Bank Employing GOP House Leader’s Wife Got Bailout Bucks
http://www.propublica.org/article/bank-employing-gop-house-leaders-wi...
Rep. Eric Cantor (R-Va.) holds up House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's
statement while speaking to the media after the vote failed on the
bailout on Capitol Hill on Sept. 29, 2008. (Mark Wilson/Getty Images)
House Republican Whip Eric Cantor [1], a rising star in the
Republican
party, has been a prominent voice demanding accountability in how the
government doles out hundreds of billions for bank bailouts.

"I think most American taxpayers now are sort of scratching their
head," Cantor told CNN in December, "wondering when all this bailout
stuff is going to end. And probably thinking, 'You know, when is my
bailout coming?'"


This Thursday, Cantor cast a high-profile vote opposing release of
another $350 billion in bailout funds. Unpublicized until now was a
recent development: The Treasury Department used $267 million of
taxpayer funds to buy preferred stock in a private banking company
that employs Cantor's wife.


The bailout for New York Private Bank and Trust (NYPBT) [2] came
earlier this month as part of a Treasury Department program to boost
"healthy banks" with extra capital. NYPBT is the holding company for
Emigrant Bank [3], a savings bank with 35 branches in and around New
York City. Diana Cantor runs the Virginia branch of Emigrant's
wealth-
management division, called Virginia Private Bank & Trust, which
targets an ultra-rich clientele.


Rob Collins, Cantor's deputy chief of staff, said the congressman
didn't know the bank was seeking bailout money and never interceded
on
the bank's behalf with government regulators. He also said Cantor had
never intended the bailout bill to be used to buy up stock in banks.


"No one knew outside the Treasury Department, including Congressman
Cantor, how the bailout money would be used," Collins said.


A spokesman for the bank said Diana Cantor "has nothing to do with
the
operation of the main bank" and was "never aware that the parent bank
was seeking or received [bailout] funding."


Financial analysts say Emigrant is struggling and could use the
government's cash, although a spokesman for NYPBT says Emigrant is
healthy.


The Virginia Private Bank & Trust, a satellite opened this spring, is
still getting off the ground. On Thursday, when ProPublica visited
its
small Richmond office in an office park not far from the Cantors'
home, a sheet of white paper taped to the door served as its sign.
One
of the two employees there said the office had yet to serve a client
since it opened last spring. She referred further queries to the
bank's main office.


In an April interview [4] with Private Wealth magazine, NYPBT
executives said that Virginia was the first of several regional
locations planned for the bank's division concentrating on wealthy
investors. The New York branch opened in 2005, concentrating on New
York City area clients wanting to invest more than $50 million.


Diana Cantor comes to the job with many years of financial
experience.
She was hired in early 2008 after a long tenure running the Virginia
College Savings Plan. Rep. Cantor's personal financial disclosure
shows that she received a "consultant fee" from NYPBT in 2007 as
well.


House Republicans elected Cantor as whip last month, making him their
second-highest ranking member. Before that, Cantor served as chief
deputy whip, helping to round up votes for legislation. In September
and October, he, along with the Republican leadership, supported the
$700 billion Treasury rescue plan, called the Troubled Asset Relief
Program, after first pushing an alternative: a government insurance
fund supported by premiums paid by the banks.


"Let's not turn to the taxpayers,” Cantor told CNN in late September.
"Let's have the investors on Wall Street, frankly, who own these
assets pay for the premium, pay for the government guarantee, so we
can get our markets going again."


The Treasury’s initial bailout plan called for purchasing banks'
toxic
mortgage-backed securities. That changed in mid-October, becoming a
program to directly invest in the nation's banks. Since then, Cantor
and other House GOP leaders have been increasingly critical of
Treasury's handling of the bailout.


In December, Cantor signed two letters from the House Republican
leadership. The first [5] called for the CEOs of the banks receiving
bailout money to testify before Congress about how the funds had been
used. The second letter [6] warned Treasury and Federal Reserve
officials that the remainder of the bailout money wouldn't be
released
until they explained how the investment in banks was helping the
economy.


NYPBT is one of more than 250 banks to have received money through
what is called the Capital Purchase Program, a major component of the
$700 billion bailout. The money is supposed to be reserved for
"healthy banks," Treasury officials have said, but in the eyes of
analysts, NYPBT seems less than fully healthy. Last October, Fitch
Ratings downgraded Emigrant to below investment grade, pointing to
"expected recognition of losses in its investment portfolio."


Fitch analyst Ken Ritz told ProPublica that "given the litany of
banks" approved for bailout money, it "wasn’t wholly unexpected" that
NYPBT would be approved. Nevertheless, Fitch's outlook for Emigrant
remains negative.


NYPBT is one of 47 private banks to have received bailout cash so far
in exchange for preferred shares. Treasury officials have said that
thousands of banks have applied.


A spokesman for NYPBT said the bank is "one of the best run banks in
the country" and is "well-capitalized." As of Sept. 30, NYPBT did
meet
regulators' requirements to be considered "well-capitalized," a
standard of financial strength, according to data gathered by the
FDIC. The bank's spokesman said pursuing the money was simply
"prudent" given "the uncertain economic outlook."


Howard Milstein, the CEO of the bank, told the trade publication
American Banker last week that he'd been eager to get the
government's
investment -- so eager that he'd changed the bank's tax status from
an
"S corporation" to a "C corporation," because S corporations weren't
included in the initial bailout round.


"I like to get things done, because anything can happen if you wait,"
he told the magazine. "We wanted to make sure we were in a position
to
get it for sure and get it sooner." Milstein said the bank planned to
use the extra money to increase Emigrant's commercial and real-estate
lending.


Milstein was an early advocate of government support for banks that
got into trouble with subprime mortgages. In February 2008, well
before the financial crisis took hold, he penned an op-ed column for
the New York Times suggesting the government guarantee mortgages for
15 years if banks agreed to leave low "teaser" interest rates in
place.


Collins, Cantor's aide, said the fact that NYPBT had to change its
tax
designation to receive bailout money undercuts any implication that
his boss had tried to help the bank.


Keith Ashdown, chief investigator at the nonpartisan advocacy group
Taxpayers for Common Sense, said the circumstances create an
appearance problem for Cantor. "It looks very bad to the public when
a
very influential lawmaker's wife could be benefiting," he said.



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