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United States Government Accountability Office

GAO

Report to Congressional Committees

October 2010

TROUBLED ASSET
RELIEF PROGRAM

Opportunities Exist to
Apply Lessons
Learned from the
Capital Purchase
Program to Similarly
Designed Programs
and to Improve the
Repayment Process

GAO-11-47

October 2010

TROUBLED ASSET RELIEF PROGRAM
Accountability • Integrity • Reliability

Opportunities Exist to Apply Lessons Learned from
the Capital Purchase Program to Similarly Designed
Programs and to Improve the Repayment Process
Highlights of GAO-11-47, a report to
congressional committees

Why GAO Did This Study

What GAO Found

Congress created the Troubled Asset
Relief Program (TARP) to restore
liquidity and stability in the financial
system. The Department of the
Treasury (Treasury), among other
actions, established the Capital
Purchase Program (CPP) as its
primary initiative to accomplish these
goals by making capital investments in
eligible financial institutions. This
report examines (1) the
characteristics of financial institutions
that received CPP funding and (2)
how Treasury implemented CPP with
the assistance of federal bank
regulators. GAO analyzed data
obtained from Treasury case files,
reviewed program documents, and
interviewed officials from Treasury
and federal bank regulators.

Institutions that received capital under CPP were diverse and generally
exceeded eligibility guidelines, and while few institutions have failed, concerns
remain about the growing numbers of institutions facing difficulties in paying
dividend and interest payments to Treasury. Institutions that participated in
CPP included roughly equal numbers of public and private firms of all sizes that
were located throughout the country (see figure on next page). About half of
CPP institutions that we reviewed were small—that is, had less than $500
million in risk-weighted assets. However, 25 of the largest firms received almost
90 percent of all CPP funds, and 9 of those comprised almost 70 percent of all
funds. Approved institutions had similar overall examination ratings from their
regulators and generally were rated as satisfactory. For example, almost all of
the institutions we reviewed had an overall examination rating that was
satisfactory or better. Many of the examination ratings were over 1 year old, but
Treasury and regulatory officials said they took various actions to mitigate any
limitations related to older examination results, including using preliminary
ratings from ongoing bank examinations. Financial performance ratios that
Treasury and regulators also used to evaluate CPP applicants—such as riskbased capital and nonperforming loan ratios—varied by institution but typically
were well within guidelines as defined by Treasury and regulatory capital
standards. Institutions generally were well above the minimum levels of
regulatory capital. However, we identified 66 institutions—12 percent of the
firms we reviewed—that exhibited weaker financial conditions relative to those
of other approved institutions, and Treasury or regulators raised concerns
about the viability of a few of these institutions. For almost all of these weaker
firms, Treasury or regulators identified factors—such as management quality or
substantial capital levels—that mitigated the weaknesses and provided
additional support for the approval of the CPP investment. Four CPP
institutions have failed, but the number of firms exhibiting signs of financial
difficulty—such as missing their dividend or interest payments—has increased
over time. Specifically, the number of institutions that have not made a
scheduled dividend or interest payment has increased from 8 for payments due
in February 2009 to 123 for payments due in August 2010. Over this period, a
total of 144 institutions did not make at least one payment by the end of the
reporting period in which they were due, for a total of 413 missed payments. As
of August 31, 2010, 79 institutions had missed three or more payments and 24
had missed five or more. Through August 31, 2010, the total amount of missed
dividend and interest payments was $235 million, although some institutions
made their payments after the end of the reporting period.

What GAO Recommends
If Treasury administers programs
containing elements similar to those
of CPP, Treasury should implement a
process for monitoring all applicants
that regulators recommend for
withdrawal to ensure that similar
applicants are treated equitably. To
improve monitoring of regulators’
decisions on CPP repayments,
Treasury should periodically collect
and review information on the
analysis supporting regulators’
decisions and provide feedback for
regulators’ consideration on the
extent to which they are evaluating
similar institutions consistently.
Treasury agreed to consider our
recommendations. We also received
technical comments from the Federal
Reserve, FDIC, OCC, and Treasury
and incorporated them as
appropriate.
View GAO-11-47 or key components.
For more information, contact Orice Williams
Brown at (202) 512-8678 or
williamso@gao.gov.

The process Treasury established to invest in financial institutions included
internal control procedures for approved applicants that enhanced
consistency, but regulators’ recommendations for application withdrawals
and investment repayments received less oversight. Treasury relied on
individual bank regulators to recommend applicants that it would consider for
CPP investments and provided regulators with limited formal guidance on the
factors to consider in evaluating the applicants. Because of the limited nature
United States Government Accountability Office

small businesses through capital investments in
certain financial institutions. Unless Treasury makes
changes from the CPP model to include monitoring of
withdrawal recommendations, such new programs
may share the same increased risk of participants not
being treated equitably. Treasury is required by statute
to allow recipients to repay, subject to consultation
with the federal banking regulators, but as with
withdrawal recommendations, Treasury does not
monitor or collect information or analysis supporting
the regulators’ decisions. Regulators said that they
evaluate repayment requests based on their
supervisory guidelines for capital reductions. Also, in
the absence of monitoring by Treasury, regulators
have developed generally similar guidelines for
evaluating repayment requests and established
processes for coordinating repayment decisions that
involve multiple regulators. However, without
collecting information on or monitoring different
regulators’ repayment decisions, Treasury has no basis
for determining whether regulators evaluate similar
institutions consistently and cannot provide feedback
to regulators on the consistency of their decision
making.

of Treasury’s guidance, regulators used discretion and
judgment in their assessments, which created the
potential for inconsistency across regulators.
Applicants that regulators recommended for approval
received additional reviews as they moved through
Treasury’s process. For some, this included a review
by a council of regulators and all recommended
applicants were reviewed by Treasury. These reviews
promoted a more consistent evaluation of
recommendations made by different regulators.
However, regulators recommended that some
applicants withdraw their applications and these
institutions may not have benefited from the
additional reviews if they withdrew their applications
before reaching the council or Treasury. Furthermore,
the regional offices of some regulators could—and
did—recommend that applicants withdraw without
centralized review within the agency. Because
Treasury did not monitor which institutions regulators
excluded from its program, or the reasons for their
decisions, it could not fully ensure that regulators
treated similar applicants consistently. Limited
oversight of withdrawal recommendations also may
pose challenges to any future Treasury program that
may follow the CPP model, such as the Small Business
Lending Fund—an initiative to increase credit for

Number of Participants and Amount of CPP Investments, by State, December 29, 2009

Number of firms participating in CPP
1

17
4
0

3
0 6

18
4
4

21

2
2

1

17

2

45

19

17

1

3
CPP funds (dollars in billions)
disbursed by state
80

4
12

72

32

17

70
4

3

31
20

12
14

30

3

12

60
50

2

26

24
5

7

19

31

9

9

11

25

11

11

26

13

40
23

30
20

2

10
0
NY NC CA PA OH MN GA IL VA CT AL TX WI MA UT PR TN WA MO MI IN SC NJ LA MS MD DE FL AR OR CO KY IA NV KS HI WV OK ND ID ME NM NE NH SD RI WY AZ DC AK

0 CPP participants

1 to 10

11 to 20

21 to 30

More than 30

Sources: GAO analysis of OFS data: Map Resources (map).

United States Government Accountability Office

Contents

Letter

1
Background
CPP Institutions Were Diverse and with Some Exceptions Met CPP
Guidelines, but More Institutions Are Showing Signs of Financial
Difficulties
While Treasury’s Processes Included Multiple Reviews of
Approved CPP Applicants, Certain Operational Control
Weaknesses Offer Lessons Learned for Similarly Designed
Programs
Conclusions
Recommendations for Executive Action
Agency Comments and Our Evaluation

25
39
41
41

Appendix I

Objectives, Scope, and Methodology

46

Appendix II

Information on Processing Times for the Capital
Purchase Program

49

Comments from the Department of the Treasury’s
Office of Financial Stability

51

GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments

53

Appendix III

Appendix IV

4

8

Tables
Table 1: Number of Institutions Participating in CPP That
Exhibited Weak Characteristics Prior to Approval
Table 2: Mitigating Factors for Viability Concerns Identified by
Regulators or Treasury
Table 3: Withdrawals by CPP Applicants before Submission to CPP
Council or Treasury as of December 31, 2009
Table 4: Repayment Requests as of August 2010

Page i

18
21
31
35

GAO-11-47 Troubled Asset Relief Program

Figures
Figure 1: Process for Accepting and Approving CPP Applications
Figure 2: Number of Participants and Amount of CPP Investments
by State as of December 31, 2009
Figure 3: CAMELS Overall and Component Ratings Used to
Evaluate CPP Institutions Funded through April 30, 2009
Figure 4: Bank or Thrift and Holding Company Performance Ratios
Used to Evaluate CPP Institutions Funded through April
30, 2009
Figure 5: Investment Repayment Process for CPP

6
9
12

16
35

Abbreviations
ALLL
ARRA
CAMELS
CDCI
CPP
CRA
EESA
NCUA
OCC
OFS
OREO
OTS
PFR
QFI
RWA
SBLF
SCAP
SIGTARP
TARP

allowance for loan and lease losses
American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009
capital, asset quality, management, earnings, liquidity, and
sensitivity to market risk
Community Development Capital Initiative
Capital Purchase Program
Community Reinvestment Act
Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008
National Credit Union Administration
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
Office of Financial Stability
other real estate owned
Office of Thrift Supervision
primary federal regulator
qualified financial institution
risk-weighted assets
Small Business Lending Fund
Supervisory Capital Assessment Program
Office of the Special Inspector General for TARP
Troubled Asset Relief Program

This is a work of the U.S. government and is not subject to copyright protection in the
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Page ii

GAO-11-47 Troubled Asset Relief Program

United States Government Accountability Office
Washington, DC 20548

October 4, 2010
Congressional Committees
From October 2008 through December 2009, the U.S. Department of the
Treasury (Treasury) invested over $200 billion in over 700 financial
institutions as part of government efforts to stabilize U.S. financial
markets and the economy. 1 These investments were made through the
Capital Purchase Program (CPP), which was the initial and largest
initiative under the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP). 2 Specifically,
Treasury’s authority under TARP enabled it to buy or guarantee up to
almost $700 billion of the “troubled assets” that were deemed to be at the
heart of the crisis, including mortgages and mortgage-based securities, and
any other financial instrument Treasury determined it needed to purchase
to help stabilize the financial system, including equities. 3 Treasury created
CPP in October 2008 to provide capital to viable financial institutions
through the purchase of preferred shares and subordinated debt. In return
for its investments, Treasury would receive dividend or interest payments
and warrants. 4 The program was closed to new investments on December
31, 2009, after Treasury had invested a total of $205 billion in 707 financial
institutions over the life of the program. Since then, Treasury has
continued to oversee its investments and collect dividend and interest
payments. Some participants have repurchased their preferred shares or

1

Other government efforts to stabilize the financial system included Treasury’s Targeted
Investment Program, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation’s Temporary Liquidity
Guarantee Program and the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System’s Term
Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility and emergency lending programs such as the
Commercial Paper Funding Facility, the Primary Dealer Credit Facility, and the Term
Securities Lending Facility.
2

As authorized by the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008 (EESA), Pub. L. No.
110-343, 122 Stat. 3765 (2008), codified at 12 U.S.C. §§ 5201 et seq. EESA was signed into
law on October 3, 2008 to help stem the worst financial crisis since the 1930s. EESA
established the Office of Financial Stability within Treasury and provided it with broad,
flexible authorities to buy or guarantee troubled mortgage-related assets or any other
financial instruments necessary to stabilize the financial markets.
3

Section 3(9) of the act, 12 U.S.C. § 5202(9). The act requires that the appropriate
committees of Congress be notified in writing that the Secretary of the Treasury, after
consultation with the Federal Reserve Chairman, has determined that it is necessary to
purchase other financial instruments to promote financial market stability.

4

A warrant is an option to buy shares of common stock or preferred stock at a
predetermined price on or before a specified date.

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GAO-11-47 Troubled Asset Relief Program

subordinated debt and left the program with the approval of their primary
bank regulators.
Treasury has stated that it used CPP investments to strengthen financial
institutions’ capital levels rather than the purchases of troubled mortgagebacked securities and whole loans as initially envisioned under TARP
because it saw these investments as a more effective mechanism to
stabilize financial markets, encourage interbank lending, and increase
confidence in lenders and investors. Treasury envisioned that the
strengthened capital positions of viable financial institutions would
enhance confidence in the institutions themselves and the financial system
overall and increase the institutions’ capacity to undertake new lending
and support the economy. Financial institutions interested in receiving
CPP investments sent their applications directly to their primary federal
banking regulators, which did the initial evaluations. Institutions were
evaluated to determine their long-term strength and viability, and weaker
institutions were encouraged by their regulators to withdraw their
applications. The regulators provided Treasury’s Office of Financial
Stability (OFS) with recommendations approving or denying applications.
OFS made the final decisions.
This report is based upon our continuing analysis and monitoring of
Treasury’s process for implementing the Emergency Economic
Stabilization Act of 2008, (EESA), which provided GAO with broad
oversight authorities for actions taken under TARP and requires that we
report at least every 60 days on TARP activities and performance. 5 To
fulfill our statutorily mandated responsibilities, we have been monitoring
and providing updates on TARP programs, including CPP, in several
reports. This report expands on the previous work. 6 Its objectives are to
(1) describe the characteristics of financial institutions that received CPP

5

Section 116 of EESA, 122 Stat. at 3783 (codified at U.S.C. § 5226).

6

See GAO, Troubled Asset Relief Program: Additional Actions Needed to Better Ensure
Integrity, Accountability, and Transparency, GAO-09-161 (Washington, D.C.: Dec. 2,
2008); Troubled Asset Relief Program: Status of Efforts to Address Transparency and
Accountability Issues, GAO-09-296 (Washington, D.C.: Jan. 30, 2009); Troubled Asset Relief
Program: March 2009 Status of Efforts to Address Transparency and Accountability
Issues, GAO-09-504 (Washington, D.C.: Mar. 31, 2009); Troubled Asset Relief Program:
June 2009 Status of Efforts to Address Transparency and Accountability Issues,
GAO-09-658 (Washington, D.C.: Jun. 17, 2009); and Troubled Asset Relief Program: One
Year Later, Actions Are Needed to Address Remaining Transparency and Accountability
Challenges, GAO-10-16 (Washington, D.C.: Oct. 8, 2009).

Page 2

GAO-11-47 Troubled Asset Relief Program

funding, and (2) assess how Treasury, with the assistance of federal bank
regulators, implemented CPP.
To meet the report’s objectives, we reviewed Treasury’s case files for CPP
institutions that were funded through April 30, 2009, and other supporting
documentation such as records of meetings and transaction reports. We
collected and analyzed information from the case files, including data on the
characteristics of institutions that participated in CPP, such as risk-weighted
assets, examination ratings, and selected financial ratios.7 We also gathered
information on the process that Treasury and regulators used to evaluate CPP
applications. We reviewed program documents and interviewed officials from
OFS who were responsible for processing applications and repayment
requests to obtain their views on CPP implementation. Additionally, we
interviewed officials from the four federal banking regulators—the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), the Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency (OCC), the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
(Federal Reserve), and the Office of Thrift Supervision (OTS)—to obtain
information on their process for reviewing CPP applications and repayment
requests. Further, we collected and reviewed program documents from the
bank regulators, including their policies and procedures, guidance
documents, and analysis summaries. Finally, we reviewed relevant laws (e.g.,
EESA) as well as relevant reports by GAO, the Office of the Special Inspector
General for TARP (SIGTARP), the FDIC Office of Inspector General, and the
Federal Reserve Office of Inspector General. This report is part of our
coordinated work with SIGTARP and the inspectors general of the federal
banking agencies to oversee TARP and CPP. The offices of the inspectors
general of FDIC, Federal Reserve, and Treasury and SIGTARP have all
completed work or have work under way at their respective agencies
reviewing CPP’s implementation. In coordination with the other oversight
agencies and offices and to avoid duplication, we primarily focused our audit
work (including our review of agency case files) on the phases of the CPP
process from the point at which the regulators transmitted their
recommendations to Treasury.
We conducted this performance audit from May 2009 to September 2010 in
accordance with generally accepted government auditing standards. Those
standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain sufficient,

7
Risk-weighted assets are the total assets and off-balance-sheet items held by an institution
that are weighted for risk according to the federal banking agencies’ regulatory capital
standards.

Page 3

GAO-11-47 Troubled Asset Relief Program

appropriate evidence to provide a reasonable basis for our findings and
conclusions based on our audit objectives. We believe that the evidence
obtained provides a reasonable basis for our findings and conclusions
based on our audit objectives.

Background

CPP was the primary initiative under TARP for stabilizing the financial
markets and banking system. Treasury created the program in October 2008
to stabilize the financial system by providing capital on a voluntary basis to
qualifying regulated financial institutions through the purchase of senior
preferred shares and subordinated debt. 8 On October 14, 2008, Treasury
allocated $250 billion of the $700 billion in overall TARP funds for CPP but
adjusted its allocation to $218 billion in March 2009 to reflect lower
estimated funding needs based on actual participation and the expectation
that institutions would repay their investments. The program was closed to
new investments on December 31, 2009, and, in total, Treasury invested
$205 billion in 707 financial institutions over the life of the program.
Through June 30, 2010, 83 institutions had repaid about $147 billion in CPP
investments, including 76 institutions that repaid their investments in full.
Under CPP, qualified financial institutions were eligible to receive an
investment of between 1 and 3 percent of their risk-weighted assets, up to
a maximum of $25 billion. 9 In exchange for the investment, Treasury
generally received shares of senior preferred stock that were due to pay
dividends at a rate of 5 percent annually for the first 5 years and 9 percent
annually thereafter. 10 In addition to the dividend payments, EESA required
the inclusion of warrants to purchase shares of common stock or
preferred stock, or a senior debt instrument to give taxpayers additional
protection against losses and an additional potential return on the
investments. Institutions are allowed to repay CPP investments with the
approval of their primary federal bank regulators and afterward to
repurchase warrants at fair market value.

8

For purposes of CPP, qualifying financial institutions generally include stand-alone U.S.controlled banks and savings associations, as well as bank holding companies and most
savings and loan holding companies.
9

In May 2009, Treasury increased the maximum amount of CPP funding that small financial
institutions (qualifying financial institutions with total assets less than $500 million) may
receive from 3 percent of risk-weighted assets to 5 percent of risk-weighted assets.
10

For certain types of institutions known as S corporations, Treasury received subordinated
debt rather than preferred shares to preserve these institutions’ special tax status.

Page 4

GAO-11-47 Troubled Asset Relief Program

While this was Treasury’s program, the federal bank regulators played a
key role in the CPP application and approval process. The federal banking
agencies that were responsible for receiving and reviewing CPP
applications and recommending approval or denial were the
•

Federal Reserve, which supervises and regulates banks authorized to do
business under state charters and that are members of the Federal Reserve
System, as well as bank and financial holding companies; 11

•

FDIC, which provides primary federal oversight of any state-chartered
banks insured by FDIC that are not members of the Federal Reserve
System;

•

OCC, which is responsible for chartering, regulating, and supervising
commercial banks with national charters; and

•

OTS, which charters federal savings associations (thrifts) and regulates
and supervises federal and state thrifts and savings and loan holding
companies. 12
Treasury, in consultation with the federal banking regulators, developed a
standardized framework for processing applications and disbursing CPP
funds. Treasury encouraged financial institutions that were considering
applying to CPP to consult with their primary federal bank regulators. 13 The
bank regulators also had an extensive role in reviewing the applications of
financial institutions applying for CPP and making recommendations to
Treasury. Eligibility for CPP funds was based on the regulator’s assessment
of the applicant’s strength and viability, as measured by factors such as
examination ratings, financial performance ratios, and other mitigating
factors, without taking into account the potential impact of TARP funds.
Institutions deemed to be the strongest, such as those with the highest
examination ratings, received presumptive approval from the banking

11
Bank holding companies are entities that own or control one or more U.S. commercial
banks. Financial holding companies are a subset of bank holding companies that may
engage in a wider range of activities.
12

The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, Pub. L. No. 111-203,
Title III, 124 Stat. 1376, 1520 (2010), includes provisions to abolish OTS and allocate its
functions among the Federal Reserve, OCC, and FDIC.

13
The primary federal regulator is generally the regulator overseeing the lead bank of the
institution. Where the institution is owned by a bank holding company, the primary federal
regulator also consults with the Federal Reserve.

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GAO-11-47 Troubled Asset Relief Program

regulators, and their applications were forwarded to Treasury. Institutions
with lower examination ratings or other concerns that required further
review were referred to the interagency CPP Council, which was composed
of representatives from the four banking regulators, with Treasury officials
as observers. The CPP Council evaluated and voted on the applicants, and
applications from institutions that received “approval” recommendations
from a majority of the regulatory representatives were forwarded to
Treasury. Treasury provided guidance to regulators and the CPP Council to
use in assessing applicants that permitted consideration of factors such as
signed merger agreements or confirmed investments of private capital,
among other things, to offset low examination ratings or other weak
attributes. Finally, institutions that the banking regulators determined to be
the weakest and ineligible for a CPP investment, such as those with the
lowest examination ratings, were to receive a presumptive denial
recommendation. Figure 1 provides an overview of the process for
assessing and approving CPP applications.
Figure 1: Process for Accepting and Approving CPP Applications
Intake

Evaluation
B

Presumptive approval recommendation

Application
reviewed
and decision
deral Re
e
F
g memo sent
y
Federal
Reserve
OCC
FDIC
OTS

C
Final
decision made

ato
ul

Application
submitted
to one of
the PFRs

rs

Prim
ar

A

Final decisions

Qualified
Financial
Institution
(QFI)

Recommendation

Assistant
Investment
Secretary
Committee
for Financial
(Treasury Recommendation Stability,
officials)
Treasury
APPROVE / DENY

Capital Purchase
Program Council

Presumptive
denial
recommendation
Stages where follow-up and/or reconsideration are possible. QFIs may contact regulators informally to inquire
about their chances of getting recommended for approval. Treasury may encourage QFIs to withdraw applications before they are denied.
CPP Council is made up of representatives from the primary federal regulators (PFR), with Treasury officials as observers

Sources: GAO analysis; Treasury; Art Explosion (images).

Note: If the applicant was a bank holding company, an application was submitted to both the
applicant’s holding company regulator and the regulator of the largest insured depository institution
controlled by the applicant.

Page 6

GAO-11-47 Troubled Asset Relief Program

The banking regulator or the CPP Council sent approval recommendations
to Treasury’s Investment Committee, which comprised three to five senior
Treasury officials, including OFS’s chief investment officer (who served as
the committee chair) and the assistant secretaries for financial markets,
economic policy, financial institutions, and financial stability at Treasury.
After receiving recommended applications from regulators or the CPP
Council, OFS reviewed documentation supporting the regulators’
recommendations but often collected additional information from
regulators and the council before submitting applications to the
Investment Committee. The Investment Committee could also request
additional analysis or information in order to clear any concerns before
deciding on an applicant’s eligibility. After completing its review, the
Investment Committee made recommendations to the Assistant Secretary
for Financial Stability for final approval. Once the Investment Committee
recommended preliminary approval, Treasury and the approved institution
initiated the closing process to complete the legal aspects of the
investment and disburse the CPP funds.
At the time of the program’s announced establishment, nine major
financial institutions were initially included in CPP. 14 While these
institutions did not follow the application process that was ultimately
developed, Treasury included these institutions because federal banking
regulators and Treasury considered them to be essential to the operation
of the financial system, which at the time had effectively ceased to
function. At the time, these nine institutions held about 55 percent of U.S.
banking assets and provided a variety of services, including retail and
wholesale banking, investment banking, and custodial and processing
services. According to Treasury officials, the nine financial institutions
agreed to participate in CPP in part to signal the importance of the
program to the stability of the financial system. Initially, Treasury
approved $125 billion in capital purchases for these institutions and
completed the transactions with eight of them on October 28, 2008, for a
total of $115 billion. The remaining $10 billion was disbursed after the
merger of Bank of America Corporation and Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc., was
completed in January 2009.

14

The nine major financial institutions were Bank of America Corporation; Citigroup, Inc.;
JPMorgan Chase & Co.; Wells Fargo & Company; Morgan Stanley; The Goldman Sachs
Group, Inc.; The Bank of New York Mellon Corporation; State Street Corporation; and
Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc.

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GAO-11-47 Troubled Asset Relief Program

CPP Institutions Were
Diverse and with
Some Exceptions Met
CPP Guidelines, but
More Institutions Are
Showing Signs of
Financial Difficulties

The institutions that received CPP capital investments varied in terms of
ownership type, location, and size. The 707 institutions that received CPP
investments were split almost evenly between publicly held and privately
held institutions, with slightly more private firms. 15 They included statechartered and national banks and U.S. bank holding companies located in
48 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico (see fig. 2). Most states
had fewer than 20 CPP firms, but 13 states had 20 or more. California had
the most, with 72, followed by Illinois (45), Missouri (32), North Carolina
(31), and Pennsylvania (31). Montana and Vermont were the only 2 states
that did not have institutions that participated in CPP.

15
Under CPP program guidelines, a public institution is a company (1) whose securities are
traded on a national securities exchange and (2) that is required to file, under the federal
securities laws, periodic reports such as the annual and quarterly reports with either the
Securities and Exchange Commission or a primary federal bank regulator. A privately held
institution is a company that does not meet the definition of a public institution.
Institutions traded in over-the-counter markets had the option to participate under the
terms for private institutions.

Page 8

GAO-11-47 Troubled Asset Relief Program

Figure 2: Number of Participants and Amount of CPP Investments by State as of December 31, 2009

Number of firms participating in CPP
1

17
4
0

3
0 6

18
4
4

21

2
2

1

17

2

45

19

17

1

3
CPP funds (dollars in billions)
disbursed by state
80

4
12

72

32

17

70

4

3

12
31
20

12
14

60

30

3

26

24
5

2

7

19

31

9

9

11

25

11

11

26

13

50

23

40
30

2
20
10
0

NY NC CA PA OH MN GA IL VA CT AL TX WI MA UT PR TN WA MO MI IN SC NJ LA MS MD DE FL AR OR CO KY IA NV KS HI WV OK ND ID ME NM NE NH SD RI WY AZ DC AK

0 CPP participants
1 to 10
11 to 20
21 to 30
More than 30
Source: GAO analysis of OFS data: Map Resources (map.

The total amount of CPP funds disbursed to institutions also varied by
state. The amount of CPP funds invested in institutions in most states was
less than $500 million, but institutions in 17 states received more than $1
billion each. Institutions in states that serve as financial services centers

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GAO-11-47 Troubled Asset Relief Program

such as New York and North Carolina received the most CPP funds. 16 The
median amount of CPP funds invested in institutions by state was $464
million.
The size of CPP institutions also varied widely. The risk-weighted assets of
firms we reviewed that were funded through April 30, 2009, ranged from
$10 million to $1.4 trillion. 17 However, most of the institutions were
relatively small. For example, about half of the firms that we reviewed had
risk-weighted assets of less than $500 million, and almost 70 percent had
less than $1 billion. Only 30 percent were medium to large institutions
(more than $1 billion in risk-weighted assets). Because the investment
amount was tied to the firm’s risk-weighted assets, the amount that firms
received ranged widely, from about $300,000 to $25 billion. The average
investment amount for all of the 707 CPP participants was $290 million,
although half of the institutions received less than $11 million. The 25
largest institutions received almost 90 percent of the total amount of CPP
investments, and 9 of these firms received almost 70 percent of the funds.

Regulatory Examinations
Found That the Financial
Condition of Most CPP
Institutions Was At Least
Satisfactory

The characteristics Treasury and regulators used to evaluate applicants
indicated that approved institutions had bank or thrift examination ratings
that generally were satisfactory, or within CPP guidelines. 18 Treasury and
regulators used various measures of institutional strength and financial
condition to evaluate applicants. These included supervisory examination
ratings and financial performance ratios assessing an applicant’s capital

16
The top 5 states receiving the most CPP investments were New York ($80,194,291,000),
North Carolina ($28,695,010,000), California ($27,667,578,000), Pennsylvania
($9,848,886,000), and Ohio ($7,840,580,000). The states receiving the least amount of CPP
investments were Alaska ($4,781,000), the District of Columbia ($6,000,000), Arizona
($8,047,000), Wyoming ($8,100,000), and Rhode Island ($31,065,000).
17

The dates of the risk-weighted assets were from 2008, although dates were not available
for 161 of the 567 firms we reviewed.

18

FDIC was the primary regulator for most of the institutions that participated in CPP—424
firms, or 60 percent of those we reviewed. The Federal Reserve was the primary regulator
for 112 firms, or 16 percent; OCC was the primary regulator for 116, or 16 percent; and OTS
for 55, or 8 percent.

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adequacy and asset quality. 19 While some examination results were more
than a year old, regulatory officials told us that they had taken steps to
mitigate the effect of these older ratings, such as collecting updated
information.

Examination Ratings

Almost all of the 567 institutions we reviewed had overall examination
ratings for their largest bank or thrift that were satisfactory or better (see
fig. 3). 20 The CAMELS ratings range from 1 to 5, with 1 indicating a firm
that is sound in every respect, 2 denoting an institution that is
fundamentally sound, and 3 or above indicating some degree of
supervisory concern. Of the CPP firms that we reviewed, 82 percent had
an overall rating of 2 from their most recent examination before applying
to CPP, and an additional 11 percent had the strongest rating. Seven
percent had an overall rating of 3 and no firms had a weaker rating. We
also found relatively small differences in overall examination ratings for
institutions by size or ownership type. For example, institutions that were
above and below the median risk-weighted assets of $472 million both had
average overall ratings of about 2. Also, public and private firms both had
average overall examination ratings of about 2.
Bank or thrift examination ratings for individual components—such as
asset quality and liquidity—exhibited similar trends. In particular, each of
the individual components had an average rating of around 2. Institutions
tended to have weaker ratings for the earnings component, which had an
average of 2.2, than for the other components, which averaged between 1.8
and 1.9. Public and private institutions exhibited similar results for the
average component ratings, although private institutions tended to have
stronger ratings on all components except for earnings and sensitivity to

19

The federal banking agencies assign a supervisory rating when they conduct examinations
of a bank or thrift’s safety and soundness. The numerical ratings range from 1 to 5, with 1
being the strongest and 5 the weakest. The ratings—referred to as CAMELS—assess six
components of an institution’s financial health: capital, asset quality, management,
earnings, liquidity, and sensitivity to market risk. Treasury instructed regulators to consider
CAMELS ratings, among other indicators, in making approval recommendations. Treasury
and regulators also identified six performance ratios for evaluating applicants. Three of the
ratios related to regulatory capital levels—Tier 1 risk-based capital ratio, total risk-based
capital ratio, and Tier 1 leverage ratio. The other three ratios measured certain classes of
assets—including classified assets, nonperforming loans, and construction and
development loans—as a share of capital and reserves.

20
SunTrust Banks, Inc., and Bank of America Corporation each received two CPP
investments in separate transactions. Therefore, the number of unique institutions
receiving CPP investments through April 30, 2009 is 565.

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market risk. Differences in average ratings by bank size also were small.
For example, smaller institutions had stronger average ratings for the
capital and asset quality components, but larger institutions had stronger
average ratings for earnings and sensitivity to market risk.
Figure 3: CAMELS Overall and Component Ratings Used to Evaluate CPP Institutions Funded through April 30, 2009
116

Capital
Asset quality

151

Management

87

Earnings

82

316

Sensitivity to
market risk

0

20 7

152
403

37

392

63

Composite

200

300

8

24 8

460
100

27

43

306

143

37

90

428

119

Liquidity

22 7

422

40
400

500

4
600

Number of firms
Rating
None
4
3
2
1
Source: GAO analysis of OFS documentation.

Note: The dates of CAMELS examination ratings span from December 2006 to December 2008.
Dates were missing for 104 of the institutions that we reviewed. Institutions were identified as having
no rating if we did not find the information in our review of Treasury’s case files. This does not
necessarily indicate that the institution had no examination rating. Some newly chartered institutions
(de novos) did not have examination ratings completed at the time of the application.

Holding companies receiving CPP investments typically also had
satisfactory or better examination ratings. The Federal Reserve uses its own

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rating system when evaluating bank holding companies. 21 Almost 80 percent
of holding companies receiving CPP funds had an overall rating of 2 (among
those with a rating), and an additional 14 percent had an overall rating of 1.
The individual component ratings for holding companies (for example, for
risk management, financial condition, and impact) also were comparable
with overall ratings, with most institutions for which we could find a rating
classified as satisfactory or better. Specifically, over 90 percent of the
ratings for each of the components were 1 or 2, with most rated 2.
Many examination ratings were more than a year old, a fact that could
limit the degree to which the ratings accurately reflect the institutions’
financial condition, especially at a time when the economy was
deteriorating rapidly. Specifically, about 25 percent of examination ratings
were older than 1 year prior to the date of application, and 5 percent were
more than 16 months old. On average, examination ratings were about 9
months older than the application date. Regulators used examination
ratings as a key measure of an applicant’s financial condition and viability,
and the age of these ratings could affect how accurately they reflect the
institutions’ current state. For example, assets, liabilities, and operating
performance generally are affected by the economic environment and
depend on many factors, such as institutional risk profiles. Stressed
market conditions such as those existing in the broad economy and
financial markets during and before CPP implementation could be
expected to have negative impacts on many of the applicants, making the
age of examination ratings a critical factor in evaluating the institutions’
viability. Further, some case decision files for CPP firms were missing
examination dates. Specifically, 104 applicants’ case decision files out of
the 567 we reviewed lacked a date for the most recent examination results.
Treasury and regulatory officials told us that they took various actions to
collect information on applicants’ current condition and to mitigate any
limitations of older examination results. Efforts to collect additional
information on the financial condition of applicants included waiting for
results of scheduled examinations or relying on preliminary CAMELS

21

The Federal Reserve assigns each bank holding company a composite rating (C) based on
an evaluation of its managerial and financial condition and an assessment of future
potential risk to its subsidiary bank or thrift. The main components of the rating system
represent risk management (R), financial condition (F), and potential impact (I) of the
holding company and nonbank or nonthrift subsidiaries on the bank or thrift. Examiners
assign ratings based on a 1-to-5 numeric scale. A 1 indicates the highest rating, strongest
performance and practices, and least degree of supervisory concern; a 5 indicates the
lowest rating, weakest performance, and highest degree of supervisory concern.

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exam results, reviewing quarterly financial results such as recent
information on asset quality, and sometimes conducting brief visits to
assess applicants’ condition. Officials from one regulator explained that
communication with the agency’s regional examiners and bank
management on changes to the firm’s condition was the most important
means of allaying concerns about older examination results. However,
officials from another regulator stated that they did use older examination
ratings, depending on the institution’s business model, lending
environment, banking history, and current loan activity. For example, the
officials said they would use older ratings if the institution was a small
community bank with a history of conservative underwriting standards
and was not lending in a volatile real estate market.
As with the examination ratings, almost all of the institutions we reviewed
had a rating for compliance with the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA)
of satisfactory or better. 22 Over 80 percent of firms received a satisfactory
rating and almost 20 percent had an outstanding rating. Only two
institutions had an unsatisfactory rating. Average CRA ratings also were
similar across institution types and sizes.

Performance Ratios

Performance ratios for the CPP firms we reviewed varied but typically
were well within CPP guidelines. In assessing CPP applicants, Treasury
and regulators focused on a variety of ratios based on regulatory capital
levels, and institutions generally were well above the minimum required
levels for these ratios. 23 Regulators generally used performance ratio
information from regulatory filings for the second or third quarters of
2008. Two of these ratios are based on a key type of regulatory capital
known as Tier 1, which includes the core capital elements that are
considered the most reliable and stable, primarily common stock and
certain types of preferred stock. Specifically, for the Tier 1 risk-based
capital ratio, banks or thrifts and holding companies had average ratios

22

Federal banking regulators also examine the institutions they supervise to determine their
compliance with CRA. Congress enacted CRA in 1977 to encourage depository institutions
to help meet the credit needs of the communities in which they operate, including low- and
moderate-income neighborhoods. A CPP applicant’s CRA rating is another factor that
Treasury instructed the federal banking regulators to consider in making approval
recommendations.

23

The minimum amount of regulatory capital is the amount required by bank regulators for
an institution to be considered adequately capitalized for purposes of prompt corrective
action. Prompt corrective action is a supervisory framework for banks that links
supervisory actions closely to a bank’s capital ratios. Under prompt corrective action,
institutions below this threshold are considered undercapitalized.

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that were more than double the regulatory minimum of 4 percent with
only one firm below that minimum level. Further, only two institutions
were below 6.5 percent (see fig. 4). 24 Although almost all firms had Tier 1
risk-based capital ratios that exceeded the minimum level, the ratios
ranged widely, from 3 percent to 43 percent. 25 Similarly, banks or thrifts
and holding companies had average Tier 1 leverage ratios that were more
than double the required 4 percent, and only 3 firms were below 4
percent. 26 The ratios also ranged widely, from 2 percent to 41 percent.
Finally, for the total risk-based capital ratio, banks or thrifts and holding
companies had average ratios of 12 percent, well above the 8 percent
minimum, and only two firms were below 8 percent. 27 These ratios ranged
from 4 percent to 44 percent.
Asset-based performance ratios for most CPP institutions also generally
remained within Treasury’s guidelines, although more firms did not meet
the criteria for these ratios than did not meet the criteria for capital ratios.
Treasury and the regulators established maximum guideline amounts for
the three performance ratios relating to assets that they used to evaluate
applicants. These ratios measure the concentration of troubled or risky
assets as a share of capital and reserves—classified assets, nonperforming
loans (including non-income-generating real estate, which is typically
acquired through foreclosure), and construction and development loans.
For each of these performance ratios, both the banks or thrifts and holding
companies had average ratios that were less than half of the maximum
guideline, well within the specified limits. For example, banks/thrifts and
holding companies had average ratios of 25 and 32 percent, respectively,

24

The Tier 1 risk-based capital ratio is defined as Tier 1 capital as a share of risk-weighted
assets (RWA). Tier 1 capital consists of core elements such as common stock,
noncumulative perpetual preferred stock, and minority interests in consolidated
subsidiaries. Risk-weighted assets are on- and off-balance sheet assets adjusted for their
risk characteristics.

25

Some of the CPP institutions we reviewed were newly chartered banks, referred to as de
novo institutions. In their early years of operation, de novo banks may have high amounts
of capital relative to their assets and low levels of nonperforming loans as they extend
credit to new clients and grow their loan portfolios. One such bank that opened the same
year it applied for CPP accounted for the highest regulatory capital ratios in each of the
three categories (Tier 1 risk-based capital ratio, Tier 1 leverage ratio, and total risk-based
capital ratio).
26

The Tier 1 leverage ratio is defined as Tier 1 capital as a share of average total
consolidated assets.

27

The total risk-based capital ratio is defined as total capital as a share of risk-weighted
assets. Total capital includes Tier 1 capital and Tier 2 capital, or supplementary capital.

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for classified assets, which had a maximum guideline of 100 percent. The
substantial majority of banks or thrifts and holding companies also were
well below the maximum guidelines for the asset ratios. For example,
almost 90 percent of banks/thrifts and over 80 percent of holding
companies had classified assets ratios below 50 percent. However, while
only 3 firms missed the guidelines for any of the capital ratios, 38
banks/thrifts and holding companies missed the nonperforming loan ratio,
8 missed the construction and development loan ratio, and 1 missed the
classified assets ratio.
Figure 4: Bank or Thrift and Holding Company Performance Ratios Used to Evaluate CPP Institutions Funded through April
30, 2009
Bank or thrift
Asset quality

Capital
Tier 1 risk-based capital 2.9%
Total risk-based capital

Tier 1 leverage ratio

3.7

1.7

11.1%

43.4%

Classified assets ratio
[Classed assets/(Net Tier 1 capital + ALLL)]

0%

12.4

44.3

Nonperforming loan ratio
[(NPLs+OREO)/(Net Tier 1 capital + ALLL)]

0

9.2

0

10

30

40

50

0

105.0%

15.4 66.7

Construction and development loan ratio
0
[Construction and development loans/Total RBC]

41.3

20

24.5%

120.0

50

359.0

100 150 200 250 300 350 400

Holding company
Asset quality

Capital
Tier 1 risk-based capital

6.0%

Total risk-based capital

Tier 1 leverage ratio

10.2% 18.5%

8.4

3.6

0

12.0

8.4

10

20.2

0%

Nonperforming loan ratio
[(NPLs+OREO)/(Net Tier 1 capital + ALLL)]

0.1

31.9% 85.9%

17.2 59.6

Construction and development loan ratio
2.1
[Construction and development loans/Total RBC]

18.9

20

Classified assets ratio
[Classed assets/(Net Tier 1 capital + ALLL)]

30

40

50

0

124.4

50

305.2

100 150 200 250 300 350 400

Range
Mean
Regulatory criteria for adequately capitalized/Treasury CPP criteria
Source: GAO analysis of OFS documentation.

Note: The dates of performance ratios for all but one bank and one holding company were from 2008.
The “allowance for loan and lease losses” (ALLL) is an account maintained by financial institutions to
cover expected losses in their loan and lease portfolios. The “other real estate owned” (OREO) is an
account used for examination and reporting purposes that primarily includes real estate owned by a
financial institution as a result of foreclosure.

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Treasury and Bank
Regulators Took Steps to
Help Ensure That CPP
Applicants Met Guidelines
for Viability

A small group of CPP participants exhibited weaker attributes relative to
other approved institutions (see table 1). For most of these cases,
Treasury or regulators described factors that mitigated the weaknesses
and supported the applicant’s viability. Specifically, we identified 66 CPP
institutions—12 percent of the firms we reviewed—that either (1) did not
meet the performance ratio guidelines used to evaluate applicants, (2) had
an unsatisfactory overall bank or thrift examination rating, or (3) had a
formal enforcement action involving safety and soundness concerns. 28 We
use these attributes to identify these 66 firms as marginal institutions,
although the presence of these attributes does not necessarily indicate that
a firm was not viable or that it was ineligible for CPP participation. 29
However, they generally may indicate firms that either had weaker
attributes than other approved firms or required closer evaluation by
Treasury and regulators. Nineteen of the institutions met multiple criteria,
including those that missed more than one performance ratio for the
largest bank/thrift or holding company. The most common criteria for the
firms identified as marginal was an unsatisfactory overall examination
rating or an unsatisfactory nonperforming loan ratio. A far smaller number
of firms exceeded the construction and development loan ratio or had
experienced a formal enforcement action related to safety and soundness
concerns. One bank and two holding companies missed the capital or
classified assets ratios.

28

At the initiation of CPP, Treasury and regulators defined acceptable levels for the three
performance ratios relating to asset quality (classified assets ratio, nonperforming loan and
real estate-owned ratio, and construction and development loan ratio). The criteria for the
three performance ratios relating to capital levels (Tier 1 risk-based capital ratio, total riskbased capital ratio, and the Tier 1 leverage ratio) are based on regulatory minimums for an
institution to be considered adequately capitalized. For the leverage ratio, we used the
minimum level that applies to most banks and bank holding companies (4 percent),
although regulators applied a lower level to banks and bank holding companies with strong
examination ratings. Banks with overall unsatisfactory examination ratings are those with
a composite CAMELS rating weaker than 2. We reviewed enforcement actions available
through regulators’ Web sites to determine whether actions were formal or informal, active
at the time of CPP approval, or related to compliance or safety and soundness.

29

Treasury and regulatory officials said that they did not have absolute criteria for
evaluating CPP applicants and did not make approval decisions solely on the basis of
specific quantitative measurements. Treasury and regulatory officials explained that they
also relied on their judgment and familiarity with the firms they supervised.

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Table 1: Number of Institutions Participating in CPP That Exhibited Weak
Characteristics Prior to Approval
Number of institutions
exhibiting the characteristic

Characteristic
Overall CAMELS bank examination rating of 3, 4, or 5

40

Active, formal safety-and-soundness-related
enforcement action

5

Tier 1 risk-based capital ratio less than 4 percent

1

Total risk-based capital ratio less than 8 percent

1

Tier 1 leverage ratio less than 4 percent

3

Classified assets ratio greater than 100 percen

ta

Nonperforming loan ratio greater than 40 percent

1
b

Construction and development loans/total risk-based
capital ratio greater than 300 percent
Total institutions exhibiting characteristics

38
8
66c

Source: GAO analysis of OFS documentation.
a

Classified assets / (net Tier 1 capital + ALLL).

b

(Nonperforming loans + OREO) / (Net Tier 1 capital + ALLL).

c

Total does not add because 19 firms exhibited multiple characteristics.

In their evaluations of CPP applicants, Treasury and regulators
documented their reasons for approving institutions with marginal
characteristics. They typically identified three types of mitigating factors
that supported institutions’ overall viability: (1) the quality of management
and business practices; (2) the sufficiency of capital and liquidity; and (3)
performance trends, including asset quality. The most frequently cited
attributes related to management quality and capital sufficiency.
High-quality management and business practices. In evaluating
marginal applicants, regulators frequently considered the experience and
competency of the applicants’ senior management team. Officials from one
bank regulator said that they might be less skeptical of an applicant’s
prospects if they believed it had high-quality management. For example,
they used their knowledge of institutions and the quality of their
management to mitigate economic concerns for banks in the geographic
areas most severely affected by the housing market decline. Commonly
identified strengths included the willingness and ability of management to
respond quickly to problems and concerns that regulators identified such
as poor asset quality or insufficient capital levels. The evaluations of
several marginal applicants described management actions to aggressively
address asset quality problems as an indication of an institution’s ability to

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resolve its weaknesses. Regulators also had a positive view of firms whose
boards of directors implemented management changes such as replacing
key executives or hiring more experienced staff in areas such as credit
administration. Finally, regulators evaluated the quality of risk
management and lending practices in determining management strength.
Capital and liquidity. Regulators often reviewed the applicant’s capital
and liquidity when evaluating whether an institution’s weaknesses might
affect its viability. In particular, regulators and Treasury considered the
sufficiency of capital to absorb losses from bad assets and the ability to
raise private capital. As instructed by Treasury guidance, regulators
evaluated an institution’s capital levels prior to the addition of any CPP
investment. Although an institution might have high levels of
nonperforming loans or other problem assets, regulators’ concerns about
viability might be eased if it also had a substantial amount of capital
available to offset related losses. Likewise, capital from private sources
could shore up an institution’s capital buffers and provide a signal to the
market that it could access similar sources if necessary.
When evaluating the sufficiency of a marginal applicant’s capital,
regulators also assessed the amount of capital relative to the firm’s risk
profile, the quality of the capital, and the firm’s dependence on volatile
funding sources. Institutions with a riskier business model that included,
for instance, extending high-risk loans or investing in high-risk assets
generally would require higher amounts of capital as reserves against
losses. Conversely, an institution with a less risky strategy or asset base
might need somewhat less capital to be considered viable. Regulators
reviewed the quality of a firm’s capital because some forms of capital,
such as common shareholder’s equity, can absorb losses more easily than
other types, such as subordinated debt or preferred shares, which may
have restrictions or limits on their ability to take losses. 30 Finally,
regulators considered the nature of a firm’s funding sources. They viewed
firms that financed their lending and other operations with stable funding
sources, such as core deposit accounts or long-term debt, as less risky
than firms that obtained financing through brokered deposits or wholesale

30

For example, holders of subordinated debt have a claim on the firm’s assets, and
institutions issuing subordinated debt have an obligation to repay those funds, even though
holders of the subordinated debt may have a lower priority for repayment than depositors
or senior debt holders in the event of an insolvency or bank seizure. Institutions do not
have an obligation to repay funds received from purchasers of their common stock or
certain types of preferred stock.

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funding, which could be more costly or might need to be replaced more
frequently.
Performance trends. Regulators also examined recent trends in
performance when evaluating marginal applicants. For example,
regulators considered strong or improving trends in asset quality, earnings,
and capital levels, among others, as potentially favorable indicators of
viability. These trends included reductions in nonperforming and classified
assets, consistent positive earnings, reductions in commercial real estate
concentrations, and higher net interest margins and return on assets. In
some cases, regulators identified improvements in banks’ performance
through preliminary examination ratings. Officials from one bank
regulator stated that the agency refrained from making recommendations
until it had recent and complete examination data. For example, if an
examination was scheduled for an applicant that had raised regulatory
concerns or questions, the agency would wait for the updated results
before completing its review and making a recommendation to Treasury.

Some Firms Were
Approved despite
Questions about Their
Ongoing Viability

Regulators and Treasury raised specific questions about the viability of a
small number of institutions that ultimately were approved and received
their CPP investments between December 19, 2008, and March 27, 2009.
Most of the questions about viability involved poor asset quality, such as
nonperforming loans or bad investments, and lending that was highly
concentrated in specific product types, such as commercial real estate
(see table 2). For these institutions, various mitigating factors were used
to provide support for the firm’s ultimate approval. For example,
regulators and Treasury identified the addition of private capital, strong
capital ratios, diversification of lending portfolios, and updated
examination results as mitigating factors in approving the institutions. One
of these institutions had weaker characteristics than the others, and
regulators and Treasury appeared to have more significant concerns about
its viability. Ultimately, regulators and the CPP Council recommended
approval of this institution based, in part, on criteria in Section 103 of
EESA, which requires Treasury to consider providing assistance to
financial institutions having certain attributes such as serving low- and
moderate-income populations and having assets less than $1 billion.

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Table 2: Mitigating Factors for Viability Concerns Identified by Regulators or
Treasury
Eligibility or viability concerns
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

Very high commercial real estate
concentration
High construction and development
loan concentration
State of bank’s lending market
Poor performance ratios
Nonperforming loans
Precarious financial position
Elimination of capital by investment
losses
Continual subpar management ratings
Questionable viability without CPP
funds
Unsatisfactory management
responsiveness
High commercial real estate exposure
Potential impairment in mortgage
servicing assets
Viability of business plan given the
current industry turmoil
Overall credit quality
Viability questionable without additional
capital
Ability to improve operating
performance
Proportion of non-owner-occupied
commercial real estate

Mitigating factors
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

Preliminary examination results
Relative strength of local market area
Management strong and conservative
Strong capital position
Bank committed to raising additional
capital
Private capital investment
Aggressive in recognizing losses
Relatively strong capital ratios
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac investment
losses
Favorable capital treatment
Bank profitable with strong capital
Commercial real estate portfolio diversified
by product type
Condition due to investment rather than
loan losses
Conservative underwriting standards
Low construction and development loans
Special consideration based on provisions
in statute
Approval conditioned upon planned
issuance of additional equity capital
Improved effectiveness of servicing rights
hedging program
Recent examination rating of composite 2
Strong loan review and approval
procedures
Low ratios of classified and nonperforming
loans

Source: GAO analysis of OFS documentation.

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A Growing Number of CPP
Firms, Including Many
That Had Identified
Weaknesses, Have
Exhibited Signs of
Financial Difficulty

Through July 2010, 4 CPP institutions had failed, but an increasing number
of CPP firms have missed their scheduled dividend or interest payments,
requested to have their investments restructured by Treasury, or appeared
on FDIC’s list of problem banks. 31 First, the number of institutions missing
the dividend or interest payments due on their CPP investments has
increased steadily, rising from 8 in February 2009 to 123 in August 2010, or
20 percent of existing CPP participants. 32 Between February 2009 and
August 2010, 144 institutions did not pay at least one dividend or interest
payment by the end of the reporting period in which they were due, for a
total of 413 missed payments. 33 As of August 31, 2010, 79 institutions had
missed three or more payments and 24 had missed five or more. Through
August 31, 2010, the total amount of missed dividend and interest
payments was $235 million, although some institutions made their
payments after the scheduled payment date. Institutions are required to
pay dividends only if they declare dividends, although unpaid cumulative
dividends accrue and the institution must pay the accrued dividends
before making dividend payments to other types of shareholders in the
future, such as holders of common stock. Federal and state bank
regulators also may prevent their supervised institutions from paying
dividends to preserve their capital and promote their safety and
soundness. According to the standard terms of CPP, after participants
have missed six dividend payments—consecutive or not—Treasury can
exercise its right to appoint two members to the board of directors for that
institution. In May 2010, the first CPP institution missed six dividend
payments, but as of August 2010, Treasury had not exercised its right to
appoint members to its board of directors. An additional seven institutions
missed their sixth dividend payment in August 2010. Treasury officials told
us that they are developing a process for establishing a pool of potential

31

Under the CPP terms, institutions pay cumulative dividends on their preferred shares
except for banks that are not subsidiaries of holding companies, which pay noncumulative
dividends. Some other types of institutions, such as S corporations, received their CPP
investment in the form of subordinated debt and pay Treasury interest rather than
dividends.
32

The following number of institutions missed their scheduled dividend or interest
payments by due date: February 2009–8, May 2009–18, August 2009–34, November 2009–54,
February 2010–79, May 2010–97, and August 2010—123.

33

CPP dividend and interest payments are due on February 15, May 15, August 15 and
November 15 of each year, or the first business day subsequent to those dates. The first
CPP dividend and interest payments were due in February 2009, for a total of seven
possible payments due through August 2010. The reporting period ends on the last day of
the calendar month in which the dividend or interest payment is due. Some institutions
made their dividend or interest payments after the end of the reporting period.

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directors that Treasury could appoint on the boards of institutions that
missed at least six dividend payments. They added that these potential
directors will not be Treasury employees and would be appointed to
represent the interests of all shareholders, not just Treasury. Treasury
officials expect that any appointments will focus on banks with CPP
investments of $25 million or greater, but Treasury has not ruled out
making appointments for institutions with smaller CPP investments. We
will continue to monitor and report on Treasury’s progress in making
these appointments in future reports.
Although none of the 4 institutions that have failed as of July 31, 2010,
were identified as marginal cases, 39 percent of the 66 approved
institutions with marginal characteristics have missed at least one CPP
dividend payment, compared with 20 percent of CPP participants overall.
Through August 2010, 26 of the 144 institutions that had missed at least
one dividend payment were institutions identified as marginal. Of these 26
marginal approvals, 20 have missed at least two payments, and 14 have
missed at least four. Several of the marginal approvals also have received
formal enforcement actions since participating in CPP. As of April,
regulators filed formal actions against nine of the marginal approvals,
including four cease-and-desist orders and four written agreements. 34
Seven of these institutions also missed at least one dividend payment.
However, none of the approvals identified as marginal had filed for
bankruptcy or were placed in FDIC receivership as of July 31, 2010. 35
Second, since June 2009, at least 16 institutions have formally requested
that Treasury restructure their CPP investments, and most of the
institutions have made their requests in recent months. 36 Specifically, as of
July, 9 of the 11 requests received this year were received since April.

34

One firm identified as a marginal approval has had two formal enforcement actions since
receiving its CPP investment—one each from FDIC and the Federal Reserve.

35

Four CPP institutions have filed for bankruptcy protection or had regulators place their
banking subsidiary in receivership—UCBH Holdings Inc., CIT Group Inc., Pacific Coast
National Bancorp, and Midwest Banc Holdings. However, none of these firms failed to
meet the CPP program guidelines or other criteria used to identify institutions with weak
characteristics.
36

The information on restructured CPP investments does not include Citigroup, which
exchanged its CPP shares for financial instruments that converted to common shares in
September 2009. Treasury said that it does not include Citigroup because it received
investments under several TARP programs in addition to CPP such as the Targeted
Investment Program and it is monitored separately within Treasury.

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GAO-11-47 Troubled Asset Relief Program

Treasury officials said that institutions have pursued a restructuring
primarily to improve the quality of their capital and attract additional
capital from other investors. Treasury has completed six of the requested
restructurings and entered into agreements with 2 additional institutions
that made requests. According to officials, Treasury considers multiple
factors in determining whether to restructure a CPP investment. These
factors include the effect of the proposed capital restructuring on the
institution’s Tier 1 and common equity capital and the overall economic
impact on the U.S. government’s investment. The terms of the
restructuring agreements most frequently involve Treasury exchanging its
CPP preferred shares for either mandatory convertible preferred shares—
which automatically convert to common shares if certain conditions such
as the completion of a capital raising plan are met—or trust preferred
securities—which are issued by a separate legal entity established by the
CPP institution.
Finally, the number of CPP institutions on FDIC’s list of problem banks
has increased. At December 31, 2009, there were 47 CPP firms on the
problem list. This number had grown to 71 firms by March 31, 2010, and to
78 at June 30, 2010. The FDIC tracks banks that it designates as problem
institutions based on their composite examination ratings. Institutions
designated as problem banks have financial, operational, or managerial
weaknesses that threaten their continued viability and include firms with
either a 4 or 5 composite rating.

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GAO-11-47 Troubled Asset Relief Program

While Treasury’s
Processes Included
Multiple Reviews of
Approved CPP
Applicants, Certain
Operational Control
Weaknesses Offer
Lessons Learned for
Similarly Designed
Programs

Reviews of regulators’ approval recommendations helped ensure
consistent evaluations and mitigate risk from Treasury’s limited guidance
for assessing applicants’ viability. Reviews of regulators’ recommendations
to fund institutions are an important part of CPP’s internal control
activities aimed at providing reasonable assurance that the program is
performing as intended and accomplishing its goals. 37 The process that
Treasury and regulators implemented established centralized control
mechanisms to help ensure consistency in the evaluations of approved
applicants. For example, regulators established their own processes for
evaluating applicants, but they generally had similar structures including
initial contact and review by regional offices followed by additional
centralized review at the headquarters office for approved institutions.
FDIC, OTS, and the Federal Reserve conducted initial evaluations and
prepared the case decision memos at regional offices (or Reserve Banks in
the case of the Federal Reserve), while the regulators’ headquarters (or
Board of Governors) performed secondary reviews and verification. At
OCC, district offices did the initial analysis of applicants and provided a
recommendation to headquarters, which prepared the case decision memo
using input from the district. All of the regulators also used review panels
or officials at headquarters to review the analyses and recommendations
before submission to the CPP Council or Treasury.
Applicants recommended for approval by regulators also received further
evaluation at the CPP Council or Treasury. Regulators sent to the CPP
Council applications that they had approved but that had certain
characteristics identified by Treasury as warranting further review by the
council. These characteristics included indications of relative weakness,
such as unsatisfactory examination ratings and performance ratios. At the
council, representatives from all four federal bank regulators discussed
the viability of applicants and voted on recommending them to Treasury
for approval. As Treasury officials explained, the CPP Council was the
deliberative forum for addressing concerns about marginal applicants
whose eligibility for CPP was unclear. The council’s charter describes its
purpose as acting as an advisory body to Treasury for ensuring that CPP
guidelines are applied effectively and consistently across bank regulators
and applicants. By requiring the regulators to reach consensus when
recommending applicants whose approval was not straightforward, the

37

See GAO, Standards for Internal Control in the Federal Government,
GAO/AIMD-00-21.3.1 (Washington, D.C.: Nov. 1, 1999).

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GAO-11-47 Troubled Asset Relief Program

CPP Council helped ensure that the final outcome of applicants was
informed by multiple bank regulators and generally promoted consistency
in decision making.
After regulators or the CPP Council submitted a recommendation to
Treasury, the applicant received a final round of review by Treasury’s CPP
analysts and the Investment Committee. CPP analysts conducted their
own reviews of applicants and the case files forwarded from the
regulators, including the case decision memos. They collected additional
information for their reviews from regulators’ data systems and publicly
available sources and also gathered information from regulators to clarify
the analysis in the case files. According to Treasury officials, the CPP
analysts were experienced bank examiners serving on detail from each of
the bank regulators except OCC. Treasury officials explained that CPP
analysts did not make decisions about preliminary approvals or
preliminary disapprovals. Only the Investment Committee made those
decisions.
In the final review stage, the Investment Committee evaluated all of the
applicants forwarded by regulators or the CPP Council. On the basis of its
review of the regulators’ recommendations and analysis and additional
information collected by Treasury CPP analysts, the Investment
Committee recommended preliminary approval or denial to applicants,
subject to the final decision of the Assistant Secretary for Financial
Stability. By reviewing and issuing a preliminary decision on all forwarded
applicants, the Investment Committee represented another important
control, much like the CPP Council. Unlike the CPP Council, however, the
Investment Committee deliberated on all applicants referred by regulators
rather than just those meeting certain marginal criteria.
The reviews by the CPP Council, analysts at OFS, and the Investment
Committee were important steps to limit the risk of inconsistent
evaluations by different regulators. This risk stemmed from the limited
guidance that Treasury provided to regulators concerning the application
review process. Specifically, the formal written guidance that Treasury
initially provided to regulators consisted of broad high-level guidance,
which was supplemented with other informal guidance to address specific

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GAO-11-47 Troubled Asset Relief Program

concerns. 38 The written guidance provided by Treasury established the
institution’s strength and overall viability as the baseline criteria for the
eligibility recommendation. 39 Regulators said that while the guidance was
useful in providing a broad framework or starting point for their reviews,
they could not determine an applicant’s viability using Treasury’s written
guidance alone. Officials from several regulators said that they also relied
on regulatory experience and judgment when evaluating CPP applicants
and making recommendations to Treasury. Treasury officials told us that
they believed they were not in a position to provide more specific
guidance to regulators on how to evaluate the viability of the institutions
they oversaw. Treasury officials further explained that with many different
kinds of institutions and unique considerations, regulators needed to make
viability decisions on an individual basis.
A 2009 audit by the Federal Reserve’s Inspector General (Fed IG)
assessing the Federal Reserve’s process and controls for reviewing CPP
applications similarly found that Treasury provided limited guidance in the
early stages of the program regarding how to determine applicants’
viability. 40 As a result, the Federal Reserve and other regulators developed
their own procedures for analyzing CPP applications. The report also
found that formal, detailed, and documented procedures would have
provided the Federal Reserve with additional assurance that CPP
applications would be analyzed consistently and completely. However, the
multiple layers of reviews involving the regulators, the CPP Council, and
Treasury staff helped compensate for the risk of inconsistent evaluation of
applicants that received recommendations for CPP investments. The Fed
IG recommended that the Federal Reserve incorporate lessons learned
from the CPP application review process to its process for reviewing

38

In addition to the limited formal guidance, Treasury subsequently provided regulators
with informal and case-specific guidance using e-mails and conference calls. For example,
Treasury held regular weekly conference calls with the bank regulators to discuss concerns
about specific applicants and also broader process and policy issues such as commercial
real estate exposures.

39

The guidance identified other factors for consideration, such as the existence of a signed
merger agreement involving the institution or a confirmed private equity investment.
Finally, the guidance document defined three categories for regulators to use in classifying
applicants that were based on examination ratings (such as the CAMELS ratings), the age
of the ratings, and financial performance ratios (including capital and asset quality ratios).
40

Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System Office of Inspector General, Audit of
the Board’s Processing of Applications for the Capital Purchase Program under the
Troubled Asset Relief Program, (Washington, D.C.: Sept. 30, 2009).

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GAO-11-47 Troubled Asset Relief Program

repurchase requests. The Federal Reserve generally agreed with the
report’s findings and recommendations.

Treasury and the
Regulators’
Documentation of
Approval Decisions
Improved as the Program
Matured

As Treasury fully implemented its CPP process, it and the regulators
compiled documentation of the analysis supporting their decisions to
approve program applicants. For example, regulators consistently used a
case decision memo to provide Treasury with standard documentation of
their review and recommendations of CPP applicants. This document
contained basic descriptive and evaluative information on all applicants
forwarded by regulators, including identification numbers, examination
and compliance ratings, recent and post-investment performance ratios,
and a summary of the primary regulator’s evaluation and recommendation.
Although the case decision memo contained standard types of
information, the amount and detail of the information that regulators
included in the form evolved over time. According to regulators and
Treasury, they engaged in an iterative process whereby regulators
included additional information after receiving feedback from Treasury on
what they should describe about their assessment of an applicant’s
viability. For example, regulators said that often Treasury wanted more
detailed explanations for more difficult viability decisions. According to
bank regulatory officials, other changes included additional discussion of
specific factors relevant to the viability determination, such as information
on identified weaknesses and enforcement actions, analysis of external
factors such as economic and geographic influences, and consideration of
nonbank parts of holding companies. Treasury officials explained that as
CPP staff learned about the types of information the Investment
Committee wanted to see, they would communicate it to the regulators for
inclusion in case decision memos.
Our review of CPP case files indicated that some case decision memos
were incomplete and missing important information, but typically only for
applicants approved early in the program. For instance, several case
decision memos contained only one or two general statements supporting
viability, largely for the initial CPP firms. 41 Eventually, the case decision
memos included several paragraphs, and some contained multiple pages,
with detailed descriptions of the applicant’s condition and viability

41
For example, one memo stated only “Confirmed Category 1 institution. Recommend
Approval.” Others stated “Category 1 institution; approved under 12 USC 1823(c)(4)
systemic risk exception.”

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GAO-11-47 Troubled Asset Relief Program

assessment. Most of the cases in which the regulator did not explain its
support for an applicant’s viability occurred in the first month of the
program. Some case decision memos lacked other important information,
although these memos also tended to be from early in the program. For
example, multiple case decision memos were missing either an overall
examination rating, all of the component examination ratings, or a
performance ratio related to capital levels. Most or all of those were
approved prior to December 2008. Further, 104 of 567 case files we
reviewed lacked examination ratings dates, and almost all of these firms
were approved before the end of December 2008. Missing CRA dates,
which occurred in 214 cases, exhibited a similar pattern.
For applications that regulators sent to Treasury with an approval
recommendation, Treasury staff used a “team analysis” form to document
their review before submitting the applications to the Investment
Committee for its consideration. According to Treasury officials, the team
analysis evolved over time as CPP staff became more experienced and
different examiners made their own modifications to the form. For example,
as the CPP team grew in size, additional fields were added to document
multiple levels of review by other examiners. As with the case decision
memos, the consistency of information in the team analysis improved with
time. For instance, team analysis documents did not include calculations of
allowable investment amounts for almost 60 files that we reviewed that
Treasury had approved by the end of December 2008. Finally, a small
number of case files did not contain an award letter, but all of those
approvals had also occurred before the end of December 2008.
Treasury and regulators compiled meeting minutes for the CPP Council
and Investment Committee, although they did not fully document some
early Investment Committee meetings. The minutes described discussions
of policy and guidance related to TARP and CPP and also the review and
approval decisions for individual applicants. However, records do not
exist for four meetings of the Investment Committee that occurred
between October 23, 2008, and November 12, 2008. According to Treasury,
no minutes exist for those meetings. We did not find any missing meeting
minutes for the CPP Council, although at the early meetings, regulators did
not collect the initials of voting members to document their
recommendations to approve or disapprove applicants they reviewed.
Within several weeks however, regulators began using the CPP Council
review decision sheets to document council members’ votes in addition to
the meeting minutes.

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GAO-11-47 Troubled Asset Relief Program

Treasury’s Implementation
Process Limited Its Ability
to Oversee Regulators’
Recommendations for
Applicant Withdrawals

Although the multiple layers of review for approved institutions enhanced
the consistency of the decision process, applicants that withdrew from
consideration in response to a request from their regulator received no
review by Treasury or other regulators. To avoid a formal denial, regulators
recommended that applicants withdraw when they were unable to
recommend approval or believed that Treasury was unlikely to approve the
institution. Some regulators said that they also encouraged institutions not
to formally submit applications if approval appeared unlikely. Applicants
could insist that the regulator forward their application to the CPP Council
and ultimately to the Investment Committee for further consideration even
if the regulator had recommended withdrawal. However, Treasury officials
said that they did not approve any applicants that received a disapproval
recommendation from their regulator or the CPP Council. Regulators also
could recommend that applicants withdraw after the CPP Council or
Investment Committee decided not to recommend approval of their
application. One regulator stated that all the applicants it suggested
withdraw did so rather than receive a formal denial. Treasury officials also
said that institutions receiving a withdrawal recommendation generally
withdrew and that no formal denials were issued.
Almost half of all applicants withdrew from CPP consideration before
regulators forwarded their applications to the CPP Council or Treasury.
Regulators had recommended withdrawal in about half of these cases
where information was available. Over the life of the program, regulators
received almost 3,000 CPP applications, about half of which they sent to
the CPP Council or directly to Treasury (see table 3). The remaining
applicants withdrew either voluntarily or after receiving a
recommendation to withdraw from their regulator. Three of the
regulators—OCC, OTS, and the Federal Reserve—indicated that about half
of their combined withdrawals were the result of their recommendations.
FDIC, which was the primary regulator for most of the applicants, did not
collect information on the reasons for applicants’ withdrawals. 42
According to Treasury officials, those applicants that chose to withdraw
voluntarily did so for various reasons, including uncertainty over future
program requirements and increased confidence in the financial condition

42

As part of its review of FDIC’s processing of CPP applicants, FDIC’s Office of Inspector
General evaluated the reasons for application withdrawals that occurred as of December
10, 2008, and found that 42 percent had been suggested to withdraw by FDIC regional
offices. The remainder withdrew voluntarily. See FDIC Office of Inspector General,
Controls Over the FDIC’s Processing of Capital Purchase Program Applications from
FDIC-Supervised Institutions, EVAL-09-004 (Arlington, VA.: Mar. 20, 2009).

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GAO-11-47 Troubled Asset Relief Program

of banks. In addition to institutions that withdrew after applying for CPP,
Treasury officials and officials from a regulator indicated that some firms
decided not to formally apply after discussing their potential application
with their regulator. However, regulators did not collect information on
the number of firms deciding not to apply after having these discussions.
Table 3: Withdrawals by CPP Applicants before Submission to CPP Council or
Treasury as of December 31, 2009

Bank
regulator
FDIC
Federal
Reserve

Total
applications
received

Voluntary
withdrawal

Recommended
withdrawal

Total applications
sent to CPP
Council or
Treasury

1,814

Not available

Not available

917

342

42

82

218

OCC

442

93

130

219

OTS

297

131

40

126

Total

2895

Not available

Not available

1,480

Sources: FDIC, Federal Reserve, OCC, and OTS.

Note: Of the total 1,480 applications sent to the CPP Council or Treasury, Treasury ultimately
received 1,403 applications. These 1,403 applications resulted in 738 CPP transactions (for 707
institutions because some institutions submitted multiple applications), 658 withdrawals, and 7
applications that were not approved.

Although applications recommended for approval received multiple
reviews and were coordinated among regulators and Treasury, each
regulator made its own decision on withdrawal recommendations. Most
regulators conducted initial reviews of applicants at their regional offices,
and staff at these offices had independent authority to recommend
withdrawal for certain cases. Regulatory officials said that regional staff
(including examiners and more senior officials) made initial assessments
of applicants’ viability using Treasury guidelines and would recommend
withdrawal for weak firms with the lowest examination ratings that were
unlikely to be approved. 43 Applicants that received withdrawal
recommendations might have had weak characteristics relative to those of
other firms and might have received a denial from Treasury. But following
regulators’ suggestions to withdraw before referral to the CPP Council or

43

We did not examine regulators’ files on withdrawn applicants to identify actual instances
of inconsistencies to avoid duplication of work conducted by SIGTARP and agency
inspectors general that reviewed CPP implementation at their respective agencies.

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GAO-11-47 Troubled Asset Relief Program

Treasury, or to not apply, ensured that they would not receive the
centralized reviews that could have mitigated any inconsistencies in their
initial evaluations. Further, while regulators had panels or senior officials
at their headquarters offices providing central review of approved
applicants, most of the regulators allowed their regional offices to
recommend withdrawal for weaker applicants or encourage such
applicants not to apply, thereby limiting the benefit of that control
mechanism. Allowing regional offices to recommend withdrawal without
any centralized review may increase the risk of inconsistency within as
well as across regulators. In its report on the processing of CPP
applications, the FDIC Office of Inspector General found that one of
FDIC’s regional offices suggested that three institutions withdraw from
consideration that were well capitalized and technically met Treasury
guidelines. 44 Regional FDIC management cited poor bank management as
the primary concern in recommending that the institutions withdraw. The
report concluded that the use of discretion by regional offices in
recommending that applicants withdraw increased the risk of
inconsistency. The report made two recommendations to enhance
controls over the process for evaluating applications: (1) forwarding
applications recommended for approval that do not meet one or more of
Treasury’s criteria to the CPP Council for additional review and (2)
requiring headquarters review of institutions recommended for withdrawal
when the institutions technically meet Treasury’s criteria. In commenting
on the report, FDIC concurred with the recommendations.
Treasury did not collect information on applicants that had received
withdrawal recommendations from their regulators or on the reasons for
these decisions. According to Treasury officials, Treasury did not receive,
request, or review information on applicants that regulators recommended
to withdraw and thus could not monitor the types of institutions that
regulators were restricting from the program or the reasons for their
decisions. The officials said that Treasury did not collect or review
information on withdrawal recommendations in part to minimize the
potential for external parties to influence the decision-making process.
However, such considerations did not prevent Treasury from reviewing
information on applicants that regulators recommended for approval, and
concerns about external influence could also be addressed directly
through additional control procedures rather than by limiting the ability to

44

FDIC Office of Inspector General, Controls Over the FDIC’s Processing of Capital
Purchase Program Applications from FDIC-Supervised Institutions.

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GAO-11-47 Troubled Asset Relief Program

collect information on withdrawal recommendations. The lack of
additional review outside of the individual regulator or oversight of
withdrawal requests by Treasury presents the risk that applicants may not
have been evaluated in a consistent fashion across regulators. As the
agency responsible for implementing CPP, it is equally beneficial for
Treasury to understand the reasons that regulators recommended
applicants withdraw from the program as it is for Treasury to understand
the reasons regulators recommended approval. Collecting and reviewing
information on withdrawal requests would have served as an important
control mechanism and allowed Treasury to determine whether leaving
certain applicants out of CPP was consistent with program goals. It also
would have allowed Treasury to determine whether similar applicants
were evaluated consistently across different regulators in terms of their
decisions to recommend withdrawal.
Treasury has indicated that it may use the CPP model for new programs to
stimulate the economy and improve conditions in financial markets, and
unless corrective actions are taken, such programs may share the same
increased risk of similar participants not being treated consistently.
Specifically, in February 2010, Treasury announced terms for a new TARP
program—the Community Development Capital Initiative (CDCI)—to
invest lower-cost capital in Community Development Financial
Institutions that lend to small businesses. According to Treasury and
regulatory agency officials, Treasury modeled its implementation of the
CDCI program after the process it used for CPP, with federal bank
regulators—in this case including the National Credit Union
Administration (NCUA)—conducting the initial reviews and making
recommendations. The CDCI program also uses a council of regulators to
review marginal approvals, and an Investment Committee at Treasury
reviews all applicants recommended by regulators for approval. As in the
case of CPP, control mechanisms exist for reviewing approved applicants,
but no equivalent reviews are done for applicants that receive withdrawal
recommendations. Thus, the CDCI structure could raise similar concerns
about a lack of control mechanisms to mitigate the risk of inconsistency in
evaluations by different regulators. The deadline for financial institutions
to apply to participate in the CDCI was April 30, 2010, and all
disbursements or exchanges of CPP securities for CDCI securities must be
completed by September 30, 2010.

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GAO-11-47 Troubled Asset Relief Program

The Small Business Jobs Act of 2010, enacted on September 27, 2010,
established a new Treasury program—the Small Business Lending Fund
(SBLF)—to invest up to $30 billion in small institutions to increase small
business lending. 45 Treasury may choose to model the new program’s
implementation on the CPP process, as it did with the CDCI. Treasury is
required to consult with the bank regulators to determine whether an
institution may receive a capital investment, and Treasury officials have
indicated that they would likely rely on regulators to determine applicants’
eligibility. Unless Treasury also takes steps to coordinate and monitor
withdrawal requests by regulators, the disparity that existed in CPP
between the control mechanisms for approved applicants and those
receiving withdrawal recommendations may persist in this new program,
potentially resulting in similar applicants being treated differently.

Treasury Does Not Monitor
Regulators’ Decisions to
Approve or Deny CPP
Repayments

Treasury relies on decisions from federal bank regulators concerning
whether to allow CPP firms to repay their investments, but as with
withdrawal recommendations, it does not monitor or collect information
on regulators’ decisions. The CPP institution submits a repayment request
to its primary federal regulator and Treasury (see fig. 5). Bank regulatory
officials explained that their agencies use existing supervisory procedures
generally applicable to capital reductions as a basis for reviewing CPP
repurchase requests and that they approach the decision from the
perspective of achieving regulatory rather than CPP goals. Following their
review, regulators provide a brief e-mail notification to Treasury indicating
whether they object or do not object to allowing an institution to repay its
CPP investment. Treasury, in turn, communicates the regulators’ decisions
to the CPP firms.

45

Pub. L. No. 111-240, Title IV, Subtitle A, 124 Stat. 2504 (2010).

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GAO-11-47 Troubled Asset Relief Program

Figure 5: Investment Repayment Process for CPP

FI
preferred stock
FI
or subordinated
warrants
debt
Treasury notifies institution
that request received and
review is under way.
B

A

Financial
institution
(FI)

FI
warrants

Treasury notifies institution
of the decision and instructs institution
to contact Treasury counsel
to set up dates for closing
and settlement.
Treasury
D

Request
repurchase
of preferred
stock or
subordinated
debt

Yes

FI

Does
institution
want to
repurchase
warrants?

Federal
regulator

Treasury

tice

No

C
Regulator analyzes
financial condition and
viability of institution since
CPP funds were received.
Approval or denial of request
is e-mailed to Treasury.

No

F Treasury and the
institution have 10 days
to agree on a fair
market value (FMV) for
the warrants. If they
disagree,
independent
Treasury
appraisals
are used to
FMV determine a
FMV that
FI
will be used
as the sales
price.

Treasury may sell warrants.

E After repurchasing all preferred stock or
subordinated debt, the institution has
15 days to notify Treasury of its intentions to
repurchase warrants originally issued with
the preferred stock.

Sources: GAO (analysis); Art Explosion (images).

As of August 2010, 109 institutions had formally requested that they be
allowed to repay their CPP investments, and regulators had approved over
80 percent of the requests (see table 4). According to Treasury officials,
there have been no instances where Treasury has raised concerns about a
regulator’s decision. Officials at the Federal Reserve—which is
responsible for reviewing most CPP repayment requests because requests
for bank holding companies go to the holding company regulator—
explained that they had not denied any requests but had asked institutions
to wait or to raise additional capital. In these cases, institutions typically
had experienced significant deterioration since the CPP investment,
raising concerns about the adequacy of their capital levels.
Table 4: Repayment Requests as of August 2010
Status of repayment request
Requests received
Recommended for approval
Not recommended for approval

Federal Reserve
95
78
17a

FDIC
2
2
0

OCC
1
1
0

OTS
11
10
1b

Total
109
91
18

Sources: Federal Reserve, FDIC, OCC, OTS
a

Includes requests with a decision pending.

b

Decision pending.

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GAO-11-47 Troubled Asset Relief Program

Under the original terms of CPP, Treasury prohibited institutions from
repaying their funds within 3 years unless the firm had completed a
qualified equity offering to replace a minimum amount of the capital. 46
However, the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA)
included provisions modifying the terms of CPP repayments. These
provisions require that Treasury allow any institution to repay its CPP
investment subject only to consultation with the appropriate federal bank
regulator without considering whether the institution has replaced such
funds from any other source or applying any waiting period. 47 Treasury
officials indicated that, as a result of these restrictions, they did not
provide guidance or criteria to regulators. The officials explained that even
before the ARRA provisions limited Treasury’s role, the standard CPP
contract terms allowed institutions to repay the funds at their discretion—
subject to regulatory approval—as long as they completed a qualified
equity offering or the 3-year time frame had passed. The officials said that
the contract terms themselves helped ensure that CPP goals were
achieved.
While the decision to allow repayment ultimately lies with the bank
regulators, Treasury is not statutorily prohibited from reviewing their
decision-making process and collecting information or providing feedback
about the regulators’ decisions. The two regulators responsible for most
repayment requests prepare a case decision memo to document their
analysis that is similar to the memo they used to document their
evaluations of CPP applicants, but Treasury and agency officials said that
Treasury does not request or review the memo or other analyses
supporting regulators’ decisions. One regulator indicated that it would
provide Treasury with a brief explanation of the basis for its decisions to
deny repayment requests and a brief discussion of the supervisory
concerns raised by the proposed repayment. But Treasury officials stated
that they did not review any information on the basis for regulators’

46

A qualified equity offering is the sale and issuance of Tier 1 qualifying perpetual preferred
stock, common stock, or a combination of such stock for cash. Under the original terms,
CPP investments in the form of senior preferred shares could only be redeemed prior to 3
years from the date of investment with the proceeds of qualified equity offerings that
resulted in aggregate gross proceeds to the financial institution of not less than 25 percent
of the issue price of the senior preferred.

47

Pub. L. No. 111-5, div. B, § 7001, 123 Stat. 115, 516 (2009). Section 7001 provides, in part,
that “Subject to consultation with the appropriate Federal banking agency, if
any…Treasury shall permit a TARP recipient to repay any assistance previously provided
under the TARP to such financial institution, without regard to whether the financial
institution has replaced the funds from any other source or to any waiting period.”

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GAO-11-47 Troubled Asset Relief Program

decisions to approve or deny repayment requests. Without collecting or
monitoring such information, Treasury has no basis for considering
whether decisions about similar institutions are being made consistently
and thus whether CPP firms are being treated equitably. Furthermore,
absent information on why regulators made repayment decisions,
Treasury cannot provide feedback to regulators on the consistency of
regulators’ decision making for similar institutions as part of its
consultation role.

Regulators Independently
Developed Similar
Guidelines for Evaluating
Repurchase Requests and
Processes for Coordinating
Their Decisions without
Treasury Guidance

Regulators have independently developed similar guidelines for evaluating
repurchase requests and also established processes for coordinating
decisions that involved multiple regulators, and Treasury officials stated
that they did not provide input to these guidelines or processes.
Regulators said that, in general, they considered the same types of factors
when evaluating repayment requests that they considered when reviewing
CPP applications. According to the officials, regulators follow existing
regulatory requirements for capital reductions—including the repayment
of CPP funds—that apply to all of their supervised institutions. In addition
to following existing supervisory procedures, officials from the different
banking agencies indicated that they also considered a broad set of similar
factors, including the following:

•

the institution’s continued viability without CPP funds;

•

the adequacy of the institution’s capital and ability to maintain appropriate
capital levels over the subsequent 1 to 2 years, even assuming worsening
economic conditions;

•

the level and composition of capital and liquidity;

•

earnings and asset quality; and

•

any major changes in financial condition or viability that had occurred
since the institution received CPP funds.
Although regulators said that they considered similar factors in their
evaluations, without reviewing any information or analysis supporting
regulators’ recommendations, Treasury cannot be sure that regulators are
using these guidelines consistently for all repayment requests.
In addition to setting out guidelines for standard repayment requests, the
Federal Reserve established a supplemental process to evaluate

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repayment requests by the 19 largest bank holding companies that
participated in the Supervisory Capital Assessment Program (SCAP). 48 As
we reported in our June 2009 review of Treasury’s implementation of
TARP, the Federal Reserve required any SCAP institution seeking to repay
CPP capital to demonstrate that it could access the long-term debt
markets without reliance on debt guarantees by FDIC and public equity
markets in addition to other factors. 49 As of September 16, 2010, four bank
holding companies that participated in SCAP had not repurchased their
CPP investment and one had not repaid funds from TARP’s Automotive
Industry Financing Program. 50
Bank regulators said that they also shared their repayment process
documents with each other to enhance the consistency of their
evaluations and recommendations. For example, the Federal Reserve
designed a repayment case decision memo that documents the review of
repayment requests and the factors considered in making the decision and
shared it with other regulators to promote consistency in their reviews.
Officials from OTS explained that they used the Federal Reserve’s
repurchase case decision memo as the framework for their document
while adding certain elements specific to thrifts such as confirmation that
FDIC concurrence was received for thrift holding companies with state
bank subsidiaries regulated by FDIC. Bank regulatory officials also stated
that bank regulators discussed the repayment process during their weekly
conference calls on CPP-related topics. OCC also prepares a memo to
document its review of repurchase requests that differs from the form
used by the Federal Reserve and OTS; however, it contains similar
elements such as an explanation of the analysis and the basis for the

48

SCAP was an effort initiated in February 2009 by the Federal Reserve and other federal
banking regulators to conduct a comprehensive simultaneous assessment of the capital
held by the 19 largest bank holding companies. It was designed as a forward-looking
exercise intended to help regulators gauge the extent of additional capital necessary to
keep the institutions strongly capitalized and able to lend even if economic conditions were
worse than had been expected.

49

For more information, see GAO-09-658.

50

The four CPP firms that participated in SCAP and had not repaid the capital as of
September 16, 2010 were Fifth Third Bancorp, KeyCorp, Regions Financial Corporation,
and SunTrust Banks, Inc. The fifth firm was GMAC, which received TARP funds through
the Automotive Industry Financing Program, which Treasury established in December 2008
to help stabilize the U.S. automotive industry and avoid disruptions that would pose
systemic risk to the nation’s economy. Citigroup, Inc., exchanged its CPP shares for
financial instruments that converted to common shares in September 2009, and Treasury
has begun the process of selling its shares of Citigroup, Inc., common stock.

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decision. Finally, FDIC officials said that they followed existing
procedures for capital retirement applications from FDIC-supervised
institutions that included safety and soundness considerations.
Bank regulators also established processes for coordinating repayment
decisions for CPP firms with a holding company and subsidiary bank
supervised by different regulators. For example, Federal Reserve officials
said that if a holding company it supervised that had a subsidiary bank
under another regulator requested to repay CPP funds, the agency would
consult with the subsidiary’s regulator before making a final decision. The
officials stated that if the regulator of the subsidiary bank objected to the
Federal Reserve’s preliminary decision, the regulators would try to reach a
consensus. However, as regulator of the holding company that received
the CPP investment, the Federal Reserve has the ultimate responsibility
for making the decision as it is considered the primary federal regulator in
such cases. According to Federal Reserve officials, when OTS is the
primary regulator of a subsidiary thrift, it provides a repayment case
decision memo to the Federal Reserve for it to consider as it evaluates the
repayment request. OCC also provides the Federal Reserve with its
analysis of any subsidiary bank for which it is the primary regulator, and
FDIC identifies certain individuals who provide their recommendation and
are available to discuss the decision. OTS performs a similar coordination
role for CPP repayment requests that involve thrift holding companies
with nonthrift financial subsidiaries. However, if Treasury does not collect
information on or monitor the processes regulators use to make their
repayment decisions, Treasury cannot provide any feedback to regulators
on the extent to which they are coordinating their decisions.

Conclusions

Approved CPP applicants generally had similar examination ratings and
other strength characteristics that exceeded guidelines. However, a
smaller group of firms had weaker characteristics and were approved after
consideration of mitigating factors by regulators and Treasury. The ability
to approve institutions after consideration of mitigating factors illustrates
the importance of including controls in the review and selection process to
provide reasonable assurance of the achievement of program goals and
consistent decision making.
While Treasury established such controls for applicants that regulators
recommended for approval, Treasury’s process was inconsistent in the
control mechanisms that existed for applicants that regulators
recommended to withdraw from program consideration. These
institutions did not benefit from the multiple levels of review that Treasury

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and regulators applied to approved applicants. For example, regulators
could decide independently which applicants they would recommend to
withdraw and may have considered mitigating factors differently. Treasury
did not collect information on these firms or the reasons for regulators’
decisions. Without mechanisms such as those that exist for approved
applicants to control for the risk of inconsistent evaluations across
different regulators, Treasury cannot have reasonable assurance that all
similar applicants were treated consistently or that some potentially
eligible firms did not end up withdrawing after following the advice of
their regulator. Treasury officials explained their desire to conduct
adequate due diligence on all applicants recommended for approval, but as
Treasury is the agency responsible for implementing CPP, understanding
the reasons that regulators recommended applicants withdraw would have
been equally beneficial for Treasury. Collecting and reviewing information
on withdrawal requests would allow Treasury to determine whether
applicants that were left out of CPP were evaluated consistently across
different regulators and conformed to Treasury’s goals for the program.
Although Treasury is no longer making investments in financial institutions
through CPP, it may continue to use the process as a model for similar
programs as it has for the CDCI program. One such program is the SBLF,
which Congress authorized in September 2010. SBLF contains elements
similar to those of CPP and requires Treasury to administer the program
with bank regulators. Unless Treasury makes changes to the CPP model to
include monitoring and reviews of withdrawal recommendations, these new
programs may share the same increased risk of similar participants not
being treated consistently that existed in CPP.
As with the approval process, agencies are expected to establish control
mechanisms to provide reasonable assurance that program goals are being
achieved. Treasury has not established mechanisms to monitor, review, or
coordinate regulators’ decisions on repayment requests because, in its
view, it lacks the authority to do so and is limited to carrying out
regulators’ decisions regarding the institution making the request.
However, Treasury is not precluded from providing feedback to help
ensure that regulators are treating similar institutions consistently when
considering their repayment requests. Although regulators said that they
consider similar factors when evaluating CPP firms’ repayment requests,
without collecting information on how and why regulators made their
decisions, Treasury cannot verify the degree to which regulators’ decisions
on requests to exit CPP actually were based on such factors.

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Recommendations for
Executive Action

If Treasury administers programs containing elements similar to those of
CPP, such as the SBLF, we recommend that Treasury apply lessons
learned from the implementation of CPP and enhance procedural controls
for addressing the risk of inconsistency in regulators’ decisions on
withdrawals. Specifically, we recommend that the Secretary of the
Treasury direct the program office responsible for implementing SBLF to
establish a process for collecting information from bank regulators on all
applicants that withdraw from consideration in response to a regulator’s
recommendation, including the reasons behind the recommendation. We
also recommend that the program office evaluate the information to
identify trends or patterns that may indicate whether similar applicants
were treated inconsistently across different regulators and take action, if
necessary, to help ensure a more consistent treatment.
As part of its consultation with regulators on their decisions to allow
institutions to repay their CPP investments to Treasury, and to improve
monitoring of these decisions, we recommend that the Secretary of the
Treasury direct OFS to periodically collect and review certain information
from the bank regulators on the analysis and conclusions supporting their
decisions on CPP repayment requests and provide feedback for the
regulators’ consideration on the extent to which regulators are evaluating
similar institutions consistently.

Agency Comments
and Our Evaluation

We provided a full draft of this report to Treasury for its review and
comment. We received written comments from the Assistant Secretary for
Financial Stability. These comments are summarized below and reprinted
in appendix III. In addition, we received technical comments on this draft
from the Federal Reserve, FDIC, OCC, and Treasury, which we
incorporated as appropriate. In its written comments, Treasury agreed to
consider our recommendation to review information on applicants that
regulators recommend to withdraw from program consideration if
Treasury implements a similar program in the future. Treasury stated that
the system used to evaluate CPP applicants balanced the objectives of
ensuring consistent treatment for all applicants while also utilizing the
independent judgment of federal banking regulators. Treasury suggested
that ensuring regulators hold regular discussions about their standards
could be an additional action to help ensure consistency in regulators’
reviews. As we note in the report, Treasury implemented multiple layers of
review for approved institutions to enhance the consistency of the
decision process. However, applicants that withdrew from consideration
in response to a request from their regulator received no review by
Treasury or other regulators. Although CPP is no longer making any new

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investments, the passage of the SBLF, which, according to Treasury
officials, would also rely on regulators to determine applicants’ eligibility,
presents an opportunity for Treasury to address this area of concern. We
continue to believe that unless Treasury takes steps to monitor and
provide feedback on regulators’ withdrawal requests, applicants that
receive withdrawal recommendations under this new program may not be
treated consistently and equitably.
Treasury stated that our second recommendation—to review information
on regulators’ decisions on repayment requests and provide feedback to
regulators—also raises questions about how to balance the goals of
consistency and respect for the independence of regulators. However,
Treasury acknowledged the potential value of our recommendation and
agreed to consider ways to address it in a manner consistent with these
considerations. Specifically, Treasury noted that while it is prohibited
from imposing standards for repayment as a result of statutory changes to
its authority under EESA, it did help facilitate meetings among regulators
to discuss when CPP participants would be allowed to repay their
investments. Finally, Treasury explained that it does not receive
confidential supervisory information about CPP participants on a regular
basis, which could limit any information collection envisioned by our
recommendation. However, as we noted in the report, the two regulators
with responsibility for most CPP repayment requests document their
analysis in a manner similar to what regulators provided to Treasury when
recommending CPP applicants, but Treasury does not review this
information.

We are sending copies of this report to the Congressional Oversight Panel,
Financial Stability Oversight Board, Special Inspector General for TARP,
interested congressional committees and members, Treasury, the federal
banking regulators, and others. The report also is available at no charge on
the GAO Web site at http://www.gao.gov.

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GAO-11-47 Troubled Asset Relief Program

If you or your staff have any questions about this report, please contact me
at williamso@gao.gov or (202) 512-8678. Contact points for our Offices of
Congressional Relations and Public Affairs may be found on the last page
of this report. GAO staff who made major contributions to this report are
listed in appendix IV.

Orice Williams Brown
Director, Financial Markets
and Community Investment

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GAO-11-47 Troubled Asset Relief Program

List of Committees
The Honorable Daniel K. Inouye
Chairman
The Honorable Thad Cochran
Vice Chairman
Committee on Appropriations
United States Senate
The Honorable Christopher J. Dodd
Chairman
The Honorable Richard C. Shelby
Ranking Member
Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs
United States Senate
The Honorable Kent Conrad
Chairman
The Honorable Judd Gregg
Ranking Member
Committee on the Budget
United States Senate
The Honorable Max Baucus
Chairman
The Honorable Charles E. Grassley
Ranking Member
Committee on Finance
United States Senate
The Honorable David R. Obey
Chairman
The Honorable Jerry Lewis
Ranking Member
Committee on Appropriations
House of Representatives
The Honorable John M. Spratt, Jr.
Chairman
The Honorable Paul Ryan
Ranking Member
Committee on the Budget
House of Representatives

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The Honorable Barney Frank
Chairman
The Honorable Spencer Bachus
Ranking Member
Committee on Financial Services
House of Representatives
The Honorable Sander M. Levin
Acting Chairman
The Honorable Dave Camp
Ranking Member
Committee on Ways and Means
House of Representatives

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Appendix I: Objectives, Scope, and
Methodology

Appendix I: Objectives, Scope, and
Methodology
The objectives of our report were to (1) describe the characteristics of
financial institutions that received funding under the Capital Purchase
Program (CPP), and (2) assess how the Department of the Treasury
(Treasury), with the assistance of federal bank regulators, implemented
CPP.
To describe the characteristics of financial institutions that received CPP
funding, we reviewed and analyzed information from Treasury case files
on all of the 567 institutions that received CPP investments through April
30, 2009. 1 We gathered information from the case files using a data
collection survey that recorded our responses in a database. Multiple
analysts reviewed the collected information, and we performed data
quality control checks to verify its accuracy. We used the database to
analyze the characteristics of CPP applicants including their supervisory
examination ratings, financial performance ratios, and regulators’
assessments of their viability, among other things. We spoke with Treasury
and regulatory officials about their processes for evaluating applicants, in
particular about actions they took to collect up-to-date information on
firms’ financial condition. We also collected and analyzed information
from the records of the CPP Council and Investment Committee meetings
to understand how the committees evaluated and recommended approval
of CPP applicants. Additionally, we collected limited updated information
on all CPP institutions approved through December 31, 2009—for
example, their location, primary federal regulator, ownership type, and
CPP investment amount—from Treasury’s Office of Financial Stability
(OFS) and from publicly available reports on OFS’s Web site to present
characteristics for all approved institutions. To describe how Treasury and
regulators assessed firms with weaker characteristics, we collected
information on the reasons regulators approved these firms and the
concerns regulators raised about their eligibility from case files and
records of committee meetings. To describe enforcement actions that
regulators took against these institutions, we reviewed publicly available
documents on formal enforcement actions from federal bank regulators’
Web sites. We also collected information on CPP firms that missed their
dividend or interest payments or restructured their CPP investments from
OFS and publicly available reports on its Web site. Finally, we collected
information from the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) on
the number of CPP firms added to its list of problem banks.

1

In total, Treasury invested in 707 financial institutions through December 31, 2009, when it
closed CPP to new investments.

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Appendix I: Objectives, Scope, and
Methodology

To assess how Treasury implemented CPP with the assistance of federal
bank regulators, we reviewed Treasury’s policies, procedures, and
guidance related to CPP, including nonpublic documents and publicly
available material from the OFS Web site. We met with OFS officials to
discuss how they evaluated applications and repayment requests and
coordinated with regulators to decide on these applications and requests.
We interviewed officials from FDIC, the Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency (OCC), Office of Thrift Supervision (OTS), and the Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve System (Federal Reserve) to obtain
information on their processes for reviewing and providing
recommendations on CPP applications and repayment requests. We also
discussed the guidance and communication they received from Treasury
and their methods of formulating their CPP procedures. Additionally, we
collected and analyzed program documents from the bank regulators,
including policies and procedures, guidance documents, and summaries of
their evaluations of applications and repayment requests. We also gathered
data from regulators on applicants that withdrew from CPP
consideration—including the reason for withdrawing—and on the number
of repayment requests and their outcomes. We reviewed relevant laws,
such as the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008 and the
American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, to determine the
impact of statutory changes to Treasury’s authority. To assess how
Treasury and regulators documented their decisions to approve CPP
applicants, we analyzed information from case files and CPP Council and
Investment Committee meeting minutes to identify how consistently
Treasury and regulators included relevant records of their reviews and
decision-making processes. We also discussed with Treasury and
regulatory officials the key forms they used to document their decisions
and the evolution of these forms over time. To assess Treasury programs
that were modeled after CPP, we collected and reviewed publicly available
documents from Treasury and interviewed Treasury officials to discuss
the nature of these programs—including the Community Development
Capital Initiative (CDCI) and Small Business Lending Fund (SBLF)—and
plans for implementing them. Finally, we met with the Federal Reserve’s
Office of Inspector General to learn about its work examining the Federal
Reserve’s CPP process and reviewed its report and other reports by GAO,
the Special Inspector General for the Troubled Asset Relief Program
(SIGTARP), and the FDIC Office of Inspector General.
This report is part of our coordinated work with SIGTARP and the
inspectors general of the federal banking agencies to oversee TARP and
CPP. The offices of the inspectors general of FDIC, Federal Reserve, and
Treasury and SIGTARP have all completed work or have work under way

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Appendix I: Objectives, Scope, and
Methodology

reviewing CPP’s implementation at their respective agencies. In
coordination with the other oversight agencies and offices and to avoid
duplication, we primarily focused our audit work (including our review of
agency case files) on the phases of the CPP process from the point at
which the regulators transmitted their recommendations to Treasury.
We conducted this performance audit from May 2009 to September 2010 in
accordance with generally accepted government auditing standards. Those
standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain sufficient,
appropriate evidence to provide a reasonable basis for our findings and
conclusions based on our audit objectives. We believe that the evidence
obtained provides a reasonable basis for our findings and conclusions
based on our audit objectives.

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Appendix II: Information on Processing Times
for the Capital Purchase Program

Appendix II: Information on Processing
Times for the Capital Purchase Program
In general, the time frame for the Department of the Treasury and
regulators to complete the evaluation and funding process for Capital
Purchase Program applicants increased based on three factors. First,
smaller institutions had longer processing time frames than larger firms.
The average number of days between a firm’s application date and the
completion of the CPP investment increased steadily based on the firm’s
size as measured by its risk-weighted assets. The smallest 25 percent of
firms we reviewed had an average processing time of 100 days followed by
83 days for the next largest 25 percent of firms. The two largest quartiles
of firms had average processing times of 72 days and 53 days respectively.
Also, it took longer to complete the investment for smaller firms, as the
average time between preliminary approval and disbursement increased as
the institution size decreased. Second, private institutions took longer for
Treasury and regulators to process than public firms. The average and
median processing time frames from application through disbursement of
funds was about 6 weeks longer for private firms than for public firms. As
with the trend for smaller institutions, private institutions had longer
average time frames between preliminary approval and disbursement.
Third, when Treasury returned an application to regulators for additional
review, it took an average of about 2 weeks to receive a response from
regulators. On average, Treasury preliminarily approved these applicants
after an additional 3 days of review.
Firms that applied earlier had shorter average processing times—from
application to disbursement—than firms that applied in later months. The
average time from application through disbursement was 70 days for firms
that applied in October, 82 days for firms that applied in November, and 89
for those that applied in December. Also, public firms tended to apply
earlier than private firms and larger firms tended to apply earlier than
smaller firms. For example, 62 percent of firms that applied in October
were public, while 93 percent of firms that applied in December were
private—a trend that largely resulted from the later release of program
term sheets for the privately held banks. Likewise, 61 percent of firms that
applied in October were the largest firms and 84 percent of firms that
applied in December were the smallest firms. Because larger firms and
public firms also had shorter average processing time frames than smaller
and private firms, this may explain why firms that applied earlier had
shorter processing times than those that applied later in the program.
The overall process for most firms, from when they applied to when they
received their CPP funds, took 2 1/2 months. There were many interim
steps within this broad process that can shorten or lengthen the overall
time frame. For example, in our June 2009 report on the status of

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Appendix II: Information on Processing Times
for the Capital Purchase Program

Treasury’s implementation of the Troubled Asset Relief Program, we
reported that the average processing days from application to submission
to Treasury varied among the different regulators from 28 days to 57 days. 1
Also, Treasury preliminarily approved most firms within 5 weeks from
application. The Investment Committee approved most firms the same day
it reviewed them; however, it generally took longer to approve firms with
the lowest examination ratings, resulting in a longer average review time
frame. As previously mentioned, firms that Treasury returned to regulators
for additional review took longer to receive Treasury’s preliminary
approval, and these firms tended to be those with lower examination
ratings. Once Treasury preliminarily approved an applicant, it took an
average of 33 days to complete the investment. As with the trends for the
overall processing time frames, the final investment closing and
disbursement took longer for smaller institutions and private institutions.

1

See GAO-09-658.

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Appendix III: Comments from the Department
of the Treasury’s Office of Financial Stability

Appendix III: Comments from the
Department of the Treasury’s Office of
Financial Stability

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Appendix III: Comments from the Department
of the Treasury’s Office of Financial Stability

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Appendix IV: GAO Contact and Staff
Acknowledgments

Appendix IV: GAO Contact and Staff
Acknowledgments
GAO Contact

Orice Williams Brown (202) 512-8678 or williamso@gao.gov

Staff
Acknowledgments

Daniel Garcia-Diaz (Assistant Director), Kevin Averyt, William Bates,
Richard Bulman, Emily Chalmers, William Chatlos, Rachel DeMarcus,
M’Baye Diagne, Joe Hunter, Elizabeth Jimenez, Rob Lee, Matthew
McDonald, Marc Molino, Bob Pollard, Steve Ruszczyk, and Maria Soriano
made important contributions to this report.

(250504)

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