US on the hook for $50 BILLION+ to bailout Greece

May 11, 2010 18:50


And that doesn’t count the added exposure created by the Federal Reserve’s decision over the weekend to participate in currency swaps to provide liquidity to jittery European banks. The swaps move resembles the Term Auction Facility the Fed instituted when the worst of the US financial crisis hit in 2007-08.

By: Jeff Cox at CNBC.com

The US exposure to the European debt bailout could be at least $50 billion, but the chance of taxpayers actually being on the hook for that appears remote.

Determining the exact amount of exposure is nearly impossible until governments start stepping up to the window created by the European Union and the International Monetary Fund to stem the crisis in Greece and elsewhere on the continent.

But one rule-of-thumb formula puts potential US exposure at $54 billion should the entire IMF loan fund be tapped.

And that doesn’t count the added exposure created by the Federal Reserve’s decision over the weekend to participate in currency swaps to provide liquidity to jittery European banks. The swaps move resembles the Term Auction Facility the Fed instituted when the worst of the US financial crisis hit in 2007-08.

And the entire bailout package has been nicknamed “Le Tarp” by some for its similarity to the Troubled Asset Relief Program that bailed out US companies with taxpayer-backed loans.

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