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Geithner: Bailout Repayments Will Broaden Program

Geithner: Bailout repayments from big banks will reopen program to smaller, community banks

The Obama administration will use bailout money repaid by large banks to provide additional capital infusions to community banks, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said Wednesday.

In remarks to an association of community bankers, Geithner also said the administration is moving forward with plans to streamline financial rules as part of a broader overhaul to be unveiled in the next several weeks.

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Banks with less than $500 million in assets will have six months to apply for the funds, Geithner said. They also will be able to apply for larger amounts than banks were allowed to request during the current round of investments.

The Treasury Department has said it expects banks to repay $25 billion in government funds over the next year. Banks such as Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and JPMorgan Chase & Co. have said they want to pay back the money they've received from $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program, or TARP, as soon as possible.

While Geithner's remarks to the Independent Community Bankers of America drew applause, it's not clear how many small banks want more government aid. Many say they are healthy, don't need the money and are wary of the limits on executive compensation and other restrictions Congress has imposed on bailout recipients.

Twelve smaller banks have returned almost $1.2 billion in government funds so far. More than 570 banks have received about $198 billion in TARP funds.

The administration first indicated that the repaid funds would be used for further injections earlier this month when regulators announced the results of the "stress tests" conducted on the nation's 19 largest banks. Those tests found that 10 of the banks, including Bank of America Corp. and Citigroup Inc., needed to raise additional capital to survive a worsening recession.

Several members of Congress, including Rep. Brad Sherman, D-Calif., contend that the law creating the TARP doesn't allow the money to be invested a second time. Instead, repayments should be used to reduce the national debt, they say.

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