Bank failures and the coming Economic collapse

Interesting stuff. Pinning down a specific date is a tall order.

As a provocative side note; if there is timeline manipulation, how would that impact cycles (of any sort) playing out?

My thought is that cycle theories, at best, only give an approximation of probabilities, and not a solid prediction to bet the farm on.
 
Michael Hudson suggests another cause for banking collapses is that banks have not passed on the full interest rate increases to deposits and savings leading to cash runs on banks as peeps pull out their savings to invest in other ways.

Why the Banking System is Breaking Up
The collapses of Silvergate and Silicon Valley Bank are like icebergs calving off from the Antarctic glacier. The financial analogy to the global warming causing this collapse is the rising temperature of interest rates, which spiked last Thursday and Friday to close at 4.60 percent for the U.S. Treasury’s two-year bonds. Bank depositors meanwhile were still being paid only 0.2 percent on their deposits. That has led to a steady withdrawal of funds from banks – and a corresponding decline in commercial bank balances with the Federal Reserve.

Most media reports reflect a prayer that the bank runs will be localized, as if there is no context or environmental cause. There is general embarrassment to explain how the breakup of banks that is now gaining momentum is the result of the way that the Obama Administration bailed out the banks in 2008. Fifteen years of Quantitative Easing has re-inflated prices for packaged bank mortgages – and with them, housing prices, stock and bond prices.

The Fed’s $9 trillion of QE (not counted as part of the budget deficit) fueled an asset-price inflation that made trillions of dollars for holders of financial assets, with a generous spillover effect for the remaining members of the top Ten Percent. The cost of home ownership soared by capitalizing mortgages at falling interest rates into more highly debt-leveraged property. The U.S. economy experienced the largest bond-market boom in history as interest rates fell below 1 percent. The economy polarized between the creditor positive-net-worth class and the rest of the economy – whose analogy to environmental pollution and global warming was debt pollution.

But in serving the banks and the financial ownership class, the Fed painted itself into a corner: What would happen if and when interest rates finally rose?

In Killing the Host I wrote about what seemed obvious enough. Rising interest rates cause the prices of bonds already issued to fall – along with real estate and stock prices. That is what has been happening under the Fed’s fight against “inflation,” its euphemism for opposing rising employment and wage levels. Prices are plunging for bonds, and also for the capitalized value of packaged mortgages and other securities in which banks hold their assets on their balance sheet to back their deposits.

The result threatens to push down bank assets below their deposit liabilities, wiping out their net worth – their stockholder equity. This is what was threatened in 2008. It is what occurred in a more extreme way with S&Ls and savings banks in the 1980s, leading to their demise. These “financial intermediaries” did not create credit as commercial banks can do, but lent deposits out in the form of long-term mortgages at fixed interest rates, often for 30 years. But in the wake of the Volcker spike in interest rates that inaugurated the 1980s, the overall level of interest rates remained higher than the interest rates that S&Ls and savings banks were receiving.

Depositors began to withdraw their money to get higher returns elsewhere, because S&Ls and savings banks could not pay their depositors higher rates out of the revenue coming in from their mortgages fixed at lower rates. So even without fraud Keating-style, the mismatch between short-term liabilities and long-term interest rates ended their business plan.

The S&Ls owed money to depositors short-term, but were locked into long-term assets at falling prices. Of course, S&L mortgages were much longer-term than was the case for commercial banks. But the effect of rising interest rates has the same effect on bank assets that it has on all financial assets. Just as the QE interest-rate decline aimed to bolster the banks, its reversal today must have the opposite effect. And if banks have made bad derivatives trades, they’re in trouble.

Any bank has a problem of keeping its asset valuations higher than its deposit liabilities. When the Fed raises interest rates sharply enough to crash bond prices, the banking system’s asset structure weakens. That is the corner into which the Fed has painted the economy by QE.

The Fed recognizes this inherent problem, of course. That is why it avoided raising interest rates for so long – until the wage-earning bottom 99 Percent began to benefit by the recovery in employment. When wages began to recover, the Fed could not resist fighting the usual class war against labor. But in doing so, its policy has turned into a war against the banking system as well.

Silvergate was the first to go, but it was a special case. It had sought to ride the cryptocurrency wave by serving as a bank for various currencies. After SBF’s vast fraud was exposed, there was a run on cryptocurrencies. Investor/gamblers jumped ship. The crypto-managers had to pay by drawing down the deposits they had at Silverlake. It went under.

Silvergate’s failure destroyed the great illusion of cryptocurrency deposits. The popular impression was that crypto provided an alternative to commercial banks and “fiat currency.” But what could crypto funds invest in to back their coin purchases, if not bank deposits and government securities or private stocks and bonds? What is crypto, ultimately, if not simply a mutual fund with secrecy of ownership to protect money launderers?

Silicon Valley Bank also is in many ways a special case, given its specialized lending to IT startups. New Republic bank also has suffered a run, and it too is specialized, lending to wealthy depositors in the San Francisco and northern California area. But a bank run was being talked up last week, and financial markets were shaken up as bond prices declined when Fed Chairman Jerome Powell announced that he actually planned to raise interest rates even more than he earlier had targeted. Rising employment rates make wage earners more uppity in their demands to at least keep up with the inflation caused by the U.S. sanctions against Russian energy and food and the actions by monopolies to raise prices “to anticipate the coming inflation.” Wages have not kept pace with the resulting high inflation rates.

It looks like Silicon Valley Bank will have to liquidate its securities at a loss. Probably it will be taken over by a larger bank, but the entire financial system is being squeezed. Reuters reported on Friday that bank reserves at the Fed were plunging. That hardly is surprising, as banks are enjoying record interest rate spreads. No wonder well-to-do investors are running from the banks.

The obvious question is why the Fed doesn’t simply bail out banks in SVB’s position. The answer is that the lower prices for financial assets looks like the New Normal. For banks with negative equity, how can solvency be resolved without sharply reducing interest rates to restore the 15-year Zero Interest-Rate Policy (ZIRP)?

There is an even larger elephant in the room: derivatives. Volatility increased last Thursday and Friday. The turmoil has reached vast magnitudes beyond what characterized the 2008 crash of AIG and other speculators. Today, JP Morgan Chase and other New York banks have tens of trillions of dollar valuations of derivatives – casino bets on which way interest rates, bond prices, stock prices and other measures will change.

For every winning guess, there is a loser. When trillions of dollars are bet on, some bank trader is bound to wind up with a loss that can easily wipe out the bank’s entire net equity.

There is now a flight to “cash,” to a safe haven – something even better than cash: U.S. Treasury securities. Despite the talk of Republicans refusing to raise the debt ceiling, the Treasury can always print the money to pay its bondholders. It looks like the Treasury will become the new depository of choice for those who have the financial resources. Bank deposits will fall. And with them, bank holdings of reserves at the Fed.

So far, the stock market has resisted following the plunge in bond prices. My guess is that we will now see the Great Unwinding of the great Fictitious Capital boom of 2008-2015. So the chickens are coming hope to roost – with the “chicken” being, perhaps, the elephantine overhang of derivatives fueled by the post-2008 loosening of financial regulation and risk analysis.
 
🗣️ - 🇰🇪 #Kenya's President William Ruto has advised his citizens who still have US dollars to sell them urgently:

📍"For people who work with numbers. I'm giving you free advice: those of you who have dollars can certainly suffer losses. Because in a couple of weeks this market will change." 👀


Interestingly, that middle and upper class people in Russia, despite all sanctions etc-still keep their savings in ‘greenbacks’. Because ruble is still not totally cut from Fed/IMF/WB directives and is highly volatile🤦‍♂️
 
Michael Hudson suggests another cause for banking collapses is that banks have not passed on the full interest rate increases to deposits and savings leading to cash runs on banks as peeps pull out their savings to invest in other ways.
Well, yeah, kinda. The banks actually can’t pay out new higher rates for deposits because their capital is already locked up at lower rates. (And the profitable loan business has dried up AND already existing loans are beginning to blow up) but this process is an outgrowth of Fed policy/rate hikes to “control inflation”. Kind of an after effect and not so much a cause or a reason.

I think The question is, we’re the regional banks forced to buy the long term low interest debt or was this just a decision made by “geniuses” at the banks? Certainly those geniuses could see the writing on the wall because they cashed out big time before things started imploding. So the story of “gee whiz, the regulators just missed this. Oopsies!” Is questionable. Word gets passed around in any business sector before realities play out. (I do have personal experience in that, not just conspiracy theory.)
 
I still find it incredible how they keep on telling everyone "nah, it's cool.. don't worry about it"

And is it me? or is Europe once again taking on the larger hits from these failures? just like with the sanctions against Rusia, it is Europe who seems to be the one left in an awful place, no industry, no energy, and now no money... not to mention no bullets even.
 
I still find it incredible how they keep on telling everyone "nah, it's cool.. don't worry about it”
Big red flag for me, as well. And I’m sure you can all appreciate how many big red flags I just assume are waving in the breeze on the regular :cry:

This whole scenario has been giving me flashbacks to 2008-2012 big time. It wasn’t great in the states, but I remember the protests in the UK, France, Greece, and then the Arab Spring (likely a bit different there, but dominos will be dominos, right?)

Only this time is so much different (if for no other reason the BRICS stuff combined with NATO’s insane escalations.) And “austerity” is a punishing word, since last time.

I’m going to go do some deep breathing now ….
 
It is so tripped out. How long can they keep it up? Is there a black swan warming up on the sidelines, off-camera? (it seems too soon to me)

Or just the next logical implosion: Douche Bank! C'mon down!

iu


And Alejo, I agree about the Eurozone taking a bigger hit first. (again) for now, anyway. I think they are saving the biggest pie in the face for last (to the USA.)

It should be an interesting week. Everything seems to be hanging in the balance. But another drug fix could send the markets higher too. The markets seem to be in denial of reality; the pinnacle of wishful thinking. They are so pumped up, rigged and manipulated like a Vegas Casino, I guess it is natural for market valuations and fluctuations to be detached from reality.
 
Hot off the "it's all planned" deep conspiracy desk....

I think it's reasonable to think that politicians and economist types in Western governments aren't so detached from reality that they don't realize that the era of the dollar domination is coming to an end. They've probably known it for a while. And they probably have some contingency plan to transition to, rather than just sitting back and watching American dollar and geopolitical hegemony go down the toilet.

So maybe, just maybe, there will be a kind of 'engineered' crisis in the West that will be used to usher in the pre-cooked CBDC system, where it doesn't matter anymore if this or that currency has crashed and burned, because a nation's wealth and currency is no longer based on what it produces or 'confidence' in the currency or economy or how much debt it has. If the dollar goes down, the rest of the world is in serious economic doodoo too, and all would like get onboard with 'wiping the slate clean' and starting again with what would effectively be a govt. controlled crypto currency, with 'wallets' for each person etc.
 
If the dollar goes down, the rest of the world is in serious economic doodoo too, and all would like get onboard with 'wiping the slate clean' and starting again with what would effectively be a govt. controlled crypto currency, with 'wallets' for each person etc.
Have you claimed your Metaverse citizenship yet? Thinking I would be safe, I bought a virtual property far away from Zuckerberg. Yesterday, I received an electrical impulse informing me that Zucky had acquired the rights to my whole neighborhood which is 1000 virtual miles away from his mansion! I couldn't believe my eyes crypto portrait! Now, I only have two choices: become his slave or hide behind a digital art gallery where my future depends on a benevolent, rare items collector!

I'm just kidding.

It's gonna be a wild ride, whether real or virtual!
 
I think Cs gave a a hint it would go wild after a planed crash. We se now a planed crash of west currencies. Dolar is heart of currency system. Most money and assets is in dolar.
Haven't the Cs said in a previous session to enjoy things while the chaos was controlled? If the Elite's plans for destroying the current system so it can be replaced by another, don't go as planned, things may get out of control and the chaos could be way worse than just economic collapse, digital currencies & passports. I've been thinking a lot lately about what could be coming, could it be a depression, or are we looking at a complete meltdown? Look at how the elite's plans for Russia have gone, not exactly the outcome expected. So it's when but also how bad for me, and prepare for the worst... or try to.
 
Meantime in Russia is being promoted the same ‘vector’:

A new independent currency, the digital ruble, will be launched in Russia from 2023.

Anatoly Aksakov, chairman of the Russian State Duma Committee on the Financial Market, announced the launch of the new currency as a given.
Initially, it was planned to launch the digital ruble in 2022, but due to sad events, the presentation was postponed, but the work on integrating the new currency into the banking sector did not stop for a minute.

According to the announced plans of the Central Bank:
in 2023, the digital ruble will be used in settlements between enterprises and individuals.
In 2024, all credit institutions operating in Russia will be required to switch to the digital ruble.
In 2025, a scheme will be implemented in which it will be possible to use the digital ruble as a payment even without Internet access.
Taking into account the fact that the government is interested in the digital currency replacing "live money" as soon as possible, it should be concluded that the first who will have to use the digital ruble will be state employees and pensioners who will be voluntarily and forcibly pushed to this form of receiving pensions and salaries.

This might be an unpopular opinion, but the system isn't inherently bad in itself. It's all about the rules. If the rules are byzantine or just stupid, there's a healthy layer of "grey area", as it is today. Digital currency eliminates that by strictly enforcing all the policies automatically (even the dumbest ones, like CO2 limits). In a more sane world, digital currency could be tied for example to a country's rare natural resource.
From what I've read about CBDC proof of concepts, and looking at how the Multipolar World is coming into realization, there will be no global currency, but local ones, implemented as a Distributed Ledger (because at that scale, we can only consider eventually-consistent systems). There are proposed models, of how banks will be settling cross-border payments, and how underlying currencies will be converted. Most probably, if you'd like to buy something from Russia, you'd need to have an account in a bank that has a "wallet" in Russia's Central Bank.
I guess it is critical for Russia to have its own local system developed, without relying on (even open-sourced) technologies developed by Anglo-Saxons. It's also an opportunity to inject some reasonable rules that ALL parties need to agree to participate.
 
This might be an unpopular opinion, but the system isn't inherently bad in itself. It's all about the rules. If the rules are byzantine or just stupid, there's a healthy layer of "grey area", as it is today. Digital currency eliminates that by strictly enforcing all the policies automatically (even the dumbest ones, like CO2 limits). In a more sane world, digital currency could be tied for example to a country's rare natural resource.
From what I've read about CBDC proof of concepts, and looking at how the Multipolar World is coming into realization, there will be no global currency, but local ones, implemented as a Distributed Ledger (because at that scale, we can only consider eventually-consistent systems). There are proposed models, of how banks will be settling cross-border payments, and how underlying currencies will be converted. Most probably, if you'd like to buy something from Russia, you'd need to have an account in a bank that has a "wallet" in Russia's Central Bank.
I guess it is critical for Russia to have its own local system developed, without relying on (even open-sourced) technologies developed by Anglo-Saxons. It's also an opportunity to inject some reasonable rules that ALL parties need to agree to participate.

What do you think about what I think is the main worry, which is that the new rules are looking like full invasion of privacy and control of behaviour?
 
According to this model, instead of an April Drop Dead date, April 10th would be the date that the global economy is supposed to make a major rebound. It'll be interesting to keep an eye on this and see if it pans out.
With regards to the ECM, yes the inflection point of 10th April is meant to be upwards or a rebound - but he also mentions that it coincides with Pi target. 8.6 years is 3140 days approximately the constant Pi. He also noticed that when you juxtapose the ECM cycles with Pi "targets" of 31.4 years; events also coincide (this is explained in min 21 of the ECM video). Apparently if you add 31.4 years to the beginning of this current 52 year cyle which began in 1985, you land at the exact date Trump gets elected. Hence April 10th 2023 also coincides with a Pi target from the collapse of the Soviet Union/birth of Ukraine. Either way we don't have long to find out if the model is still accurate as April 10th is 2 weeks away.
👁️BEYOND THE RESET.

A 3D animated short film about not too distant but a dystopian future. It speculates on the potential consequences of the infamous Great Reset, medical tyranny, woke culture, and green agenda. Everything, that World Economic Forum (WEF) is planning for humanity.

In his quarentine community residence, Bruce lives day after day, repeating the same thing; waking just after 8 am, shuffling to the bathroom, coffee on the balcony while drones retrieve garbage and deliver fake and insect food stuffs. He waves each morning to the only other person who comes out on to their balcony. Bruce is enticed to volunteer for human testing, through alerts on screen, promising a higher UBI and better food...I found myself saying, "Don't do it Bruce!" But it appears that the man he waves to daily caves.

We also see Bruce, through his memories, reliving days before covid and happier times spent with his wife or gf; days under the sun in nature. Change is shown through the buildup of the covid narrative.

Frustration and anger increase in Bruce until he decides to take action....Alarms go off sounding the announcement of a non-compliant resident.
In the animated short-film Zzartemis posted in "The Great Reset" thread, the last date shown in the film (which is the date of Bruce's rebellion) is Saturday, April 10. The year is not displayed, but fast-forwarding through our calendar reveals that there is a nearest candidate date, namely Saturday, April 10, 2027. And the next one after that being Saturday, April 10, 2032.

Mass consciousness signalling to itself?
 
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