Articles About Bailout
- Author:
- James I. Clark III
- Posted:
- 07.09.2012
Back to the Drawing Board for Greece
International lenders and Greece will renegotiate the program on which the second financial bailout for Athens is based because the original has become outdated, according to a senior Eurozone official. Greece received a €130-billion bailout in February from the European Union and the International Monetary Fund (IMF). General elections in May and June delayed the […]
- Author:
- Catalina Parada
- Posted:
- 06.20.2012
Spain Asks the Eurozone for a Bank Bailout for up to 100 Billion Euro
Spain asked the Eurozone for a bailout of up to €100-billion to rescue its banks. This is just a short-term fix for the troubled Eurozone because it doesn’t address the underlying problems in the monetary union. The earlier bailouts of Greece, Ireland and Portugal didn’t resolve the problems either. “The Spanish banking bailout is big […]
- Author:
- James I. Clark III
- Posted:
- 02.08.2012
Is Hard-Hit Ireland Resolving It’s Economic Crisis?
Ireland was one of the nations that was hardest hit by the Eurozone crisis, but now it’s being seen as leading stricken nations in their efforts to turn their economies around. International Monetary Fund (IMF) and European Union (EU) officials are impressed by its austerity measures, imposed after the massive 2010 bailout. For the average […]
- Author:
- James I. Clark III
- Posted:
- 12.07.2011
The Fed’s Secret Bank Loans Revealed
In a stunning revelation, Bloomberg has obtained 29,000 pages of Federal Reserve documents detailing the largest bailout in American history. According to an article that will appear in the January issue of Bloomberg Markets magazine, the “Fed didn’t tell anyone which banks were in trouble so deep they required a combined $1.2 trillion on December […]
- Author:
- Tom Silva
- Posted:
- 10.19.2011
As Economic Woes Deepen, Greece Seeing More Suicides
Greece’s dire financial crisis is taking a toll on the nation’s psyche in more ways than mere worries over whether the economy will survive. A team of technical experts, primarily from the European Union (EU), are in Greece monitoring the state of its debt-stricken economy – and they are well aware of how dire the situation […]
- Author:
- James I. Clark III
- Posted:
- 06.06.2011
Portugal Becomes Third of PIGS To Seek EU Bailout
Portugal has become the third European nation to accept a financial bailout to the tune of € 78 billion, with € 12 billion going directly to the Iberian nation’s banks. It is the third of four PIGS nations (Portugal, Ireland, Greece, Spain) to require a bailout. Caretaker Prime Minister Jose Socrates announced that he had […]
- Author:
- James I. Clark III
- Posted:
- 06.29.2010
Treasury: TARP Repayments Now Surpass Debt
The $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) is turning out to be a better bet than many thought at first. According to the Treasury Department, the amount of money repaid by banks and other recipients now exceeds TARP’s outstanding balance. In a monthly report to Congress on the program, TARP repayments total $194 billion; […]
- Author:
- James I. Clark III
- Posted:
- 01.06.2010
TARP Savings Could Finance Jobs Program
The $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) cost $200 billion less than originally anticipated, according to a new Treasury Department report. That reflects faster repayments by big banks, as well as less spending on rescue programs as the financial sector recovers more quickly than expected. And it’s good news for President Obama’s new job […]
- Author:
- James I. Clark III
- Posted:
- 11.10.2009
Fed Proposing to Take a Hard Line on Bank Executive Pay
The Federal Reserve is considering regulating banks’ pay policies to make certain they discourage employees from making the irresponsible gambles that led to 2008’s financial meltdown. The Fed’s proposal would apply to thousands of banks, including some that did not receive bailouts. Under the Fed’s proposal, the central bank would review – and could say […]
- Author:
- Tom Silva
- Posted:
- 12.17.2008
Will Surge in Mortgage Applications Find a Home?
The residential mortgage market is experiencing an unexpected – but welcome — boom, a result of interest rates for 30-year fixed-rate loans falling to 5.47 percent from 5.99 percent. According to the Mortgage Bankers Association’s (MBA) weekly review, the average rate for a 15-year fixed-rate loan – popular when refinancing – fell to 5.13 percent […]