After months of litigation and an act of Congress, Bloomberg has an exclusive on the massive lending by the Federal Reserve to Wall Street banks during the height of the financial crisis in 2008.
On top of the $160 billion in loans from the Treasury Department, banks — including those based overseas — borrowed $669 billion from the Fed, with the Fed's peak balance at one point reaching a staggering $1.2 trillion.
According to Bloomberg, the $1.2 trillion is about the same amount as homeowners owe on 6.5 million delinquent mortgages, three-times the size of the federal deficit in 2008, and more than the total earnings of federally insured banks in the last decade.
The leaderboard (via Bloomberg):
Morgan Stanley — $107.3 billion
Citigroup — $99.5 billion
Bank of America — $91.4 billion
UBS — $77.2 billion
Goldman Sachs —$69 billion
Deutsche Bank — $66 billion
Barclays — $64.9 billion
JP Morgan Chase — $48 billion
Hypo Real Estate Holding — $28.7 billion
Societe Generale — $17.4 billion
Back to the basics of natural, unadulterated, real food as our Creator intended. Other subjects that interest us are respect of the natural world, indigenous populations and the truth. No topic too hot to handle. We present you with information to make your own decisions based on your research. If the purchasing power of $50 billion in advertising spent yearly in the US by the food and drug companies can't influence your decisions, then they intend to prevent your options. Vote With Your $$
Tuesday, August 23, 2011
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