Gov't: Taxpayers make $12B on Citigroup bailout

OntarioVanMan

Retired Expediter
Owner/Operator
Government unwinds its stake in Citigroup posting a $12 billion profit on $45 billion bailout

Gov't: Taxpayers make $12B on Citigroup bailout - Yahoo! Finance

Martin Crutsinger, AP Economics Writer, On Tuesday December 7, 2010, 1:47 am EST

WASHINGTON (AP) -- After all is said and done, taxpayers will make a $12 billion profit on the government's $45 billion bailout of Citigroup.

The Treasury Department said late Monday that it had struck a deal to sell its remaining holdings in Citigroup common stock, about 2.4 billion shares. With the proceeds of the sale, priced at $4.35 a share, the government will have realized $57 billion on its bailout package for the big bank.

"By selling all the remaining Citigroup shares today, we had an opportunity to lock in substantial profits for the taxpayer and avoid future risk," said Tim Massad, the Treasury official who heads up the bailout program.

Citigroup received $45 billion in taxpayer support late in 2008 in one of the largest bailouts undertaken by the government as it struggled to contain the worst financial crisis to hit the country since the 1930s.

The bailout of Citigroup and other large banks was begun under the Republican administration of George W. Bush but turned into a major political liability for President Barack Obama in last month's congressional elections.

Republicans took control of the House and gained six seats in the Senate by capitalizing on voter anger over the bailouts and soaring federal budget deficits.

The administration has insisted that the bailouts were needed to prevent an even deeper recession. They said the cost of the bailouts has been falling as Citigroup and other rescued institutions pay back their government loans.

The latest estimate from the Congressional Budget Office in late November was that the $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program would end up costing the government $25 billion, down from an August CBO estimate of $66 billion.

Of the $45 billion provided to Citigroup, $25 billion was converted to a government ownership stake that the Treasury has been selling off since last spring. The bank repaid the other $20 billion in December 2009.

Treasury said that with the pricing of the last 2.4 billion shares of common stock on Monday, it would receive $31.8 billion from the sale of common stock plus another $2.9 billion in interest and dividends.

The $57 billion total also includes $20 billion from Citigroup's December 2009 repayment of TARP money and another $2.2 billion from the sale of trust preferred securities held by the government.

The actual earnings are expected to climb with the sale of an additional $800 million in trust preferred securities held by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. and the sale of warrants Treasury holds. The warrants give the holder the right to buy Citigroup common stock at a specified price.

Treasury had disposed of about 5.3 billion shares at an average price of $4.05 before Monday's pricing of the remaining shares. With the pricing of $4.35 for the shares offered on Monday, Treasury's average price for its entire 7.7 billion shares of common stock will turn out to be $4.14.

Citigroup common stock closed at $4.45 in trading Monday and has ranged from a low of $3.11 to a high of $5.07 over the past 52 weeks.

Monday's deal, for which Morgan Stanley acted as bookrunning manager, is expected to close on Friday, Treasury said. Citigroup is paying the underwriting fees.

"Selling off the remaining stake ensures that taxpayers will book a healthy profit on the Citigroup investment," said Linus Wilson, a professor of finance at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette.
 

moose

Veteran Expediter
Layout ,
just go to WADC ,& look for a vending machine .
they disposed the new flavored " Barry cool Aid "
 

layoutshooter

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
Layout ,
just go to WADC ,& look for a vending machine .
they disposed the new flavored " Barry cool Aid "


REAL MEN don't drink cool aid!! :p ANYTHING with "Barry" flavoring would be akin to drinking battery acid. :eek:
 

greg334

Veteran Expediter
BFD!

This amounts to the interest lost on other deals they screwed up. GM is still a money loser, with GM claiming to be able to pay the pension fund $4B, I question where is the gap money from the stock sale, shouldn't we get paid first?
 

OntarioVanMan

Retired Expediter
Owner/Operator
This ain't about GM....2B is chump change in the big picture...

Money is money....anything back is better then nothing...
 

layoutshooter

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
This ain't about GM....2B is chump change in the big picture...

Money is money....anything back is better then nothing...


Where did that "anything" go? Did we pay off any debt with it (if it really exists) or just spend it on some other kind of bail out or welfare program.?
 

johnf

Seasoned Expediter
I am against all these bailouts for all these corporations that took our tax money because they took risks and lost and now we are paying for it.If i take a risk will the government bail me out HELL NO!!!!!So my opinion is let them go under and let the strong survive.
 

OntarioVanMan

Retired Expediter
Owner/Operator
Where did that "anything" go? Did we pay off any debt with it (if it really exists) or just spend it on some other kind of bail out or welfare program.?

The 12B probably doesn't even cover the interest on the debt...for the welfare programs...
 

OntarioVanMan

Retired Expediter
Owner/Operator
I am against all these bailouts for all these corporations that took our tax money because they took risks and lost and now we are paying for it.If i take a risk will the government bail me out HELL NO!!!!!So my opinion is let them go under and let the strong survive.


Ditto...:D
 

layoutshooter

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
The 12B probably doesn't even cover the interest on the debt...for the welfare programs...

I would LOVE to see an independent accounting for 100% of government spending. Where has all those decades of SS surpluses gone? The interest on that money? How much of our "welfare" dollars goes to fraud and abuse? What about "creative" accounting? ETC ETC ETC. Why have we not audited the Federal Reserve? ETC ETC.
 

witness23

Veteran Expediter
Layout ,
just go to WADC ,& look for a vending machine .
they disposed the new flavored " Barry cool Aid "

You say Obama's Kool Aid, wouldn't it be Bush/Obama Kool Aid?

Not only should you read the article before posting, you should be up on the history of the TARP.
 

OntarioVanMan

Retired Expediter
Owner/Operator
I would LOVE to see an independent accounting for 100% of government spending. Where has all those decades of SS surpluses gone? The interest on that money? How much of our "welfare" dollars goes to fraud and abuse? What about "creative" accounting? ETC ETC ETC. Why have we not audited the Federal Reserve? ETC ETC.

I think the government took lessons from Capone..*LOL*

How to launder money, hide assets and payoffs...
 

greg334

Veteran Expediter
It doesn't cover the interest of the unemployment loan.

THIS is all propaganda, it is nothing but the same hype that has given us reports of the miracle recovery of GM.

When you dig into it, like GM, there is no real payback outside of the few who profited from it. Somewhere in the piles and piles of news reports is a little article that explains the profits that some of these guys/gals in these companies ended up with - record profits. It would be alright if there was some serious accoutablity that told the truth but like GM, we look at the false outcome of recovering from something horrible, with the relief that like GM, Citi and others would have brought down the country.

The same spin is being used, the public is numb with joy that unemployment benefits produce $2 of economic stimulus for every dollar given, they don't care because they don't get that someone has to pay the bill and like our great messiah has said with his fingers crossed 'it will be a shared sacrifice' to get things straight.

As much as you may not think GM matters, it does a lot. It matters in the way the government intervened on the behalf of the UAW, it matters on the way our bankruptcy laws were subverted and it matters that GM has not yet produced anything of a real profit or a product that can stand on its own. Their latest project, the Volt, is overpriced and depends on tax credits - meaning we subsidize the purchase. We as a country didn't demand new leadership for the money, that should have been the first thing that happened. Out with Lutz, and everyone else who ran the company into the ground. The biggest issue is the lie that we were told 'if GM failed, the country would' UNLESS we dump tax money that we didn't have into the company. NOT really close to the truth. What would have happened is a simple but historic sell of of GM's parts, as it was built, it would end.
 

BillChaffey

Veteran Expediter
Owner/Operator
US Navy
It may very well be a "shared sacrifice" but it won't be shared by all. If GM is really profitable why not repay all the persons & companies that got shafted by the Government approved Bankruptcy?
 
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