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Tag Archives: Lehman Brothers
Is America’s Financial Collapse Inevitable?
Posted in Business, Current Events, Family, Investing, News, Politics, Taxes
Tagged Afghanistan, Big Government, Bush tax cuts, CIA, Comeback America: Turning the Country Around and Restoring Fiscal Responsibility, Committee on the Fiscal Future of the United States, Congressional Budget Office, constitutional republic, defense, Democratic Congress, Democrats, Department of Homeland Security, dot-com bubble, Earned Income Tax Credit, Empire of Debt, FBI, Financial Crisis Inquiry Committee, Food Stamps, Freedom, Goldman Sachs, Government Accountability Office, housing bubble, interest on the debt, JPMorgan, Lehman Brothers, Medicaid, Medicare, military, MSNBC, Obama, Pat Buchanan, Reform Party, Republican, Social Security, socialism, socialized medicine, Stimulus Bill, sub-prime mortgage securities, Taxes, The American Conservative, Tim Carney, U.S. national debt, unemployment insurance, Wall Street, Washington, White House
CIT Bankruptcy Filing Will Cost US Taxpayers Another $2.3 Billion
CIT group, America’s leading specialist lender to small business, filed for Chapter 11 November 1st night in the fifth biggest bankruptcy in US history.
The collapse of the 101-year-old Utah-based lender, which trails behind only those of Lehman Brothers, Washington Mutual, Worldcom and General Motors in size, will leave US taxpayers with a $2.3 billion bill.
It is believed the board of CIT, which has $71 billion of loans, approved the filing after its creditors agreed a pre-packaged plan designed to ensure it emerges from bankruptcy with the core of its business intact.
Only last year, US financial regulators judged CIT sufficiently well-capitalized to survive. The lender was given access to $2.3 billion of funding under the Troubled Asset Relief Program (Tarp).
The bank’s collapse will be a blow for its million small and medium-sized customers, many in the retail sector, for whom sources of debt are scarce. Experts believe that, even if CIT can emerge intact from Chapter 11, its lending capacity could fall by 20 per cent.
The entire $2.3 billion Tarp loan is expected to be wiped out by the bankruptcy process. While the US Government helped other big non-bank lenders, including GMAC, General Motor’s finance arm, it rebuffed CIT’s subsequent bailout requests in July, concluding that its demise would not threaten the broad financial system.
Posted in Business, Current Events, Investing, News
Tagged CIT, General Motors, GMAC, Lehman Brothers, TARP, Troubled Asset Relief Program, Washington Mutual, Worldcom