MidSouth Bank's Cloutier Testifying About TARP Before House Subcommittee
March 03 2009 - 6:00PM
PR Newswire (US)
LAFAYETTE, La., March 3 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- MidSouth Bank
President and CEO Rusty Cloutier has been invited to testify on
Wednesday, March 4, before the House Subcommittee on Financial
Institutions and Consumer Credit. A live Webcast of "TARP
Oversight: Is TARP Working for Main Street?" will be available at
1:30 p.m. (CT) via the House Committee on Financial Services' Web
site. The hearing takes place in the Rayburn House Office Building,
located southwest of the Capitol. Cloutier is the only banker
participating in the hearing. Also scheduled to testify are Dean
Baker, Ph.D., co-director, Center for Economic and Policy Research;
David S. Scharfstein, Ph.D., Edmund Cogswell Converse Professor of
Finance and Banking at Harvard Business School; Robert W.
Davenport, president, The National Development Council; and Joseph
Zucchero, owner, Mr. Beef Deli of Chicago. Speaking on behalf of
MidSouth Bank and community bankers across the country, Cloutier
hopes the format will help answer critical questions healthy banks
now have about accepting TARP funds. In late December, MidSouth
Bank elected to sell $20 million worth of its preferred stock to
the U.S. Treasury in association with the Capital Purchase Program,
a component of TARP that was designed for healthy banks. At the
time, the bank's management and board of directors believed they
were entering into a public-private partnership with the federal
government. Since then, however, the Treasury has been attempting
to put the same sweeping restrictions on healthy banks as troubled
banks. "I hope they can finally tell me just what they want
community bankers to do," Cloutier said. "It was sold to us by the
feds as a partnership, but it's turning out to be something very
different. It's looking more and more like the federal government
wants to treat this like it was a needs-based issue, and we didn't
need the money." Cloutier also said he will elicit information on
the federal government's plan to address the "too big to fail"
major financial institutions that are now bankrupt. More important,
however, he anticipates that the format will allow him to reiterate
his message that continuous bailouts are not the answer. Those
deteriorating major banks today control 60 to 64 percent of the
nation's assets, he said, and the best low-cost solution to the
financial crisis that has devastated the country is to break them
up. "Continuing to pump money into them is not going to be the
answer. Breaking up some of their operational units and selling
them off into the open market is the only way to ignite competition
and bring back the banking industry." Cloutier noted that investors
are going to sit on the sidelines until the federal government
announces that it will take this action. "Nobody is going to put
fresh capital into the banking business when your major competitor
is going to be continuously bailed out by the U.S. government with
more and more money," he said. To access the Webcast, visit the
House Committee on Financial Services Web site at
http://www.house.gov/apps/list/hearing/financialsvcs_dem/hr0304092.shtml.
About MidSouth Bancorp, Inc. MidSouth Bancorp, Inc. is a bank
holding company headquartered in Lafayette, La., with total assets
of $936.8 million as of Dec. 31, 2008. Through its wholly-owned
bank subsidiary, MidSouth Bank, N.A., the Company offers complete
banking services to commercial and retail customers in south
Louisiana and southeast Texas. It has 34 locations in Louisiana and
Texas and more than 170 ATMs. The group is community oriented and
focuses primarily on offering commercial and consumer loan and
deposit services to individuals, and small and middle market
businesses. Established in 1985, MidSouth Bank has 27 offices
extending along the Interstate 10 corridor in south Louisiana
located in Lafayette (9), Baton Rouge (3), New Iberia (3), Lake
Charles (2), Sulphur, Jeanerette, Jennings, Thibodaux, Larose,
Opelousas, Breaux Bridge, Cecilia, Morgan City and Houma.
Additionally, the Company has seven full-service offices in the
southeast region of Texas, including Houston, Beaumont (3), Vidor,
College Station and Conroe. It also has a mortgage loan center in
Conroe. DATASOURCE: MidSouth Bancorp, Inc. CONTACT: Rusty Cloutier,
MidSouth Bank President and CEO, +1-337-962-9900, or Alex
Calicchia, Chief Marketing Officer, +1-337-593-3008, both of
MidSouth Bancorp, Inc.
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