Where Did That Bank Bailout Go? Watchdogs Aren't Sure
WASHINGTON — Although hundreds of well-trained eyes are watching over the $700 billion that Congress last year decided to spend bailing out the nation's financial sector, it's still difficult to answer some of the most basic questions about where the money went.
Despite a new oversight panel, a new special inspector general, the
existing Government Accountability Office and eight other inspectors
general, those charged with minding the store say they don't have all
the weapons they need. Ten months into the Troubled Asset Relief
Program, some members of Congress say that some oversight of bailout
dollars has been so lacking that it's essentially worthless.
"TARP has become a program in which taxpayers are not being told what most of the TARP recipients are doing with their money, have still not been told how much their substantial investments are worth, and will not be told the full details of how their money is being invested," a special inspector general over the program reported last month. The "very credibility" of the program is at stake, it said.
Access and openness have improved in recent months, watchdogs say, but the program still has a way to go before it's truly transparent.
For its part, the Treasury Department said it's fully committed to transparency, and that it's taken unprecedented steps to report the status of TARP to the public. It regularly posts information on which banks have received money, as well as details about each of those transactions. Further, Treasury said, it doesn't agree with all of its watchdogs' recommendations, which it said could hamper the program's effectiveness.
TARP was passed in the midst of last fall's financial meltdown as a way to keep American banks from falling deeper into the abyss.
The program was controversial from the start. Its supporters say it's helped spark bank lending in the country, but critics say it's unfairly rewarded the big banks and Wall Street firms that pushed the economy to the brink.
The program also has undergone a major transformation. When the Bush administration first went to Congress for the money, TARP's main purpose was to buy up hundreds of billions of dollars in bad mortgages and so-called mortgage-backed securities that were bought and sold on Wall Street.
Today, TARP consists of 12 programs that sent those hundreds of billions of dollars to big banks, but it's also bailed out auto companies, auto suppliers, individuals delinquent on their mortgages, small businesses and American International Group, the big insurance company.
The watchdogs now must oversee the maze that TARP has become.
Just because a lot of people are watching, however, doesn't mean they get everything they want to see.
One of the most prominent watchdogs is Elizabeth Warren, a Harvard Law School professor who chairs a TARP oversight panel created by Congress.
Her panel has released 10 major reports that examine TARP's plans and policies, finding that much of the work by the Treasury and the Federal Reserve has been opaque, with unclear or contradictory goals.
One report took Treasury to task for vastly undervaluing more than $250 billion in transactions with the country's major banks, and another suggested several ways to revamp federal regulation over the financial sector. Other reports have criticized the Treasury for its initial defensiveness in opening its books.
Despite its mandate, however, the panel doesn't have subpoena power. That means it can ask, but can't compel, officials from Treasury, the Federal Reserve or the nation's banks to testify.
Henry Paulson, the Treasury secretary under former President George W. Bush, repeatedly stiff-armed the panel. Timothy Geithner, the current secretary, has been more open, but so far has testified just once before Warren's group. Geithner is scheduled to appear again in September, and has agreed to do so quarterly, and two other senior Treasury officials also have appeared.
The relative lack of testimony from top officials, however, is one reason why critics of Warren's panel think it hasn't delivered on its promise.
In June, in an otherwise mundane congressional hearing, Republican Rep. Kevin Brady of Texas surprised Warren with an aggressive critique of the panel, saying it's failed to help taxpayers understand what Treasury is doing with the billions at its disposal.
"There's been very little value that the panel has brought to this issue or even insight on how these bailout dollars have been used," he said. "I frankly believe at this point, given the reports that we've seen again with little value, I think the panel needs to be abolished."
Warren defended the panel's work, saying the lack of subpoena power means we "only have the capacity to invite" witnesses.
"So you asked Secretary Paulson in the first month of existence?" Brady asked.
"I believe we asked him repeatedly," Warren said. "We asked him in our first month, in our second month, in our third month."
Warren said she took the criticism seriously, dropping by Brady's congressional office as soon as the hearing adjourned. The two had never met before, she said, and "I was really surprised," by his comments.
"He said he felt frustrated," she said. "He wanted us to be even blunter" in the panel's reports.
Brady amplified his comments in an interview last month, saying that some of the panel's work seems like a "PR ploy" and that "the moment has passed" for Warren's group to play the role Congress envisioned.
His feelings have been partially echoed by two other members of the panel, Rep. Jeb Hensarling of Texas and former Sen. John E. Sununu of New Hampshire, both Republicans appointed by congressional GOP leaders (the other three members were appointed by Democrats).
Both have accused the panel of mission creep — of straying from the central goal of determining exactly how, and how well, Treasury is doing its job.
Hensarling said that "taxpayers have not received answers as to whether the TARP program works, how decisions are being made or what the banks are doing with the taxpayers' money." While he praises the "very smart people on the panel," he said too many questions have been left unexplored.
He acknowledges that the lack of subpoena power makes things tough. "But even if we had it, I'm not sure we would have used it," said Hensarling, who's pushing to abolish TARP.
The other primary watchdog is Neil Barofsky, a special inspector general named in November by Bush specifically to track TARP funds. His office does have subpoena power, and a growing staff that's expected ultimately to have 160 people pursuing audits and criminal investigations.
It's also made a series of recommendations to the Treasury, asking that it do more to reveal how TARP money is being spent. Treasury has adopted some of its recommendations, but rejected others — including one of the most important: Giving taxpayers precise details on how TARP funds have been used by banks.
The recommendation involves one of the most visible aspects of TARP: investing $218 billion in 650 banks, helping them to strengthen their balance sheets and boost lending to American businesses and homeowners.
Barofsky's office has long advocated that the Treasury require banks to detail how the TARP money they've received has been used. The department has refused, saying that once an investment is made in a big bank, it's not possible to track how it's used.
Barofsky's office rejected that assertion, and did its own survey of 360 institutions, finding that most could say how they'd used the money.
"Treasury's reasons for refusing to adopt this recommendation have been squarely refuted by" the inspector general, his office reported to Congress.
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32 Comments so far
Show AllA real smart person told me that ever since 1956 everything our government's done and said has really been part of a brilliant, bigger, final PLAN that'll make everybody happy and everything OK in the end, but for high high high security reasons its diagrams and blueprints aren't even kept on this planet and nobody's allowed to see it.
The person said it's called Plan 9 From Outer Space -- which - stupid me - I could swear I saw on TV a long time ago....
I just got a notice from Bank of America that they were suspending my business line of credit because my home, which was the collateral, has "declined significantly" in value.
When the trillions were handed out they should have been passed through the mortgage accounts of every small debtor. That would have solved the toxic assets problem and put everyone on a more solid footing. Just handing cash over to speculators who had bankrupted already the major institutions of the United States was stupid and the result predictable.
If BOA is suspending lines of credit on a mass scale, and I am sure they are since my home is not underwater by a large margin, it is going to assure that more people lose their jobs and more people lose their homes.
According to Mike Whitney:
"We're making this way too complicated. It's simple really.
...
The $13 trillion the Fed has committed to the financial system since the beginning of the crisis --via loans and outright purchases of mortgage-backed garbage and US sovereign debt--was never authorized by Congress. In fact, the Fed stubbornly refuses to even identify which institutions got the "loans", how much the loans were worth, what kind of collateral was accepted for the loans, or when the loans have to be repaid.
In truth, the loans are not loans at all, but gifts to the industry to keep asset prices artificially high so that the entire financial system does not come crashing down.
...
This is exactly what the financial institutions are doing with the Fed's loans. They're betting on equities and hoping they can avoid the Grim Reaper.
Here's how former hedge fund manager Andy Kessler summed it up last week in the Wall Street Journal: "By buying U.S. Treasuries and mortgages to increase the monetary base by $1 trillion, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke didn't put money directly into the stock market but he didn't have to. With nowhere else to go, except maybe commodities, inflows into the stock market have been on a tear. Stock and bond funds saw net inflows of close to $150 billion since January. The dollars he cranked out didn't go into the hard economy, but instead into tradable assets. In other words, Ben Bernanke has been the market." (Andy Kessler, "The Bernanke Market" Wall Street Journal)
..."
http://globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=14704
Can anyone believe that Chairwoman Warren doesn't know this too? So why would you suppose she and her charges are spreading the disinformation, while pretending to find where these monies have gone?
The US gov't is corrupt from the very top through to the bottom, including most of the Congress and Supreme Court. It is controlled by the rich and powerful for their benefit, not by law and the people.
What can I tell you?
Take it up with Consumer Affairs!
· Yr Obd't Servant
There is also a 'Suggestion Box' over near the door. -->
The ultra-right corporate oligarchy just looted the US Treasury with no guns drawn - except for the ones they are selling to the Pentagon at outrageous prices for wars they are financing and reaping huge profits on.
But I could be wrong !
"Where Did That Bank Bailout Go? Watchdogs Aren't Sure"
It went where ALL wealth creation goes: sucked up by the financial and corporate elite.
For reference:
Zeitgeist Addendum http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=895026537690187652
Much of it went to Tel Aviv.
Ok,
this one is about the Troubled Assets Relief Program?
letsee...let me start with this:
The so-called "TARP" program was 1st designed to buy bad mortgages and other troubled assets, right?
BUT...let me go back into history abit, to see how you all got into this big mess..
hang, on ...let me start here:
1/24/02:
"The last tango: Enron and Bush"
by: Tim Wheeler/PWW Washington
(Enron) began life as an energy producer in 1985-following the coming together of 2 comanies-Internorth, and Houston Natural Gas.)
1/27/02:
"Coroner confirms Enron Suicide"
BBCnews
1/29/02:
"A walk in the valley of greed"
by: Robert Sheer/Los Angeles Times
4/8/02:
"Enron suit implicates nine US banks"
by: bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/1917627.stm
6/12/03:
"The Plot to Kill Social Security"
by: Farhad Manjoo/salon.com
7/18/07:
"Bear Stearns Says Battered Hedge Funds Are Worth Little"
by: Gretchen Morgenson/NYTimes
8/8/07:
"Bear Stearns Fat Cats Cashed Out At The Top"
by: Brett Arends/The Street.com
6/20/08:
"Bear Stearns managers' indictment alleges fraud"
(pair lied to investors, prosecutors say)
by: Greg Farrell/USA Today
7/16/08:
"Hundreds of Super Rich Under Investigation"
by: Brian Ross, Rhonda Schwartz, and Avni Patel/ABCnews
7/17/08:
"Senate Panel hears about European tax havens"
(Report says $100 billion in US assets hidden in Swiss, Liechtenstein banks)
by: AP
9/15/08:
"Stocks Tank After Wall Street Shake-Up"/New York/CBSnews/AP
9/18/08:
"Lehman Bros Belly Up!"
9/20/08:
Bush seeking $700 Billion for financial bailout/msnbc.com
9/20/08:
"Financial Bailout: America's Own Kleptocracy"
by: globalresearch.com
10/7/08:
"Waxman probes AIG's Post Bailout Retreat!"
10/8/08:
"Lawmakers Steamed over glitzy AIG retreat after bailout"
CNN.com
11/10/08:
AIG Hosts 'Seminar' at Fancy Resort Point Hilton Squaw Peak Resort in Phoenix Arizona"/ABC news
11/10/08:
Another AIG Resort 'Junket': Top Execs Caught on Tape"
(KNXV Discovers $343, 000 Secret Gathering, AIG Signs and Logos Hidden)
by: Brian Ross and Joseph Rhee/ABC news
12/10/08:
"Oversight Panel Questions Bank Bailout"
12/15/08:
"Bush Administration created Executive pay loophole"
by: John Byrne/the raw story
12/30/08:
"2008 a big year for white-collar crime"
by: James Walsh/Minneapolis Star Tribune
1/1/09:
"Citigroup reins in pay for its top executives"
by: Ieva M. Augstums/AP/Charlotte, NC.
1/10/09:
"Rubin resigns top Citigroup post"
New York
1/2/09:
"Merrill Lynch, Wachovia officially in new hands"
by: Harry R. Weber/AP
1/5/09:
"Inquiry seeks answers on Treasury's bailout choices"
by: Binyamin Appelbaum/Washington post
1/10/09:
"Bush prepares for rest of bailout funds"
by: David Cho and Lori Montgomery/Washington
1/12/09:
"Second $350 Billion of Bailout sought"
by: Andrew Taylor and Philip Elliot/AP
1/13/09:
"Bush requests rest of bailout"
by: Jim Kuhnehnn
1/17/09:
"Some Companies Getting Bailed Out Have Offshore Tax Shelters
by: Susie Madrak/Crooks and liars.com
2/24/09:
"Ruling on Secret Accounts Delayed"
Miami
3/14/09:
"Swiss banks no longer a haven"
Geneva
3/15/09:
"AIG Planning Huge Bonuses After $170 Billion Bailout"
by: Edmund L. Andrews and Peter Baker/NYTimes
3/15/09:
"AIG will pay new bonuses to execs"
(Insurance giant says it is legally obligated to make payments)
by: Martin Crutsinger
3/16/09:
"AIG tells how some of bailout was spent"
by: E. Scott Reckard and Tom Petruno/Los angeles times
3/17/09:
"AIG staff: We deserve this money"
contributed by: Ian Swanson
3/17/09:
"Obama Orders Treasury Chief to Try to Block AIG Bonuses"
by: Helene Cooper/Washington/NYTimes
3/17/09:
"AIG paid 73 Execs $1 million bonuses"
msnbc.com/AP
3/21/09:
"Connecticut attorney General says AIG understated bonuses"
CNN.com
3/22/09:
"Fallout from AIG: No more bailouts"
(Congress vows to resist more requests amid growing voter outrage)
by: David Lightman/McClatchy Tribune News service
3/27/09:
"Bankers: Take your TARP money back"
by Allan Chernoff/CNN
3/31/09:
"Bailout watchdogs: We want more info"
by: Jennifer Liberto and David Goldman/CNNMoney.com
7/13/09:
"Settlement may resolve Swiss Bank case"
washington
8/1/09:
"Switzerland, US settle over divulging depositors"
Miami
Very good referencing!!!
Thank you.
follow the money:
Nice list of fraud and corruption you have there!
Here's another one to add to your list as the Ponzi-scheme continues:
http://www.financialsense.com/Market/wrapup.htm
This crosses all party lines.
Just as no one raised their voices when the no-bid contracts were awarded and billions were handed to Haliburton, Blackwater and Brown & Root, just as billions have been handed to the oil companies and to the auto makers who have perpetuated the oil monopolies, this money, the trillions of dollars which taxpayers now owe to China and any others who would buy U.S. Treasuries, has been funneled to thousands of secret and offshore bank accounts worldwide.
Friends of the New World Order or "upper class" win.
Everyone else, loses.
I can tell you where some of the money went--besides back in the pockets of the bastards that got us in this mess--it went to buy out better banks that were giving loans to people at fairer rates--then they needed to pay for the postage and staionary they used to jack up the interest and lower the limits of a whole lot of people like you and me as a thank you for our forced participation in their sheister rip--off. Now they are investing in "pay-day loans--we need to deal with them as the pirates they are.
"Barofsky's office has long advocated that the Treasury require banks to detail how the TARP money they've received has been used. The department has refused, saying that once an investment is made in a big bank, it's not possible to track how it's used."
I don't think the taxpayers or Congress were looking at this as an "investment". It was a save-your-asses loan. And, under most circumstances, the lender wants to know exactly how the money is spent.
Cut the crap.
Let me add the pallet loads of $100 dollar bills missing in Iraq.
Want to make some quick money? Become a day trader, buy low sell high. It's easy to know when the stock market is about to be jacked up. Today (Monday) I would of bet on a decline after all the optimism of last week.
I don't invest, (don't have any money!) but it's interesting to track the trends.
THAT WAS THE PLAN FROM THE START. you're only here to pay
for all this. the real question here is this- are you going
to keep whining about it- or are you going to spurred to
action? the streets of d.c. are very hot at this time of year
so some thick soled shoes will be required. also light clothing and a strong sun block. oh and don't forget to keep e-mailing
and calling your elected reps its a very good start and
tell them your coming for a visit. unite with the folks at
work and ask them to all take a day off to accomplish
these goals this is what is going to get it done! at a
minimum!
Congress is in recess, i.e. on vacation until Sept. Best to wait until after Labor Day when they show up for work again. It also gets a hell of a lot cooler around here after Labor Day. The swampy heat sucks right now.
"One of the most prominent watchdogs is Elizabeth Warren, a Harvard Law School professor who chairs a TARP oversight panel created by Congress."
24 trillion dollars given or guaranteed to banks -
- yet oversight was outsourced to a private citizen.
Pretty soon, Congress will hire stand-ins for floor votes and committees. Then they'll say they're creating jobs.
$700 Billion? Chump change I tell you! We're the chumps because nothing has changed. The money went down the same black hole as the 2.3 TRILLION dollars that Rumsfeld announced was missing from the Pentagon budget on the day before 9-11. Was that money ever accounted for? If you pay federal taxes you only prove that both PT Barnum and Shakespeare were right.
Barofsky is wondering about the original $700 billion...?
What about the other $24 trillion in give-aways...?
The TARP couldn't hold back the flood... and the public is about to get soaked.
I guess the whole healthcare argument is underwater once the economy sinks.
Walk in peace.
If the Federal government isn't going to spend our money responsibly, why pay taxes?
Because the SYSTEM has managed to create the tax Gestapo and you WILL pay, either taxes or with your life.
Secrecy was designed to increase investor confidence.
It's no secret where the money went. It didn't go to assist homeowners. Instead it was invested in the Stock Market. The American economy isn't producing so why would the Stock Market rise? Banks have propped it up with TARP money. C'mon people, let's not save the banks, let's push the sob's over the edge. Do not borrow another penny, just make due.
Was I the only one who noticed that the only "watchdog" with subpoena power was appointed by Bush?
Not as stupid as we thought.
Yep. And the IG for the Fed can't tell where the $1 trillion went. Hey Bernanke, did you have fun with the money in Vegas?
Thanks, Obama.
And Bush, One started, the other continued it. Tweedle Dum and Tweedle Dee!
The problem is Treasury policies, not the watchdog. The watchdog panel was never designed to be some powerful force for preventing ripoffs, the whole policy is a ripoff.
The biggest theft in the history of mankind continues (other than the gold stolen from the Philippines) and we sit here paying the bill with our thumbs in that proverbial dark place. Astounding!
The banks will give boat loads of the TARP money to Senators, Congressional Representatives and Obama in the form of campaign contributions. What better way for the banks to express their gratitude and assure that more taxpayers' money will be forthcoming upon demand.