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Daily FinanceBy BETSY SCHIFFMAN Posted 9:10 AM 03/24/10
JPMorgan Chase (JPM) could bank a rich $1.4 billion tax refund this year, owing to Washington Mutual's 2008 losses and an oft-overlooked business tax break that was squeezed into the 2009 Stimulus Bill, according to a report in Wednesday's Wall Street Journal.
It's not a done deal yet -- JPMorgan is reportedly still negotiating with the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. and its bondholders about the refund. But if all goes its way, the bank could reap up to $1.55 billion for taking over Washington Mutual's money-losing bank operations back in 2008. A portion of the total would be allocated to cover legal claims related to the takeover, but the rest -- $1.4 billion -- could go straight to JPMorgan's coffers.
Washington Mutual bondholders object to JPMorgan's claim, arguing that the bank already scored a handsome government loan under the TARP program, and bailout beneficiaries are not supposed to receive stimulus-related tax refunds. (JPMorgan repaid $25 billion in TARP funds in June 2009.) Also, given that JPMorgan paid a mere $1.9 billion for Washington Mutual in 2008, the tax break would essentially give the company most of its money back from that transaction.
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http://www.dailyfinance.com/story/taxes/jpmorgan-may-score-1-4-billion-refund-for-wamu-losses/19412232/