Friday, April 3, 2009

The banks that repaid Treasury first probably didn't lend the money out

TO BE NOTED: From Dealscape:

"Five banks repay TARP, others in line
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falling dollar125.pngSo far five banks have repaid $353 million plus $5.4 million in dividends of the government's $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program, and more banks are waiting on the sidelines filling out paperwork to repay the Treasury.

The banks that have repayed TARP are:


  • Iberiabank (NYSE:IBKC) of Lafayette, La.
  • Bank of Marin Bancorp (NYSE:BMRC) of Novato, Calif.
  • Old National Bancorp (NYSE:ONB) of Evansville, Ind.
  • Signature Bank (NYSE:SBNY) of New York
  • Centra Financial Holdings (NYSE:CLFC) of Morgantown, W.Va.

Not far behind is Sun Bancorp (NYSE:SNBC), which received approval to return its $89.3 million in TARP funds next week. Shore Bancshares Inc. (NYSE:SHBI) and TCF Financial Corp. (NYSE:TCB) have filed the paperwork and are waiting approval from the Treasury. Northern Trust Inc. (NYSE:NTRS) and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (NYSE:GS) have also said they want to return TARP funds as soon as possible.

Why the rush to repay funds that are supposed to stimulate lending and help thaw the credit crisis?

As Dealscape covered in March, the list of demands the TARP funds impose on financial institutions keeps getting longer. Banks under TARP must:

  • conform to executive pay caps
  • have been told to put off evictions and modify mortgages for distressed homeowners
  • must slash dividends
  • withdraw job offers to citizens outside of the United States
  • cancel conferences
  • cancel partnerships with local companies and sports teams
  • cancel employee perks

Signature Bank's CEO Joseph DePaolo said the bank returned TARP funds due to a desire to retain "highly talented banking professionals." Iberiabank executives said they felt their TARP money was placing them at a "competitive disadvantage." The president of Bank of Marin said his bank exited the program because of its dividend restrictions and compensation limits, according to CNN.

The rush to return TARP funds also is based upon perception. At one time all institutions wanted to be involved in TARP because it was a all-for-one, one-for-all program that was supposed to end the recession. That's not the case anymore as Joseph DePaolo, Signature Bank's president and CEO, told NPR: "I believe it's Congress' fault for allowing it to go from a program for healthy institutions to a program that they're giving money to weak institutions and that we're evil."

Now while it's potentially a good thing that these healthy institutions have returned TARP money to the government, it could also mean less lending in the economy. These banks were using the government's funds to provide new loans to customers, retiring debt and buying mortgage-backed securities -- and not necessarily on bonuses or extravagant junkets. It also means that if the economy gets worse, these banks could be weakening their equity base and could again have to raise capital.

That is, of course, assuming these banks were loaning money like they were supposed to.

So if these banks weren't loaning and banks are lining up to repay TARP, did the program fail?

"The banks that repaid Treasury first probably didn't lend the money out -- meaning that $338 million probably didn't fulfill the program's aim. But it is a tiny fraction of the $199 billion Treasury has paid out so far, so it's far too early to say whether the capital injections did their job," according to The Associated Press.

The banks that are lending and using the TARP funds are those banks that are not so popular in the eyes of the public right now, including J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. (NYSE:JPM), Wells Fargo & Co. (NYSE:WFC), Morgan Stanley (NYSE:MS) and Goldman Sachs. All of these banks have said they will repay TARP within three years.

Felix Salmon posted a blog on whether or not healthy banks should give back TARP funds. His conclusion: "The prize, here, is to keep the financial system alive. And right now it's simply too interlinked to be able to cope with a substantial number of bank failures."

As he reveals in a later post:

"The government recapitalized the banks with TARP funds because the equity markets were closed. The equity markets are still closed. So for the time being, any talk of paying back TARP funds is surely premature."

What's more, if Goldman Sachs does pay back TARP funds, there will most likely be a wave of banks ready to follow its lead, throwing money back in the government's direction -- and probably prematurely. - Maria Woehr"

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