Tag Archive | "U.S. Treasury"

Geithner: GMAC Will Get Federal Funding, but Less than Expected


Washington – Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said GMAC will get less than the $5.6 billion in additional federal support that the government was considering, reported The Detroit News.

Geithner said the amount likely will be “a little lower than we anticipated,” but he didn’t say when it might be announced.

Detroit-based GMAC and the Treasury Department have been in talks to finalize the amount of new capital, in exchange for equity and stock. The lender, which has received $13.4 billion in government capital, has asked the U.S. Treasury to hold off on making the new capital infusion, so it can assess how much is needed.

As a result of the previous investment, the Treasury holds a 35.4 percent stake in GMAC, which provides loans for buyers of General Motors Co. and Chrysler Group LLC vehicles.

Unlike other financial institutions that went through “stress tests” to assess their financial health, GMAC couldn’t raise enough outside capital to assure regulators that it was prepared for a new downturn.

“We said, ‘If you do not raise capital from the private markets, if you are unable to, we will put capital into you because it is important to the stability of the system,’ ” Geithner said. “It was never going to be possible for GMAC. They are in a unique and difficult situation.”

Posted in P&A NewsComments (0)

Geithner Extends TARP; Hopes to Spur Business Lending


Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner told Congress that the Obama administration is extending the $700 billion financial-rescue program until next October, saying the U.S. must hold on to the money in case of new financial shocks, Business Week reported.

In a letter to congressional leaders, Geithner said the administration doesn’t expect to deploy more than $550 billion of the funds. He said the Treasury may expand the Federal Reserve’s Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility, an effort to jumpstart securitization markets, as well as continue to use the Troubled Asset Relief Program to help struggling homeowners and small companies.

While the TARP expires on Dec. 31, Geithner can extend it by notifying Congress.

The TARP, passed in October 2008 to prevent a collapse of the financial system, has drawn criticism from Congressional opponents of taxpayer-funded bailouts of banks including Citigroup Inc. The Obama administration, preparing the ground for an extension, has emphasized that the program may also be used to aid homeowners and small companies.

“Too many families, homeowners and small businesses still face severe financial pressure,” Geithner said. “Although bank lending standards are starting to ease, many categories of bank lending continue to contract. This contraction has hit small businesses very hard because they rely heavily on such lending, and do not have the ability to substitute credit from securities.”

The extension could bode well for the National Automobile Dealers Association. It is currently working to get the Small Business Administration to expand its floor-planning program, which has received a low response from lenders.

In public comments about the program over the past several weeks, Geithner has cautioned that shutting it down too soon could hurt the economic recovery.

Posted in Auto Industry NewsComments (0)

Page 3 of 3123