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Big banks repay US for capital

Jun 18 2009 10:03

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New York - Major US banks on Wednesday started repaying the US Treasury for capital injected into the financial system, in the latest sign of a stabilising financial system.

JPMorgan Chase said it repaid the government for its $25bn capital injection, the largest of some $68bn in expected repayments.

Morgan Stanley said it repaid $10bn and added that the firm and its employees "appreciate the support of the US government,?Congress and the?administration during this challenging period."

Goldman Sachs also repurchased the $10bn in preferred shares and paid a dividend of $425m. American Express repaid $3.39bn, plus accumulated dividends totalling $74.4m.

The repayments came after the Federal Reserve and Treasury agreed to allow some banks to begin reimbursing a total of $68bn in capital injections begun last year in an effort to stabilise a shaky financial system.

JPMorgan Chase said that it had now repaid the government in full for the investment under the Troubled Asset Relief Programme (TARP), and had paid a total of $795m in dividends on the preferred stock.

The banking group said it was notifying the US Treasury of its intent to repurchase the 10-year warrant issued to the Treasury in connection with the preferred investment, which gave the government an option to buy common shares.

Separately, BB&T Corporation said it had repurchased the Treasury's preferred shares, repaying $3.1bn. The North Carolina bank also paid a final dividend to make the total dividend payments $92.7m.

"This was, in fact, an excellent investment for the American taxpayer," said BB&T chief executive Kelly King.

"Our strong capital position allowed us to pay back TARP in a very short amount of time. But what's important today is that we've repaid the government, and now we have a singular focus on the business of serving our clients."

US Bancorp redeemed the $6.6bn of preferred stock issued to the Treasury and also indicated its intent to repurchase the 10-year warrant.

"Today's repayment of the TARP funds is a significant step forward," said Richard Davis, chairperson, president and chief executive.

"The redemption allows our company to return to operating from a position of both independent strength and strategic flexibility."

The decision to allow 10 major banks to repay the government capital offered more evidence the fragile financial system is becoming able to stand on its own.,/p>

"This demonstrates that the industry has recapitalised a lot faster than people thought possible and it represents another step back to economic recovery," said a statement from the Financial Services Roundtable, an industry group.

"The industry was asked to raise capital and has raised over $50bn from private investors over the last few weeks."

But with some major banks still required to hold tens of billions in Treasury capital, the sector is not out of the woods, according to some analysts.

The Treasury had invested $199bn in 600 banks under TARP, which gave the government authority to commit $250bn to bank recapitalisation.

The capital injections came over the protests of some banks who argued that the government was meddling in their affairs, imposing restrictions on executive pay and pushing for increased lending.

- AFP

 
 
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