Management

BofA repays US govt entire bailout money

The Bank of America (BofA) has repaid the US government the entire bailout money of $45 billion. The Department of the Treasury announced yesterday that it has received full repayment on its Troubled Asset Relief Programme (TARP) investments in Bank of America in the sum of $45 billion. - BofA securities sale raises $19.3 billion - "Cross-border deals will drive M&As" - Curl ball - JP Morgan, BofA gear up to fund Hershey"s Cadbury bid - BofA shareholder opposes insiders as CEO candidates - BofA narrows list for CEO post: Report With this the federal exchequer has so far received a total of $116 billion of its bailout money. "Treasury now estimates that total bank repayments could reach up to $175 billion by the end of 2010, cutting total taxpayer exposure to the banks by almost three-quarters from the peak," the statement said. The Department said it estimates that every one of its programmes aimed at stabilising the banking system – the Capital Purchase Programme, the Targeted Investment Programme, the Asset Guarantee Programme, and the Consumer and Business Lending Initiative -- will earn a profit thanks to dividends, interest, early repayments, and the sale of warrants. Total bank investments of $245 billion in FY"09 that were initially forecast to cost $76 billion are now projected to bring a profit of $19 billion. "Taxpayers have already received about $15 billion in revenue through interest, dividends, and the sale of warrants, and that profit could be considerably higher as Treasury sells additional warrants in the weeks ahead," it said.


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):

News of the day
Basu's final journey begins
The body of veteran Marxist leader Jyoti Basu was taken in a hearse here this morning from a funeral parlour where it had been preserved since his death on January 17.
Popular Articles

Honda Siel launches new variant of CR-V
Luxury car maker Honda Siel Cars India today launched a new version of its sports utility vehicle, Honda CR-V, priced between Rs 21.9 lakh and Rs 24.12 lakh (ex-showroom, Delhi).

What killed Kamte?
No terrorist atrocity in India has produced as much distorted reportage as Mumbai 26/11. The ill-equipped and untrained city police got all the blame, while journalists failed to ask even basic questions. Why, for instance, did the Indian Army and the Navy commandos refuse to fight the Pakistani jihadis inside the Oberoi hotel?