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April 1, 2011

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Banks eye lending fund to repay TARP

SOME American banks will use money from a government program aimed at increasing small business loans to repay their federal bailouts, the Treasury Department official who oversees the bailout program said on Wednesday.

In a brief interview, Acting Assistant Secretary Timothy G. Massad said that Treasury has yet to grant approval to any banks seeking to use money from the Small Business Lending Fund to repay their bailouts, "but they will." Last year's law creating the lending program lets banks use money from that program to repay their bailouts.

"I do expect them to approve the applications of many TARP recipients to refinance their loans under the small business lending fund," he said, using the acronym for the Troubled Asset Relief Program, the bailout's formal name.

Senator Charles Grassley complained in a recent letter to Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner that using one federal program to repay another would be "an egregious example of budget gimmickry."

Grassley wrote that he worries the Obama administration is using the small business program as "a bailout for banks and a pass-through to falsely show profits in the TARP program."

Massad's comments came shortly after he told Congress that Treasury is now running a profit on the portion of the US$700 billion federal bailout that went to banks. None of the bank bailout repayments Treasury has received so far come from the loan program, he said.

Like the bailout, the loan program was a response to the economic downturn, in this case an effort to help small businesses get capital that had become difficult for them to attain. The loan program provides money to smaller banks - their assets must be under US$10 billion - and charges them lower interest rates if the money is used for loans to small businesses.

More than 500 small banks have applied for the loan program, according to Treasury figures.

Massad said less than US$10 billion will ultimately be repaid to the bailout from the loan program.

Treasury spokeswoman Colleen Murray noted that banks using loan program money to repay their bailouts only get lower interest rates if they increase their small business lending.




 

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