memo to staff.
In its proposal to overhaul financial regulation, the Treasury Department pointed out that some firms operating under the existing rules, including collapsed companies such as American International Group, "generally were able to evade effective consolidated supervision and the long-standing policy of separating banking from commerce."
GE's Wilkerson said the company generally supports regulatory reform but thinks that it should be permitted to retain its structure. "Bank reform has historically included grandfathering provisions upon which investors have relied," he said, "and there is no reason this settled principle should not be followed here." He said the company "didn't have any choice" but to have OTS as its regulator.
The company also objects to the Treasury's proposal to force firms to separate banking and commerce because that issue "had nothing to do with the financial crisis," Wilkerson said.
Wilkerson said GE has remained profitable and avoided some of the exotic financial products that contributed to losses at other institutions. He also said that GE performed an internal stress test this year and found that its capital position was "quite strong by comparison to the banks."
The FDIC has been working to wean financial institutions off the program. The TLGP originally was slated to end in June, but at the Treasury's request the FDIC agreed to extend it until Oct. 31. Some participants have stopped using the program, but GE Capital continues to do so for the overwhelming majority of its debt.
Much of the $340 billion in debt will come due in 2012, the year the FDIC guarantees expire. At that point, known in banking circles as the "cliff," the agency will have to make good if companies such as GE are unable to honor their obligations. FDIC officials say they are comfortable that the agency has collected more than enough money to cover potential losses.
ProPublica is an independent, nonprofit newsroom that produces investigative journalism in the public interest.
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19 Comments so far
Show AllMaybe this has something to do with NBC's (GE owned) abandonment of all journalistic standards in its worshipful adoration of Obama.
Mercian June 30th, 2009 9:37 am..Except for Maddow who tells it like it is...sometimes Olbermann, but he seems to be backing off.
General electric makes,
Tomahawk cruise missiles
Patriot Missiles
Bunker Buster Bombs & they own NBC & CNBC which cheerled us into the Iraq War where these were deployed night & day.
General Electric has designed and built about 100 Nuclear Reactors on Mother Earth w/ a flaw, a 90% chance of venting radiation into the air in the case of a meltdown.
In the 60's in Walla Walla Washington they tested the effects of radiation on living human's organs w/o telling them.
Jack Welch made it policy to lay off 10% of the workforce every year.
Involved in so many cases of Fraud w/ the Pentagon they had their own office of investigations established. In '92 GE pled guilty to defrauding the US government and funnelling the money to the Israeli Military.
Pled guilty senor taxpayer. Hate them ragheads huh?
"WE are not your enemy! The PALESTINIANS are your ENEMY..."
FIRST words from the mouth of the "Dancing Israeli," one of the five, the driver, when busted in the tunnel heading back under the river to New York as the towers burned then came down above them in a controlled demolition on 9-11.
Thanks Nancy. Good work Barack. Harry, you guys in the Senate deserve a vote of thanks too. Not many countries can be so hungry for change, vote for it and get 2 dimes from their dollar.
GE, one of the biggest weapons manufacturer and owner of NBC -- part of the corporate/media military industrial complex, cashing in on war, and fleecing the American taxpayer big time. The bank bailout? THE biggest ripoff of the U.S.(taxpayers money)Treasury in the history of this country!!
Not to mention their roll in the attempted coup in the 30's ;)
Conglomerates like GE may not need much regulation. People who make money off them could be the ones that need regulation in the form of a limit on their net worth. That couldn't help but create heaven on earth.
What are the crooks-in-power bailing GE out with?
Our treasury is so empty that it echos. I'll bet they have sold all our grandchildren into slavery!
Until demand for coal goes down, GE will forever dominate. Maybe our depending on public utilities instead of buying and using our own solar panels and wind turbines to generate electricity is what's keeping GE booming.
Remember when old Ronnie RayGun used to shill for GE and would spout their "Progress is our most important product" slogan?
Then when "Progress" went out of style, GE actually changed its motto to "Men helping Man".
Well, nothing has changed. "Men helping Man" is just an euphanism for the old boy (and old girl) network of "Crooks helping crooks".
Let's give a gold star here for ProPublica, a self-described "independent nonprofit newsroom that produces investigative journalism in the public interest." Keep up the good works. This is just the sort of multi-billion tax dollar behind-closed-doors subsidy scam that gets missed by the mainstream US media.
Yeah, General Electric makes light bulbs, toasters, other consumer appliances, aircraft engines, and they tinker around with hydrogen fuel technology. GE also manufacturers nuclear weaponry, and shapes the confines (behind the scenes) of what is considered acceptable mainstream television news reporting through another of its corporate subsidiaries. It is no coincidence that the actor Ronald Reagan rose to prominence as a political figure with nationwide name recognition by shilling for this particular corporate conglomerate.
Small wonder GE oh-so-quietly shouldered itself to the center of the money trough when the shit hit the fan in the fall of 2008. Small wonder they are still there slurping away today.
Bill from Saginaw
I have to correct you here, the MSM (sorta) did cover this a few months ago. Fox Business (not quite MSM, but available) ran a few stories on the loopholes, how any corporation that owned some sort of bank or bank holding company/S&L company could get access to bailout funds or guarantees. Apparently companies such as Target and Nordstrom were considering purchasing banks so they could get in on it. It made me want to puke.
Oh Yea!
Too big and entrenched to fail!
The movie - DEADLY DECEPTION:
http://www.newday.com/films/DeadlyDeception.html
Probably our biggest weapons manufacturer!
And I'm sure this has absolutely, positively nothing whatsoever to do with the fact that GE is a major contributer to the military juggernaut.
Money to GE is far preferable than money to GM - at least they make something.
GE is a leader in electronic medical records - the US leader in wind technology - they have a stake in hydrogen energy technolgy - they produce aircraft engines, consumer appliances and virtually control plastics ...
I personally hate GE because they have killed many of my friends through their PCBs - they have devastated towns in Upstate NY, the Berkshires and countless other areas.
In the 1980s, the Berkshires planned to "go shopping" for industries of the future to locte in the cultural Berkshires. Jack Welch, then manager of GE Pittsfield, told the city that they were wasting their time - that GE would be there forever.
Jack - the lying sack of shit - eventually closed up shop in Pittsfield and destroyed the Berkshires - But, he did leave barrels of toxic waste behind near Pittsfield State forest that killed several of my friends down stream from the dump. Fuck you Jack...
But, at least they make something and if capitalism or its evolution to socialism is ever to survive, we have to produce something.
We have dug ourself into a hole where we must rely on some of the most fucked-up companies in the world for our short-term survival.
But at least they produce something for sale.
ducksawce June 29th, 2009 9:57 am....GE makes tremendous profits from war and in your own words,"have killed many of my friends through their PCBs"...and yet you believe they are entitled to this bailout money through these "pre-arranged loopholes" because they PRODUCE something. I don't get it.
I don't get it either. One of the things they produce is presidents. The one we currently have couldn't have been elected without GE's television outlets selling him. It was an unregulated campaign contribution. In return, some of the business, at least the parts we know about in regard to GE, include banking, healthcare exploitation, war, media control of elections and the general dialog, and nuclear energy. I think this election and Jeffrey Immelt's role in it, along with a few other king makers, is one of the worst things that ever happened to the US.
'Loopholes'.............."Imagine...how could we have EVER known this would happen?...BUT, we'll do something NOW"...wink...wink!
Incredible!.."Like, (paraphrasing Rice and Bush)..we never imagined anyone would fly passenger planes into the WTC."
GE was among the principal corporate beneficiaries of our unnecessary and illegal invasion/occupation of Iraq, which they were a very aggressive cheerleader for prior to the invasion. And now they're making out like ... well ... like GE, on the massive mega-billions bailout scam against the U.S. taxpayer, only hastening the now inevitable collapse/death of our economy.
Hey GE, how 'bout a little truth in advertising:
"GE, we bring good things to death."