Fannie Mae, the mortgage-finance company taken over by the government, asked the U.S. Treasury for a $10.7 billion capital investment as an eighth straight quarterly loss drove its net worth below zero once again.
A second-quarter net loss of $14.8 billion, or $2.67 a share, pushed the company to request money for the third time from a $200 billion government lifeline, Washington-based Fannie Mae said in a filing today with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
Today's results bring the company's cumulative losses over the last two years to $101.6 billion and will bring its total draw on the Treasury to $44.9 billion since April.
A record 1.5 million U.S. properties received a default or auction notice or were seized in the first half of this year, 15 percent more than a year earlier, as employers cut jobs and temporary programs to assist homeowners came to an end, RealtyTrac Inc. said July 16.
- Bloomberg
Wells Fargo said Thursday it is increasing the salaries for its top four executives, including CEO John Stumpf.
Executive compensation at banks has been a hot-button topic in recent months, especially for firms like Wells Fargo that received government bailout funds last fall. Wells Fargo received $25 billion as part of the Treasury Department's Troubled Asset Relief Program, which was launched at the peak of the credit crisis.
Last week, New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo released details on bonuses paid in 2008 to the initial nine banks the government agreed to provide with TARP funds, including Wells Fargo.
Cuomo's report showed Wells Fargo paid out $977.5 million in bonuses to employees in 2008, including to Wachovia employees. For some top executives, bonuses often make up the bulk of their annual compensation.
- USA Today