Bankster Crime

Exposing Fraud in the Banking System

Featured Story

The Fed Tallies Up a Big Threat to Financial Stability in the U.S.: “Runnables” at $21.3 Trillion

BanksterCrime:

By Pam Martens and Russ Martens,

Federal Reserve Building in Washington, D.C.

Last Friday, the Federal Reserve released its semi-annual Financial Stability Report. In the prior five years, the spring edition of the Fed’s Financial Stability Report was released in May. This year, for reasons we can only guess at (nervously), the Fed released the spring edition early, in April.

Given that last spring the second, third and fourth largest bank failures in U.S. history occurred, handing over $30 billion in losses to the federal Deposit Insurance Fund, and one of those banks (Silicon Valley Bank) experienced the fastest run on its deposits in U.S. history, one particular item in the new report that caught our attention was this:

“Overall, estimated runnable money-like financial liabilities grew 8.8 percent to $21.3 trillion (75 percent of nominal GDP) over the past year, as a decline in uninsured deposits was more than offset by an increase in assets under management at MMFs [Money Market Mutual Funds]. As a share of GDP, runnable liabilities remained above their historical median.”

To our way of thinking, “runnable” is not a good word to be associated with banking. Americans look to banks for safety and soundness and big, secure vaults. The idea that things can be “running” out of banks like farm animals stampeding through a hole in the fence is not a comforting image. Add $21.3 trillion to that image in a country that is turning bank bailouts into an art form and you realize quickly that the Fed’s Financial Stability Report is little more than an exercise in CYA. It is, after all, the Fed that keeps bailing out these megabanks on Wall Street while ignoring the screaming need to reform them.

The graph the Fed posted below its statement on “runnables” is even more hair-raising. (See below.) It breaks down the components of the $21.3 trillion in runnables.

In simple terms, “runnables” are liabilities that the financial institution must pay on demand by the customer.

Let’s zoom in on the runnable component that the Fed has listed as $6.692 trillion of uninsured deposits. It was uninsured deposits at Silicon Valley Bank, Signature Bank and to a lesser extent, First Republic Bank, that caused depositors to panic and run for the exits last spring. The FDIC insures deposits up to $250,000 per depositor, per bank. If there is negative news about a bank’s financial condition, depositors holding large amounts above the FDIC insurance limit will be the first to stampede toward the exits. In March of 2023, it took only a few negative social media posts to start an avalanche of digital deposit withdrawals at Silicon Valley Bank. In the span of just 24 hours, $42 billion in deposits had exited the bank with another $100 billion queued up to leave the next day – meaning it was possible for a federally-insured bank to lose 85 percent of its deposits in the span of 48 hours in the digital/social media age.

But what the Fed is not telling you in its new Financial Stability Report about these uninsured deposits is that the vast majority of these uninsured deposits are held by a handful of megabanks on Wall Street – the same ones that the Fed bailed out with trillions of dollars in secret loans during and after the Wall Street collapse of 2008. (See The Deposit Insurance Fund Has a Balance of $117 Billion to Protect Deposits at 4,622 Banks. But One of Those Banks Has $1.4 Trillion in Uninsured Deposits.)

In a report by the FDIC in May of last year on options for insurance reform, it reported the following:

“Uninsured deposits are disproportionally concentrated in the largest banks. At year-end 2022, banks in the top 1 percent of the asset size distribution held about 72 percent of deposits in domestic offices but about 77 percent of uninsured deposits in domestic offices….”

Another runnable listed by the Fed on its graph above is $5.8 trillion in Money Market Mutual Funds. These Funds had to be bailed out during the 2008 financial crisis and again during the COVID-19 pandemic. As we reported previously, “…just six Wall Street firms received 72 percent of the $162.9 billion in cumulative loans” made under the Fed’s money market bailout program during the pandemic. Four of those were Wall Street megabanks.

Give the gift of great skin care. Our Soap and Shave Bars are gentle and produce a smooth creamy lather that is nourishing to your skin. They are handmade in small batches. We use only high-quality natural ingredients that you can pronounce. No chemicals, no sodium laurel sulfate, no phthalates, no parabens, no detergents. The set can include Soap Bar, Shave Bar, Shave Brush, and/or Shampoo Bar. These come in a white box and are perfect for your gift giving needs.

Our soaps are made with skin loving ingredients including olive oil, coconut oil, lard, sweet almond oil, shea butter, and castor oil. We do not use palm oil. Scented only lightly with fragrance oils.

The Shave bars give a very close and smooth shave with no razor burn. They leave your skin feeling amazing. A lather can be built up in your hands and then applied to your face, but it is best to use a shaving brush. These bars will only produce a thick foam when used with a shaving brush.

Our Shampoo Bars have a thick lather. A lather can be built up in your hands and then applied to your hair, but it is best to rub the bar gently in your hair. Rinse and repeat.

You choose a scent: A Thousand Dreams is a whimsical blue scented in a warm mix of fruity and floral notes with peach, peony, lily, musk, sandalwood, and amber. Bay Rum Spice is a nice masculine scent similar to Old Spice. The scent notes are clove, pine needles, cedarwood, orange, vanilla, and musk. Birch Woods is a great outdoors-type scent. The notes are bergamot, patchouli, vetiver, and tonka bean. Cool Clear Water is a refreshing scent. The notes are crisp water, oakmoss, pine, cedar, and musk. Lavender Champagne has a wonderful scent of Lavender and Champagne and has a light purple color. The scent notes are lavender, sparkling Champagne, grapefruit, orange, thyme, oak, and amber. Midnight Waters is a moody-mystical scent that opens with fruity notes of red berries, juicy tangerine, and bergamot. Then unfolds into bubbly Champagne, violet flowers, cashmere, amber, and musk. Raspberry Vanilla is an all-time favorite fragrance for soap. It is a beautiful magenta color. The scent notes are raspberry, strawberry, lemon, coconut, peach, honeysuckle, plum, and vanilla. Warm Sandalwood is a warm, rich, and woodsy scent. The colors are warm and rich with brown, gold, and white.

A Soap bar will weigh approximately 4 ounces and be approximately 2.25 inches wide by 3.5 inches tall and 1 inch thick. A Shave bar will weigh approximately 3 ounces and be approximately 2.5 inches across and 1.25 inches thick. A Shampoo Bar will weigh approximately 3.5 ounces and be approximately 2.5 inches across and 1.25 inches thick. Please keep in mind that our products are handmade and hand cut. Each bar is unique and might vary slightly in shape, size, design, and color from those pictured.

Please keep your Soap Bars, Shave Bars, and Shampoo Bars well-drained and allow to dry between uses. This will ensure longer lasting bars.

Allergen: Our products contain oil from tree nuts. Please test on a small area of skin prior to use and stop using if irritation occurs. Do not use if you are pregnant. Do not use on infants under the age of 24 months. Do not get in your eyes as it will sting slightly.

GoShopping

Don't Miss

The Blood Bath Has Begun

By StevieRay Hansen

Don’t forget, the Spanish Flu pandemic lasted from January 1918 to December 1920.  Facebook Twitter Pinterest Email Fear of the coronavirus is causing shutdowns on a global scale…

Read More

Blain: “Step Back, Hunker Down, Get Ready…”

By StevieRay Hansen

“Vulgar, but not a vulgar as Louis Vuitton, thought Sherman.” Perhaps it’s time to think about the unthinkable and close markets for a few weeks? …

Read More

We Just Witnessed The Largest Single Day Stock Market Point Crash In History (Again)

By StevieRay Hansen

It has happened again.  On Thursday the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 2,352 points, which was the largest single-day stock market point crash in history. …

Read More

Fear Of The Coronavirus Is Causing A Stock Market Apocalypse

By StevieRay Hansen

This day is here– get ready, the virus WILL spreads throughout the US and Europe, governments will respond the same way China’s government has; martial…

Read More

A Shift In The Global Financial Order Is Upon Us

By StevieRay Hansen

The collapse in bond yields, exacerbated by the crash in oil prices, marks an end to the era of trust in central banks… OPEC+: A…

Read More

StevieRay Hansen

In his riveting memoir, "A Long Journey Home", StevieRay Hansen will lead you through his incredible journey from homeless kid to multimillionaire oilman willing to give a helping hand to other throwaway kids. Available on Amazon.

LEAVE A RESPONSE

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *