Bill Details: No Flipping TARP Assets, Unless...

Asset flippers beware -- the Treasury Department doesn't want you to profit unjustly by selling your mortgage bonds to Uncle Sam. According to details of the financial rescue bill, investors that want to sell assets to the Treasury cannot do so at a price higher than the one they bought them at. In other words, if an investor buys discounted mortgage-backed securities from a seller, he cannot turn around and unload the bonds to Treasury at a higher price. However, the legislation leaves a loophole: if a seller of bad assets took control of mortgage bonds through a merger/acquisition or bought them out of a conservatorship, they are exempt from the Treasury's "unjust enrichment" clause. The bill also allows Treasury to aid ailing depositories of less than $1 billion in assets if their capital positions were damaged by their investments in preferred stock issued by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. The legislation stipulates that the executive in charge of the Troubled Asset Relief Program must be an assistant secretary of the Treasury appointed by the president.

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