Northern Trust Corp.
(NTRS) on Wednesday declared that it has completed the final step to free itself from the government bailout program. The Chicago-based custody bank paid $87 million to repurchase stock warrants issued to the federal government as part of the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP).

With this repurchase, Northern Trust has paid a total of nearly $1.71 billion to the Treasury under TARP. This includes repurchase of preferred stock issued to the government and preferred dividends. According to the bank, the total payments represent a 14% annualized return on investment to the US taxpayers.

The $700 billion bailout program was launched by the federal government to help revive deteriorating credit markets during the height of the financial crisis. The government provided capital to institutions in exchange of preferred stock and warrants to purchase common shares.

Most banks still have short-term debt guaranteed by the government. However, some large financial firms that have redeemed warrants issued under the TARP include Morgan Stanley (MS), Bank of New York Mellon Corp. (BK), Goldman Sachs (GS), U.S. Bancorp (USB), American Express Co. (AXP), BB&T Corp. (BBT) and State Street Corp. (STT).

Although Northern Trust has been healthy with respect to its balance sheet, we think there is limited room for improving its results in the near future as the market turmoil is expected to persist for a while. The shape of its bottom line will depend on near-term economic trends.

However, repayment of TARP money will bring some relief on the preferred dividend payment front. We expect the company to emerge from this testing environment and become more competitive in the long run.

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Read the full analyst report on “BK”
Read the full analyst report on “GS”
Read the full analyst report on “USB”
Read the full analyst report on “AXP”
Read the full analyst report on “BBT”
Read the full analyst report on “STT”
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