Ten banks have been allowed to pay back  their TARP (Toxic Asset Relief Program) funds, reports CNNMoney.com. The decision will return an expected $68 billion  of federal money to taxpayers. Check out a segment of their story below.
 
Ten leading banks won approval to repay  money from the government's controversial TARP program, regulators said  Tuesday, which could represent approximately $68 billion in bailout  funds returned to taxpayers.
The Treasury Department, which has overseen  the $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program, did not indicate which  banks were included in that group, although most lenders confirmed the  news separately.
Eight of the nine banks that were found  to not need new capital following the government's bank stress tests  last month made the list. JPMorgan Chase (JPM, Fortune 500), Goldman  Sachs (GS, Fortune 500), American Express (AXP, Fortune 500), Bank of  New York Mellon (BK, Fortune 500), State Street (STT, Fortune 500) as  well as regional banking giants Capital One (COF, Fortune 500), BB&T  (BBT, Fortune 500) and U.S. Bancorp (USB, Fortune 500) all said they  will pay back TARP funds. (Insurer MetLife also was not required to  raise capital but it did not receive any TARP money.)
 
Investment bank Morgan Stanley (MS, Fortune  500), which was the only financial firm that regulators did ask to raise  money after the stress tests, confirmed it also won approval from the  Treasury Department to pay back $10 billion.
Chicago-based Northern Trust (NTRS, Fortune  500), which took in $1.576 billion under the program but was not part  of the bank stress tests, also announced Tuesday it is paying back TARP  funds.
So far, the Treasury Department has allowed  nearly two dozen small, mostly community-based lenders to redeem the  government's preferred shares, representing nearly $1.9 billion in taxpayer  money.
Should the latest banks agree to redeem  the company's preferred-shares the government acquired last fall, that  would represent approximately another $68 billion in TARP repayments.
 
"These repayments are an encouraging  sign of financial repair, but we still have work to do," Treasury  Secretary Tim Geithner said in a statement.
Proceeds received from those 10 banks  will be applied to the Treasury Department's general account, the agency  said Tuesday, some of which be will used to promote financial stability  should the economy take a turn for the worse. A portion of those funds  will also be used to reduce Treasury's borrowing and the nation's rapidly  rising level of debt.
The banks that buy back the government's  stake will also be able to repurchase the warrants, or rights to purchase  shares at a future date, the government acquired when it injected capital  into many of these banks late last year.  
Treasury said those obligations could  be purchased at "fair market value", but did not offer details  on how that would be determined.
There has been talk that the government  may auction those warrants on the open market in order to quell criticism  about their pricing. Some have charged that allowing banks to redeem  warrants at too cheap of a price would be to the disadvantage of U.S.  taxpayers who stand to make significant gains should bank stocks continue  to move higher in the months and years ahead.