Administration Seeks an Out On Bailout Rules
for Firms
Officials Worry Constraints Set by Congress Deter Participation

By 
<http://projects.washingtonpost.com/staff/email/amit+r.+paley+and+david+cho/>Amit
 
R. Paley and David Cho

Washington Post Staff Writers
Saturday, April 4, 2009; Page A01

The Obama administration is engineering its new bailout initiatives 
in a way that it believes will allow firms benefiting from the 
programs to avoid restrictions imposed by Congress, including limits 
on lavish executive pay, according to government officials.

Administration officials have concluded that this approach is vital 
for persuading firms to participate in programs funded by the $700 
billion financial rescue package.

The administration believes it can sidestep the rules because, in 
many cases, it has decided not to provide federal aid directly to 
financial companies, the sources said. Instead, the government has 
set up special entities that act as middlemen, channeling the bailout 
funds to the firms and, via this two-step process, stripping away the 
requirement that the restrictions be imposed, according to officials.

Although some experts are questioning the legality of this strategy, 
the officials said it gives them latitude to determine whether firms 
should be subject to the congressional restrictions, which would 
require recipients to turn over ownership stakes to the government, 
as well as curb executive pay.
The administration has decided that the conditions should not apply 
in at least three of the five initiatives funded by the rescue 
package.

This strategy has so far attracted little scrutiny on Capitol Hill, 
and even some senior congressional aides dealing with the financial 
crisis said they were unaware of the administration's efforts. Just 
two weeks ago, Congress erupted in outrage over bonuses being paid at 
American International Group, with some lawmakers faulting the 
administration for failing to do more to safeguard taxpayers' 
interests.
<http://projects.washingtonpost.com/congress/members/t000326>
Rep. Edolphus Towns (D-N.Y.), chairman of the House Oversight and 
Government Reform Committee, said the congressional conditions should 
apply to any firm benefiting from bailout funds. He said he planned 
to review the administration's decisions and might seek to undo them. 
"We have to make certain that if they are using government money in 
any sort of way, there should be restrictions," he said.

A Treasury spokesman defended the approach. "These programs are 
designed to both comply with the law and ensure taxpayers' funds are 
used most effectively to bring about economic recovery," spokesman 
Andrew Williams said.

In one program, designed to restart small-business lending, President 
Obama's officials are planning to set up a middleman called a 
special-purpose vehicle -- a term made notorious during the Enron 
scandal -- or another type of entity to evade the congressional 
mandates, sources familiar with the matter said.

In another program, which seeks to restart consumer lending, a 
special entity was created largely for the separate purpose of 
getting around legal limits on the Federal Reserve, which is helping 
fund this initiative. The Fed does not ordinarily provide support for 
the markets that finance credit cards, auto loans and student loans 
but could channel the funds through a middleman.

At first, when the initiative was being developed last year, the Bush 
administration decided to apply executive-pay limits to firms 
participating in this program. But Obama officials reversed that 
decision days before it was unveiled on March 3 and lifted the curbs, 
according to sources who spoke on condition of anonymity because the 
discussions were private.

Obama's team is also planning to exempt financial firms that 
participate in a program designed to find private investors to buy 
the distressed assets on the books of banks. But Treasury officials 
are still examining the legal basis for doing so. Congress has 
exempted the Treasury from applying the restrictions in a fourth 
program, which aids lenders who modify mortgages for struggling 
homeowners.

Congress drafted the restrictions amid its highly contentious 
consideration of the $700 billion rescue legislation last fall. At 
the time, lawmakers were aiming to reform the lavish pay practices on 
Wall Street. Congress also wanted the government to gain the right to 
buy stock in companies so that taxpayers would benefit if the firms 
recovered.

The requirements were honored in an initial program injecting public 
money directly into banks. That effort was developed by the Bush 
administration and continued by Obama's team. The initiative is on 
track to account for the bulk of the money spent from the rescue 
package. All the major banks already submit to executive-compensation 
provisions and have surrendered ownership stakes as part of this 
program.

Yet as the Treasury has readied other programs, it has increasingly 
turned to creating the special entities. Legal experts said the 
Treasury's plan to bypass the restrictions may be unlawful.

"They are basically trying to launder the money to avoid complying 
with the plain language of the law," said David Zaring, a former 
Justice Department attorney who defended the government from lawsuits 
involving related legal issues. "They are trying to create a loophole 
to ignore Congress, and I think the courts will think that it's 
ridiculous."

The federal watchdog agency overseeing the bailout is looking into 
the matter, trying to determine whether the Treasury's actions are 
legal.

Of the two major restrictions imposed by Congress in the bailout 
legislation, the limit on executive pay has been the most politically 
explosive issue.

Obama himself has called for these limits. "We've got to make certain 
that taxpayer funds are not subsidizing excessive compensation 
packages on Wall Street," he said earlier this year.

But officials at the Treasury and the Fed said they worry harsh pay 
limits will undermine critical bailout programs by discouraging 
financial firms from participating. Although many of these companies 
could survive without government help, they might lack money to ramp 
up lending, which officials consider critical to turning the economy 
around.

In private meetings with officials in both the Bush and Obama 
administrations, firms' leaders have pushed back against pay limits.

A major test of whether the Treasury would apply the congressional 
restrictions was a $1 trillion program developed last fall to revive 
consumer lending. The initiative, known as the Term Asset-Backed 
Securities Loan Facility, or TALF, will be seeded with up to $100 
billion from the financial rescue package, with the rest coming from 
the Fed.

The program set up a special entity providing low-cost loans to hedge 
funds and other private investors so they can buy securities that 
finance consumer debt from banks and other lenders. This would free 
these companies to make more loans.

When the Bush administration announced the program in November, 
officials directed the Fed to apply the pay limits to the lenders 
because they stood to benefit the most from the program. "There was a 
public hunger for executive-compensation restrictions, and we knew we 
couldn't be tone-deaf to the politics there," a former Bush 
administration official said.

In February, Obama administration officials at the White House and 
the Treasury began reviewing that decision. Treasury officials 
consulted with Department of Justice attorneys, who said they could 
legally avoid the pay restrictions, according to a government 
official. The requirements were removed just before the initiative 
was launched.

The concerns persisted as the administration crafted other 
initiatives. Some private investors said, for instance, that they 
would not help the government buy toxic assets from banks if the 
congressional restrictions were applied to them. And every major 
provider of small-business loans has said that it will not 
participate in the government's program if it has to surrender 
ownership stakes to the government or submit to executive-pay limits.


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