U.S. bailout watchdog vows to scrutinize share buybacks,
dividends
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[April 18, 2020] By
Pete Schroeder
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - An official charged
with overseeing how the U.S. government handles $500 billion in bailout
funds said on Friday he will also monitor how companies use the cash,
including for share buybacks, dividends and staff compensation.
Bharat Ramamurti, who was named this month as a member of the
Congressional Oversight Commission to regulate relief programs
administered by the Federal Reserve, said one of his overarching goals
was to ensure American workers were protected.
"One of the major tools that Congress came up with for addressing the
crisis was this pot of money for the Fed and the Treasury to use,"
Ramamurti, a former top aide to Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren,
told Reuters in an interview. It’s really important that they use it
wisely...so the benefits flow to working people."
In response to the economic halt brought on by tight restrictions on
businesses and social gatherings to stem the coronavirus pandemic,
Congress created a $500 billion Treasury fund that will underpin up to
$4.5 trillion of Fed loans to businesses, states and cities in need of
financing.
This month, the Fed announced it was offering up to $2.3 trillion
initially through five different lending facilities.
Ramamurti has raised concerns about those programs, arguing the Fed and
Treasury should have required companies to submit to more restrictions
in return for taxpayer-backed loans.
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The U.S. Capitol during a morning rainstorm, after Congress agreed
to a multi-trillion dollar economic stimulus package created in
response to the economic fallout from the COVID-19 Coronavirus, on
Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., March 25, 2020. REUTERS/Tom
Brenner/File Photo
In a letter to the Fed and Treasury on Wednesday, he demanded that the agencies
make public "detailed and timely" information about which companies have
received assistance through the programs. On Friday, the New York Fed said it
would publicly disclose information, including participants and loan amounts,
for its two corporate lending facilities.
Ramamurti said that once he receives that data, he plans to request information
from companies on how they have used the funds, a pledge that could make life
uncomfortable for some companies that may have used the cash to reward
shareholders and management, rather than workers.
"What did those companies do after they got taxpayer-backed lending? Did they
keep workers on payroll? Did they fire workers but pay out full executive
bonuses? Did they continue to issue dividends and engage in stock buybacks?"
Ramamurti said.
The panel does not have the legal power to compel answers, but it is charged
with producing regular reports on the lending programs and can call people to
testify before Congress. If necessary, Ramamurti said his panel could ask other
oversight committees to use their subpoena power on its behalf.
On Friday, Representative French Hill, a Republican, was the second person to be
named to the five-member panel.
(Reporting by Pete Schroeder; Editing by Leslie Adler)
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