Tuesday, April 05, 2011

US Federal Reserve Lent To (or Bailed Out?) Libya’s Qaddafi in 2009

Part of the US Federal Reserve’s post Lehman market stabilizing scheme included loans to Libya’s state owned bank, the Bloomberg reports, (bold emphasis mine)

Arab Banking Corp., the lender part- owned by the Central Bank of Libya, used a New York branch to get 73 loans from the U.S. Federal Reserve in the 18 months after Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. collapsed.

The bank, then 29 percent-owned by the Libyan state, had aggregate borrowings in that period of $35 billion -- while the largest single loan amount outstanding was $1.2 billion in July 2009, according to Fed data released yesterday. In October 2008, when lending to financial institutions by the central bank’s so- called discount window peaked at $111 billion, Arab Banking took repeated loans totaling more than $2 billion.

Fed officials say all the discount window loans made during the worst financial crisis since the 1930s have been repaid with interest.

The U.S. government has frozen assets linked to the regime of Libyan ruler Muammar Qaddafi and engaged in air strikes against his military forces, which are battling a rebel uprising in the North African country. Arab Banking got an exemption that allows the firm to continue operating while barring it from engaging in any transactions with the Libyan government, according to the U.S. Treasury Department.

Some comments:

This represents as the continued the love-hate relationship between the US and Libya’s Qaddafi

The Federal Reserve has been bailing out the world, which included despots, and not just US banks.

No wonder the US Federal Reserve has been getting brickbats not only from Americans but also from some other authorities elsewhere in the world.

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