WASHINGTON - The Federal Reserve revealed details Wednesday of trillions of dollars in emergency aid it provided to U.S. and foreign banks during the financial crisis.
Newly released documents show that the most loan money over time went to Citigroup ($2.2 trillion), followed by Merrill Lynch ($2.1 trillion), Morgan Stanley ($2 trillion), Bank of America ($1.1 trillion), Bear Stearns ($960 billion), Goldman Sachs ($620 billion), JPMorgan Chase ($260 billion) and Wells Fargo ($150 billion). Many of the loans they took were worth billions and had short durations but were paid back and renewed many times.
Among the largest foreign bank recipients were Bank of England, Swiss National Bank, Barclays and Bank of Japan.
The documents are a reminder of how crippled the financial system had become and how much it's recovered since. Banks earned $14 billion from July through September this year.
The Fed released the data in the form of more than 21,000 transactions. The disclosures are required under the financial-overhaul law.
The documents detail more than $2 trillion the Fed lent through eight programs from December 2007 to July this year. The lending programs had never been used before and are now defunct. Most of the loans have been repaid, and none are overdue, Fed officials say.
In addition, the Fed disclosed details of "swap" arrangements with foreign central banks. The Fed traded much-in-demand dollars for foreign currencies to try to ease credit. The foreign central banks, in turn, lent the dollars to banks in their countries that needed dollar funding. The Bank of Canada, the Bank of England, the European Central Bank, the Swiss National Bank and the Bank of Japan were involved in the exchanges.
One of the emergency lending programs the Fed created provided low-cost, short-term loans to banks. Another sought to ease credit problems in the "commercial paper" market, which many U.S. companies use to finance everything from salaries to supplies.
The documents help illustrate the global scope of the crisis. The Federal Reserve provided credit lines to some of the largest central banks overseas: The European Central Bank took $8 trillion in temporary credit lines, while the Bank of England took $918 billion. That credit ensured that overseas markets wouldn't freeze for a lack of U.S. dollars, the global reserve currency.
by Jeannine Aversa Associated Press Dec. 2, 2010 12:00 AM
Fed reveals aid deals for U.S., foreign banks
Saturday, December 4, 2010
Real Estate News
Reuters: Business News
National Commercial Real Estate News From CoStar Group
Latest stock market news from Wall Street - CNNMoney.com
Archive
-
▼
2010
(632)
-
▼
December
(48)
- Phoenix Real Estate Improves As Buyers Take Advant...
- Phoenix Home Prices Fall Over 10 Percent For The Y...
- Peter Schiff: Rising Rates Do Not Signal US Recove...
- Market Recap - Week Ending Thursday, December 23, ...
- 'Lost decade' can provide perspective
- Fed curbs could have cut small banks' ills
- Arizona's population: 6.4 mil
- Long way from dog days: 2011 might see record Dow
- Commercial real-estate was flat in '10
- Double dip is looming for Valley home prices
- Availability of affordable housing rentals to incr...
- Protest delays waterfront's request to boost height
- Market Recap - Week Ending December 17, 2010
- Russia-China Currency Deal Aims -- Sort of -- to D...
- Bankruptcy filings in Valley hit all-time record
- Foreclosure battle leads Gilbert homeowner to tang...
- Congress: End of the line for $8 billion in earmarks
- Arizona sues BofA for alleged mortgage fraud
- Protest delays waterfront's request to boost height
- Sweeping tax bill approved by Congress
- Developer pulls plan for north Scottsdale project
- Fed Cites Unemployment in Sticking With Bond Plan
- Maricopa County housing agency under fire
- Houston Real Estate Firm Adds Smartphone Technolog...
- Luxury-home sites sit empty, wait for buyers
- Despite new rules, bank complaints up
- Phoenix area high-end office space renting for less
- Phoenix area foreclosures hit 32-month low
- Main Street project faces foreclosure
- Phoenix area foreclosure info awaits investors
- $1.6 million awarded in Scottsdale land-use suit
- Meritage is No. 3 on builders' green list
- Elevation Chandler back on the market
- Home-loan scam alleged in lawsuits
- Tempe Marketplace project refinanced
- Former SEC chairman criticizes reform law
- How the Fed is Getting QE2 Wrong – The Anti Wealth...
- 20 hotels in Arizona get 'green' distinction
- Banks favor foreclosing over altering home loans
- Signings to buy homes went up 10.4% in October
- Projections low for Phoenix new-home sales in 2011
- Fed reveals aid deals for U.S., foreign banks
- Experts: Job growth shows Ariz., national economie...
- Is Phoenix on the 'road to full recovery'?
- Fund helps make rentals affordable
- It's no 'Wonderful Life' for county homeowners
- It's no 'Wonderful Life' for county homeowners
- Fannie Mae EVP calls for mortgage servicers to ado...
-
▼
December
(48)