Posts Tagged ‘Funds’

Western Alliance joins trend of banks paying back TARP funds

December 13th, 2011

Steny Hoyer
Small Business Lending Fund

Image by Center for American Progress Action Fund
Majority Leader Hoyer on Job Creation

July 23, 2010, 11:15am – 12:15pm

Click here to watch the event:
www.americanprogressaction.org/events/2010/07/Jobs.html/s…

House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (D-MD) spoke about Democrats’ record on job creation and the economy at the Center for American Progress Action Fund on Friday, July 23. Majority Leader Hoyer will discuss the policies that have pulled our country back from the brink of a Second Great Depression—and, at a time when too many Americans are still out of work, the policies our middle class still needs. These include a focus on entrepreneurship, more lending for small businesses, the extension of unemployment insurance, and the Make it in America agenda, a new push to strengthen American manufacturing.

The Majority Leader also addressed the challenge of balancing job creation with long-term action on deficits. The competing agendas of the two parties present a clear contrast: Democratic action on behalf of the middle class versus the Republican record of obstruction and a push to return to failed Bush policies.

PHOTO CREDIT:
Ralph Alswang
Photographer
202-487-5025
ralph@ralphphoto.com
www.ralphphoto.com

Western Alliance joins trend of banks paying back TARP funds
Nationally, slightly more than one third of the 707 financial institutions that received over $ 700 billion in government-backed assistance during the financial crisis have paid back the government funds. The US Treasury's Small Business Lending Fund …
Read more on Phoenix Business Journal (blog)

Treasury targets area banks for recovery of TARP funds
A number of community banks to exit TARP, such as EagleBank of Bethesda, used another government source, the Small Business Lending Fund, to convert the prior investment to the new program at a lower dividend rate. Not everyone that applied to SBLF …
Read more on Washington Post

Small business lending fund to cut borrowing costs
Another £1bn will be made available through business finance partnerships to invest in smaller businesses through non-bank channels. The enterprise finance guarantee, a scheme to help small business lending devised by Labour two years ago, …
Read more on The Guardian

Get Corporate Credit Funds & Business Loans Tim Wilson Way

April 19th, 2011


www.freecorporatecreditinfo.com has a free eBook to help small business owners, entrepreneurs, new companies get obtain and establish corporate credit profile to secure business loans, corporate credit cards, business trade lines, vendor credit, corporate line of credit with major banks and dun & bradstreet experian with out a personal guarantee. Business loans can be up to a million dollars within months, store credit cards with in weeks. This video was inspired by Tim Wilson I Could Be Wrong song about his beef with Oprah Winfrey Dr. Phil, Tiger Woods, Martha Stewart, Barry Bonds, Larry the Cable Guy, George Bush & others. This video explains hurdles to get corporate credit in a funny way like Tim Wilson being tired of John McCain, Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, Bill O’reilly, Enron, Bank of America, Worldcom, Al Capone, Washington Mutual, Citi Bank, Bear Sterns, American Idol, Lost, Paris Hilton, Madonna, Jeff Gordon, NASCAR, and more. The video was originally written as a song to be done like Tim Wilson But I Could Be Wrong, but after 24 hours of trying The Gong Show decided it was more like Homer Simpson and Eric Cartman of South Park not Garth Brooks Jessica Simpson or Frank Sinatra it became a poem that Tim Wilson, Jeff Foxworthy, Ron White, Bill Engvall might like. Enjoy it and get the free ebook on how to get your business corporate credit.

Global Stocks $1 Trillion Loss No Reason to Sell for U.S. Funds

April 28th, 2010

Global Stocks $1 Trillion Loss No Reason to Sell for U.S. Funds
April 28 (Bloomberg) — The largest equity-market decline since February is failing to spur selling by the biggest U.S. money managers, who say losses will prove temporary as gains in earnings make stocks too cheap to pass up.