Posts Tagged ‘bank’

Obama sinkhole recipe: Hey, let’s create a new, government-run infrastructure bank!

September 7th, 2010

e0549a12f85ADAC3.jpg Obama sinkhole recipe: Hey, let’s create a new, government run infrastructure bank!

It’s actually not a “new” idea. It’s an old, recycled one borrowed from corruptocrat Democrat Sen. Chris Dodd, who sponsored a bill to create a federally-operated “infrastructure bank” in . President Obama tried to get $5 billion in funding for one in his and $4 billion is proposed for one in his Democrat Rep. Rosa De Lauro is pushing a House version — and her expansive, pipe-dream plans tell you all you need to know about what a disastrous, costly slush fund this thing would inevitably grow into:

Ms. DeLauro’s plan would create an infrastructure bank that would be part of the United States Treasury, where it would attract money from institutional investors, then channel the funds to projects selected by a panel. The program, which would make loans much like the World Bank, would finance projects with the potential to transform whole regions, or even the national economy, the way the interstate highway system and the first transcontinental railway once did.

The outside investors would expect a competitive return on their money, so many of the completed projects would have to charge fees, taxes or tolls. In an interview, Ms. DeLauro said she would be “looking at a broader base,” meaning the bank would finance not just roads and rails, but also telecommunications, water, drainage, green energy and other large-scale works.

But if the projects did not raise enough money, the Treasury might get stuck paying back the investors, a prospect that gave pause to so-called deficit hawks like Mr. Tiberi. In an e-mail last week, he said he agreed the nation’s road and communications networks needed to be improved but was concerned about creating another company like Fannie Mae that might need a bailout.

Inside the White House, the idea for a transportation initiative, and in particular an infrastructure bank, is one that the White House chief of staff, Rahm Emanuel, has been promoting.

(Fun fact reminder: Rahm lived rent-free for five years in the of De Lauro and her Democratic pollster hubby Stanley Greenberg. But I digress.)

So, like Stimulus I, which was initially intended to put infrastructure spending first, but evolved into a multi-purpose slush fund that put infrastructure , the “infrastructure bank” envisioned by on Capitol Hill would be “looking at a broader base” to finance “green energy” and “other large-scale works” based on determined by a panel appointed by the president.

Moreover, this “bank” would be anything but a bank in the normal sense of the word. Ron Utt at Heritage exposed the in March:

This bank would be capitalized by federal appropriations to leverage a greater volume of debt borrowed under the full faith and credit of the federal government. In turn the bank would use these funds to finance eligible infrastructure projects. While these proposed entities—and similar ones that exist in the states from earlier legislation—are described as “banks,” they are no such thing.

The common meaning of a “bank” describes an entity that borrows money at one interest rate and lends it out to creditworthy borrowers at a somewhat higher interest rate to cover the borrowing, administrative, and bad debt costs incurred in the act of financial intermediation. In contrast, many of the federal infrastructure bank proposals (and those already in existence) follow only the borrowing part. Instead most allow the infrastructure bank to use borrowed funds to provide grants and subsidies to approved infrastructure projects. A grant, of course, is not paid back and does not require interest payments. So this raises an important question: How can the bank service its debt if it has no earnings?

Alert readers will recognize that this sounds alarmingly similar to the predicament of the federally sponsored lenders Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac when their earnings failed to cover debt costs, thereby necessitating a taxpayer bailout that now totals $126 billion.1 Oddly, such apparent parallels were acknowledged by Representative Rosa DeLauro (D–CT), sponsor of current infrastructure bank legislation, when she noted that her bank would be

“Innovative” = . Heaven help us.

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More on the that will undoubtedly be funded under the guise of infrastructure spending, via Kevin Williamson at NRO. (h/t commenter Netfest)

Bank middle-manager BankSimple raises $2.9M to not be a bank

September 3rd, 2010

4ca60459ed00x450.jpg Bank middle manager BankSimple raises $2.9M to not be a bank, the not-quite-a-bank provider of front-end services for a number of treasury-focused banks, raised $2.9 million in its of funding. First Round Capital, IA Ventures and Village Ventures led the round.

Again, BankSimple is not a bank. It’s a provider that manages user experiences for banks. Chief executive Joshua Reich likened it to the way gift-card operators work.

The company partners with banks that are exclusively interested in the back-end parts of banking — managing treasuries and regulatory compliance — and outsource the consumer interface and customer service out to other companies.

Users of the service receive a BankSimple debit card — which allows for overdraft protection and free ATM usage. BankSimple also allows users to deposit checks with a smartphone, something for some time now.

As payment for running its services, BankSimple receives a fraction of the income generated from the difference between each bank’s loan payment rates and savings interest rates. Reich wouldn’t disclose what percentage of the difference BankSimple receives.

BankSimple has not launched, but Reich said the company had attracted interest from 20,000 potential users. Reich also said the company had attracted interest from some banks that are interested in outsourcing their customer service, but declined to give specific names.

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 Bank middle manager BankSimple raises $2.9M to not be a bank

 Bank middle manager BankSimple raises $2.9M to not be a bank

Stress Tests UBS

July 22nd, 2010

Stress Tests

Stress Tests

Governments and regulators in the European Union still have much to do to improve the reputation of their banking systems of people, data show that the weaker members are supported by the European Central Bank, as never before The Wall Street Journal. The data highlights how banks in Portugal, Ireland, Greece and Spain are more willing than ever that the central bank in June that access to wholesale money markets has been hampered by a series of institutions, The Journal said.From point of view of regulators, the objective – which shows that the banking system is adequately capitalized, or at least you can with a little concentration of capital – will be met.

FT Alphaville has a good summary of many rumors out there, the more remarkable is that all the French banks are very good. Also, apparently, the results will be announced during the European trading day, suggesting that regulators want to stress tests to influence the outcome of stress tests results.The 91 largest banks on the continent will be published Friday in which institutions must prove that they were preparing for a future that may include a recession or another crisis in the markets for bonds, the test results Journal said.Aggregated across Europe will be announced after trading on Friday by the Committee of European Banking Supervisors, which is subsequently broken – the bank by the bank – by national regulators, giving the market the weekend to digest the information before opening again Monday, said the newspaper .

The European listed banks in the United States, however, will not escape an instant market reaction that results are published in Le Journal noted.Switzerland financial authority has also conducted its own tests. The results of which, together with UBS and Credit Suisse, will be published this week, the newspaper said, citing one person familiar with the situation.

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