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Banks say bailout funds helped boost lending.


Byline: Daily Star Staff

Summary: More than 80 percent of the US banks that received federal bailout bailout

The financial rescue of a faltering business or other organization. Government guarantees for loans made to Chrysler Corporation constituted a bailout.
 funds said the money had helped them increase lending or avoid a drop in lending as the recession worsened earlier this year, according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 a new survey released Sunday. The survey by the Special Inspector General for the US Treasury's $700 billion Troubled Asset.

WASHINGTON: More than 80 percent of the US banks that received federal bailout funds said the money had helped them increase lending or avoid a drop in lending as the recession worsened earlier this year, according to a new survey released Sunday. The survey by the Special Inspector General for the US Treasury's $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) found nearly 40 percent of the 360 banks surveyed had used some of the funds to build up capital cushions to absorb unanticipated losses.

And a third of the institutions said they had invested some of the TARP money into mortgage-backed securities Mortgage-backed securities (MSBs)

Securities backed by a pool of mortgage loans.
 issued by Fannie Mae Fannie Mae: see Federal National Mortgage Association.  and Freddie Mac Freddie Mac: see Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation. .

The survey, conducted from February to June, was aimed at answering a question on the minds of many lawmakers, policy makers and commentators: What have banks done with their bailout money?

Of the 360 banks surveyed, 300 or 83 percent said it was used to supplement lending ac-tivities. About 29 percent of institutions said they used TARP funds to make residential loans, 18 percent used TARP funds for commercial mortgages and 17 percent said they made other consumer loans with TARP funds, such as auto loans and personal lines of credit.

Among the 40 percent of banks that said they used TARP funds to bolster This article is about the pillow called a bolster. For other meanings of the word "bolster", see bolster (disambiguation).

A bolster (etymology: Middle English, derived from Old English, and before that the Germanic word bulgstraz
 capital cushions, economic uncertainty was a key factor cited. The report cited the following quote as a typical response in this area: It was "in the best interests of [the bank's] shareholders for the company to gain additional liquidity and a further capital cushion Cushion

In the context of project financing, the extra amount of net cash flow remaining after expected debt service.


cushion

See call protection.
 against the economic uncertainties that lay ahead."

Another 52 institutions, or 14 percent, said they used the funds to pay off other debts because the government funding was more cost effective.

Another 15 banks, or 4 percent, said they used TARP funds for acquisitions, mostly to take over failed banks at the request of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., the regulator regulator,
n the mechanical part of a gas delivery system that controls gas pressure that allows a manageable flow of drug vapor to escape.


regulator

see reducing valve.
 that administers most bank failures. u Reuters

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Publication:The Daily Star (Beirut, Lebanon)
Date:Jul 20, 2009
Words:403
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