Costly scheme ended earlier - Business - Evening Standard
       

Costly scheme ended earlier

The last serious financial crisis in the US banking industry was the meltdown of savings and loans companies — essentially building societies.
From 1986 to 1989, the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corp (FSLIC) closed or assisted 296 institutions that had hit the rocks due to bad property and commercial loans.

Eventually the FSLIC was swamped by the flood of failures forcing Washington to set up the Resolution Trust Corp (RTC).

It was funded with an initial $50 billion and took over the assets of failed firms and sold them off — often for just cents in the dollar.
The scheme worked, but was costly and took more than six years to solve the crisis. In all Washington injected $100 billion, with the RTC working through some $394 billion of assets.

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