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Toronto-Dominion Bank T.TD

Alternate Symbol(s):  TD | TDBCP | T.TD.PF.A | TDOPF | T.TD.PF.C | TDBKF | T.TD.PF.D | TDOMF | T.TD.PF.E | T.TD.PF.I | T.TD.PF.J

The Toronto-Dominion Bank (the Bank) operates as a bank in North America. The Bank's segments include Canadian Personal and Commercial Banking, which provides financial products and services to personal, small business and commercial customers, and includes TD Auto Finance Canada; U.S. Retail segment, which is comprised of personal and business banking in the United States, operating under the brand TD Bank; Wealth Management and Insurance segment includes the Canadian wealth business which provides investment products and services to institutional and retail investors, and the insurance business which provides property and casualty insurance, as well as life and health insurance products to customers across Canada, and Wholesale Banking segment provides a range of capital markets, investment banking, and corporate banking products and services, including underwriting and distribution of new debt and equity issues, providing advice on strategic acquisitions and divestitures.


TSX:TD - Post by User

Bullboard Posts
Post by ElixirPolywebon Dec 13, 2009 3:11am
491 Views
Post# 16581875

The TARP repayment farce

The TARP repayment farce

Some good reading and detail into the farce called TARP Repayment.

 

Now Let Us Admire The Clever Way In Which Bank Of America Has Screwed Taxpayers Again (BAC)

Henry Blodget

December 10, 2009

 

A few media outlets cheered the announcement that Bank of America was repaying its $45 billion of bailout money ahead of time. Bank of America is now obviously healthy again, so it's time to celebrate, right?

 

Well, no.

 

The main reason Bank of America paid back the money was to get out from under the onerous pay caps that makes it harder to keep its people and attract a new CEO. To make the payment, Bank of America had to take huge dilution at what a year ago would have been considered an appalling price. Bank of America may be healthier than it was 9 months ago (maybe), but shareholders certainly didn't consider selling $19 billion of equity at $15 a share cause for celebration.

 

But aren't taxpayers better off now that Bank of America has paid us back?

 

Not if you thought the control and pay restrictions TARP provided were a good thing.

 

What Bank of America has done is simply replace one form of taxpayer sponsored capital (TARP) with equity and another form of taxpayer sponsored capital--loans from the Fed. Those loans carry super-low interest rates, so they'll help Bank of America make more money at taxpayer expense. Those loans also, importantly, come with NONE of the restrictions that TARP does.

 

In case you're not following exactly what happened here, let us explain:

 

Bank of America raised $19 billion of new equity. It paid the government $45 billion of TARP funds back. To make up the difference, it borrowed $26 billion of new funds from the Fed (at a subsidized rate, no less).

 

And taxpayers are on the hook every bit as much with the Fed loans to Bank of America as they were for the TARP capital. The only thing that has changed is that taxpayers don't have any control anymore. Bank of America can now take that money and do whatever it wants with it, including paying out tremendous bonuses for making stupid loans.

 

And, god forbid, if Bank of America isn't healthy and gets itself into trouble again, taxpayers will be right there to bail it out again.

 

Because this is America, land of bailouts. And TARP-free Bank of America is still too big to fail.*

Bullboard Posts