Results matching “niagara”

Two more banks have redeemed the shares they sold the government in exchange for bailout funding.

First Niagara Financial Group Inc.
, of Lockport, N.Y., said it repaid the $184 million it received seven months ago. BailoutSleuth reported previously on its plan to exit the bailout the program.

First Manitowoc Bancorp Inc., a Wisconsin-based company, said it had paid the Treasury $12.6 million to redeem the shares it issued in January. It also paid $21,800 in accrued dividends.

First Niagara's chief executive, John P. Koelmel, said the taxpayer capital that the bank received through the Treasury Department's Troubled Asset Relief Program had served its purpose.

"Our first quarter loan production increased by 8 percent over the same period a year ago as we continued to leverage the federal capital to make commercial and consumer credit readily available in the communities where we do business,'' he said in a prepared statement. "When market conditions improved, we replaced the government's investment with private capital''

First Niagara raised $380.4 million through a stock offering last month.

Michael B. Molepske, First Manitowoc's chief executive, said that the bank's approval for, and withdrawal from, the Troubled Asset Relief Program were both signs of its financial health.

"The Treasury's investment in our Company was an indication of our soundness and the Treasury's acceptance of our repayment further highlights the financial soundness of Bank First National," Molepske said in a prepared statement.

When the TARP program was announced, many banks applied under the belief that approval by the Treasury would calm anxious investors and partners.

Many other banks, however, calculated that involvement would send more negative than positive signals about the bank's stability. First Manitowoc's decision reflects a growing consensus that the latter interpretation was the correct one.

More than two dozen banks have either returned their TARP money or announced plans to do so. To gain approval, however, they must prove to the Treasury that they are strong enough to survive without government financing or loan guarantees.

Seventeen Wisconsin banks have received TARP funds. First Manitiwoc is the first of them to leave the program.
April 13, 2009 3:49 PM

First Niagara To Sell Stock to Pay Back TARP Funds

Another bank has decided to return its bailout money and has announced a major stock offering to help finance the plan.

New York-based First Niagara Financial Group Inc. said it planned to sell $300 million in stock in order to, among other things, repurchase the $184 million in preferred shares and warrants it sold the Treasury Department under the Troubled Asset Relief Program.

A number of other financial institutions have said they were interested in paying back TARP money, citing bad press and concern about Treasury restrictions on executive pay.

First Niagara follows Goldman Sachs in planning a stock offering to help pay back the Treasury. The investment firm said last week it was considering a stock sale to pay back the $10 billion it received under the TARP program.

First Niagara's announcement came as it reported strong quarterly earnings and is preparing to take over 57 local branches in Pennsylvania it recently purchased from National City Bank.
January 4, 2009 11:42 AM

Updated list of banks getting TARP money

BailoutSleuth has updated its master list of companies that have received taxpayer money, or been approved for it, under the Treasury Department's plan to inject $250 billion in capital into U.S. financial institutions.

 

We've come up with 282 banks, thrifts, commercial finance companies and other lenders that are participating in the program. Our list excludes General Motors Corp., Chrysler LLC and American International Group Inc., which got money from the Treasury Department under different rescue programs with different terms.

 

It also excludes $20 billion in additional aid that the Treasury Department extended to Citigroup Inc. when it became apparent that the $25 billion it originally received through the TARP program would not be enough to stabilize its finances.

 

Nor does our tally include banks that were approved for government aid but turned down the money. We'll write more about those insitutions in the coming days.

 

Here is the list of companies that have sold preferred stock to the government under the TARP program, along with the amount of public money they received:

 

Citigroup Inc. (New York) -- $25 billion

 

JPMorgan Chase & Co. (New York) - $25 billion

 

Wells Fargo & Co. (San Francisco) -- $25 billion

 

Bank of America Corp. (Charlotte, N.C.) -- $15 billion

 

Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (New York) -- $10 billion

 

Merrill Lynch & Co. (New York) -- $10 billion

 

Morgan Stanley (New York) -- $10 billion

 

PNC Financial Services Group Inc. (Pittsburgh) -- $7.6 billion

 

US Bancorp (Minneapolis) -- $6.6 billion

 

GMAC LLC (Detroit) -- $5 billion

 

SunTrust Banks Inc. (Atlanta) -- $4.9 billion

 

Capital One Financial Corp. (McLean, Va.) -- $3.55 billion

 

Regions Financial Corp. (Birmingham, Ala.) -- $3.5 billion

 

Fifth Third Bancorp (Cincinnati) -- $3.4 billion

 

American Express Co. (New York) -- $3.39 billion

 

BB&T Corp. (Winston-Salem, NC) -- $3.13 billion

 

Bank of New York Mellon (New York) -- $3 billion

 

November 22, 2008 2:58 PM

Nearing the Century Mark

BailoutSleuth has updated its master list of banks that have been approved to receive taxpayer money through the Treasury Department's capital purchase program.

 

We've now identified 95 banks that have been picked to sell preferred stock to the Treasury Department as part of its plan to inject new capital directly into financial institutions to strengthen their balance sheets and stimulate lending.

 

The total amount of money approved for the banks is approaching $180 billion, a figure that does not include the $40 billion that the Treasury Department has pledged to American International Group Inc., the big insurance and investment firm.

 

Some of the new banks on the list announced their approval yesterday. They include Ameris Bancorp., a bank in southern Georgia that will get $52 million from the government, and Home Bancshares Inc., of Conway, Ark., which will get $50 million.

 

BailoutSleuth's updated roster also includes several banks that did not put out press releases announcing their participation, but simply noted it within larger Securities and Exchange Commission filings.

 

Keep reading to see the master list.

October 28, 2008 5:44 AM

The money list

 

At least 27 banks have agreed to sell stakes in themselves to the Treasury Department under a federal plan to inject capital into the financial system.

 

The newest list of recipients includes Capital One Financial Corp. a big credit-card issuer based in McLean, Va.; Washington Federal Savings, a thrift in Seattle that recently reported its first quarterly loss in history; and Saigon National Bank, a small bank in Southern California which targets that region's ethnic Vietnamese.

 

The latest deals total $30 billion in investment by the Treasury Department. The agency has allocated $250 billion for the program, which calls for the government to provide capital to banks in exchange for preferred stock and warrants.

 

The investments announced since the program's inception earlier this month cover more than $160 billion of the available cash.

 

BailoutSleuth compiled this list of recipients from bank press releases and local media reports. We will make it a standing feature on our site, adding names and amounts as they become available.

 

Here are the banks known to have selected for federal investments:

 

Citigroup Inc. (New York) -- $25 billion

 

JPMorgan Chase & Co. (New York) - $25 billion

 

Wells Fargo & Co. (San Francisco) -- $25 billion

 

Bank of America Corp. (Charlotte, N.C.) -- $15 billion

 

Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (New York) -- $10 billion

 

Merrill Lynch Inc. (New York) -- $10 billion

 

Morgan Stanley (New York) -- $10 billion

 

PNC Financial Services Group Inc. (Pittsburgh) -- $7.7 billion

 

Capital One Financial Corp. (McLean, Va.) -- $3.55 billion

 

Regions Financial Corp. (Birmingham, Ala.) -- $3.5 billion

 

SunTrust Banks Inc. (Atlanta) -- $3.5 billion

 

Fifth Third Bancorp (Cincinnati) -- $3.4 billion

 

BB&T Corp. (Winston-Salem, NC) -- $3.1 billion

 

Bank of New York Mellon (New York) -- $3 billion

 

Keycorp (Cleveland) -- $2.5 billion

 

Comerica Inc. (Dallas) -- $2.25 billion

 

State Street Corp. (Boston) -- $2 billion

 

Northern Trust Corp. (Chicago) -- $1.5 billion

 

Huntington Bancshares Inc. (Columbus, Ohio) -- $1.4 billion

 

First Horizon National Corp. (Memphis, Tenn.)  -- $866 million

 

City National Corp. (Beverly Hills, Calif.) -- $395 million

 

Valley National Bancorp (Wayne, N.J.) -- $330 million

 

UCBH Holdings Inc. (San Francisco) -- $298 million

 

Washington Federal Savings (Seattle) -- $200 million

 

First Niagara Financial Group Inc. (Buffalo, N.Y.)  -- $186 million

 

HF Financial Corp. (Sioux Falls, S.D.) -- $25 million

 

Saigon National Bank (Westminster, Calif.) -- $1.2 million

 

 

 

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Chris Carey, Editor
chris@bailoutsleuth.com

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