Trump's Fed nominee has
history of benefiting from bailouts
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[July 13, 2017]
By Olivia Oran and Pete Schroeder
(Reuters) - President Donald Trump's pick
to lead bank supervision at the Federal Reserve benefited from the
government bailing out or rescuing two banks during the 2008 financial
crisis, but that may not prevent his confirmation by a U.S. Senate
controlled by a business-friendly Republican party, policy analysts told
Reuters in recent days.
Randal Quarles, a former Wall Street lawyer and U.S. Treasury official
who now runs an investment firm, was part of a team that invested in
troubled or failed banks while he was an executive at private-equity
firm Carlyle Group LP <CG.O>. Those investments earned hundreds of
millions of dollars for Carlyle, profits that would not have been
possible without government support.
A spokesman for Quarles did not respond to a request for comment. A
spokesman for Carlyle declined to comment.
Democrats including Ohio Senator Sherrod Brown have said they intend to
scrutinize Quarles' ties to Wall Street during his confirmation hearing.
Senator Elizabeth Warren described him as "straight off the Wall Street
assembly line" in announcing her opposition in a statement.
But both the White House and Congress are controlled by Republicans, who
have the ability to approve Trump's nominees with a simple majority
after Senate rules were changed in 2013. Under previous rules, the party
in power would have needed at least 60 votes.
Quarles is viewed by many policy analysts as a business-friendly pick
who benefits from having experience in the federal government and his
business ties are unlikely to be viewed by senior senators his Wall
Street ties as a handicap.
"Profiting in the markets isn't a scarlet letter in this Congress," said
Isaac Boltansky, director of policy research at Compass Point Trading &
Research LLC, in Washington.
Before launching The Cynosure Group in 2014, Quarles was a partner and
managing director at Carlyle.
While there, he played a key role in making a $75 million investment in
Boston Private Financial Holdings Inc <BPFH.O>, and was also part of a
group that decided to jointly acquire failed lender BankUnited Inc from
the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp (FDIC), alongside private equity
peers Blackstone Group LP, Centerbridge Partners LP and WL Ross & Co, as
well as banker John Kanas.
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Randal Quarles in New York, July 19, 2006. REUTERS/Keith Bedford
Months after Carlyle's equity infusion, Boston Private received a $150 million
bailout from the Treasury Department, which it later repaid. Those taxpayer
funds helped the firm weather the financial crisis, and allowed Carlyle to sell
off its stake over time for a total of $150 million, effectively doubling its
money, according to a Reuters review of share sales the firm disclosed in
regulatory filings.
The FDIC had absorbed BankUnited's losses at an estimated cost of $4.9 billion
before selling healthier assets to the private equity consortium for $945
million. BankUnited later went public, with Carlyle selling shares worth around
$428 million in portions through 2014, according to Reuters' analysis of its
disclosures.
The tallies do not account for dividends or other undisclosed costs. Carlyle
would not provide precise numbers for returns on those investments.
Involvement with taxpayer bailouts helped sink the earlier nomination of General
Electric Co executive David Nason for the Federal Reserve supervisory
position. Nason withdrew from vetting after Republicans criticized him for
having structured the bailout program inside the Treasury Department during the
Bush administration.
But Wilbur Ross, whose WL Ross & Co was part of the consortium that invested in
BankUnited alongside Carlyle, successfully became U.S. Commerce Secretary.
Quarles' history on Wall Street may be a talking point during his confirmation
hearings, but it is unlikely to bring down his nomination, lobbyists and
financial regulatory lawyers said.
"At the end of the day, it's really a 'nothingburger,'" said Bob Kurucza, a
partner in Goodwin Procter's financial industry and investment management
practice.
(Reporting by Olivia Oran in New York and Pete Schroeder in Washington; Editing
by Lauren Tara LaCapra)
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