10 banks to repay TARP funds

Tue Jun 9, 2009 11:11pm BST
 
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By Glenn Somerville

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - JPMorgan, Goldman Sachs and eight other top U.S. banks won clearance on Tuesday to repay $68 billion (42 billion pounds) in taxpayer money given to them during the credit crisis, a step that may help them escape government curbs on executive pay.

Many banks had chafed at restrictions on pay that accompanied the capital injections. The U.S. Treasury Department's announcement that some will be permitted to repay funds from the Troubled Asset Relief Program, or TARP, begins to separate the stronger banks from weaker ones as the financial sector heals.

Treasury didn't name the banks, but all quickly stepped forward to say they were cleared to return money the government had pumped into them to try to ensure the banking system was well capitalized

Stock prices gained initially after the Treasury announcement but later shed most of the gains on concern the money could be better used for lending to boost the economy rather than paying it back to Treasury.

"If they were more concerned about the public, they would keep the cash and start loaning out money," said Carl Birkelbach, chairman and chief executive of Birkelbach Investment Securities in Chicago.

Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner told reporters the repayments were an encouraging sign of financial repair but said the United States and other key Group of Eight economies had to stay focussed on instituting measures to boost recovery.

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