iBankCoin
Joined Nov 11, 2007
31,929 Blog Posts

Study: bailouts made banks behave more risky

This paper basically sums up the key problem with bailouts in general. The banks that received funds, realizing they had the option to never lose, started throwing hail mary passes buying up high yielding garbage with the off chance hope that they could luck out and regain their former glory.

What a huge waste of resources.

ANN ARBOR, Mich. (TheStreet) — The government bailout made banks appear safer but actually caused them to take on more credit risk, according to a University of Michigan study released Wednesday.

According to a working paper by finance professors Ran Duchin and Denis Sosyura of the university of Michigan’s Ross School of Business, banks participating in the government’s Capital Purchase Program as part of the Troubled Assets Relief Program, or TARP, “significantly increased their investments in risky securities,” by 10%, “displacing safer assets, such as Treasury bonds, short-term paper, and cash equivalents.”

The study also found that although the banks receiving TARP money weren’t any more likely to expand their lending, the group’s lending activity shifted toward riskier mortgages “as measured by the borrower’s loan-to-income ratio and the high-risk loan indicator based on the loan rate.” According to the study, “the fraction of the riskiest mortgages in the originated credit increased for banks approved for participating in TARP but declined for banks denied TARP money by the regulators.”

According to the study, the receipt of TARP money also led to “significant effect on the risk profile of corporate lending,” similar to that seen for mortgage lending.

Duchin and Sosyura say that although TARP helped improve participating banks “capitalization ratios,” the net effect was “the net effect is a significant increase in systemic risk and the probability of distress due to the higher risk of bank assets.”

Among banks participating in TARP by selling preferred shares to the U.S. Treasury, the largest bailout recipients were Citigroup , which received $49 billion from the U.S. Treasury, and Bank of America , which received $45 billion in government money. Bank of America fully repaid TARP and Citigroup repaid $20 billion in TARP money, after converting $25 billion its TARP preferred shares to common shares, which were later sold by the government.

Other large banks receiving $25 billion in TARP money apiece included JPMorgan Chase and Wells Fargo , both of which fully repaid the government.

The publicly traded bank with the largest amount of TARP preferred shares outstanding is Regions Financial , which owes $3.5 billion in government bailout funds.

If you enjoy the content at iBankCoin, please follow us on Twitter

3 comments

  1. kedzilla

    The Problem is too much regulation

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0 Deem this to be "Fake News"
  2. kedzilla

    Sorry there was supposed to look like so:

    /Republican/

    The problem is too much regulation.

    \Republican\

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0 Deem this to be "Fake News"
  3. cronkite

    the problem is cabal bankers sit behind the iron curtain of congress…seems like the plan has worked out well for the bankers and its back to biz as usual.

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0 Deem this to be "Fake News"