Are Banks Making Loans Again?

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By bkoadmin


Most of the first half of the $700 billions bailout money has been handed out by the Treasury Department to the nation's banks. The idea was to inject enough money to the banks, so they would start making loans and lending money to businesses or consumers. In theory, that would thaw the frozen credit market and help jump-start the economy.

"Banks might normally be leveraged 10:1, so some of the logic is that if you invest a billion dollars in a bank in capital, then over a period of time that bank may create $10 billion in loans," explains Mike Menzies, CEO of Easton Bank and Trust.

But, it hasn't quite worked out that way. It turns out that most of the banks have been sitting on the bailout money instead of making new loans. There are signs indicating that the real balance sheets of the banks are much worse than what's already known by the public. So, the banks are holding the bailout money as their own safety net rather than taking new risks. Neither the Treasury Department nor the congress has any means for the banks to provide accounting records about their received bailout money. So far, the $350 billion bailout is as good as throwing a stone into the ocean.

For more cartoons, visit the Cartoosh blog.


Are Banks Making Loans Again? in the News

  • With $1 trillion in losses likely, banks reluctant to lendPittsburgh Tribune-Review30 hours ago

    President Obama has been demanding that banks start lending again, but the unstated secret is that banks are not lending much because they are busy paying back their government aid and covering losses of $1 trillion or more on defaulting loans.

  • Banks getting bum rap on not lending enough?KOLO 8 Reno9 hours ago

    Unlike big-city bankers, Stan Wilmoth didn't make lots of dumb loans during the boom. After the crash, he accepted not a dime of taxpayer money for his bank. His salary? "Substantially less" than the $1 million the former head of Merrill Lynch spent remodeling his office, he says. He credits his grandfather, a Protestant minister, with giving him "moral fiber."

  • Banks getting bum rap on not lending enough Trading, not lending, is the right fix for nowMalaysiaNews.net9 hours ago

    NEW YORK - Unlike big-city bankers, Stan Wilmoth didn't make lots of dumb loans during the boom. After the crash, he accepted not a dime of taxpayer money for his bank. His salary? "Substantiall...

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