Banks in Trouble: The 25 Largest U.S. Banks Are Seeing the Largest Fall in Deposits in 38 Years With No Signs of Letting Up

image-1

BanksterCrime:

Deposit Declines at 25 Largest Commercial Banks vs All Other Commercial Banks Since April 13, 2022

Deposit Declines at 25 Largest Banks vs All Other Banks Since July 1, 2023

By Pam Martens and Russ Martens: August 7, 2023 ~

Deposits at the 25-largest domestically-chartered U.S. commercial banks peaked at $11.680 trillion on April 13, 2022, according to the updated H.8 data maintained at the Federal Reserve Economic Database (FRED). As of the most current H.8 data for the week ending on Wednesday, July 26, 2023, deposits stood at $10.709 trillion at those 25 commercial banks, a dollar decline of $970 billion and a percentage decline of 8.3 percent.

Equally noteworthy, the decline shows no signs of letting up. According to the FRED data, between July 5 and the most current reading on July 26, the 25 largest U.S. banks shed $174 billion in deposits.

Despite all of the misleading news reports about depositors seeking out the perceived safety of the largest banks since the banking crisis in the spring, it’s actually been the smaller banks that have staged a comeback on growing deposits since the week of April 26. (See chart above.)

As of March 31 of this year, according to FDIC data, there were a total of 4,096 commercial banks in the U.S., meaning that if you segregate the 25 largest banks, that leaves 4,071 falling into the H.8 category of small, domestically chartered commercial banks.

This breakdown does not give the American people a quick pulse beat on the dangers lurking in the U.S. banking system – a system that imploded in 2008 and was on its way to imploding again this spring until the Fed stepped in with another bailout program. In the span of seven weeks this spring, running from March 10 to May 1, the second, third, and fourth largest bank failures in U.S. history occurred. In order of size, those were: First Republic Bank (May 1), Silicon Valley Bank (March 10) and Signature Bank (March 12). The largest bank failure in U.S. history, Washington Mutual, occurred in 2008 during the financial crisis.

Because there are only four domestically-chartered commercial banks in the U.S. with more than $1 trillion in deposits – JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, Wells Fargo, and Citigroup’s Citibank – it behooves Americans to closely monitor what is happening at these four banks, which hold such a highly concentrated share of the banking system’s deposits and assets. That is especially true given that one of those four banks, Citigroup, blew itself up in 2008 and received the largest Fed and Treasury bailout in U.S. banking history.

Given this history, it would make far more sense for the Fed to provide this deposit data in the following breakdowns: deposits at mega banks with more than $1 trillion in deposits; deposits at large banks with $200 billion to $1 trillion in deposits; and deposits at small and medium banks with less than $200 billion in deposits.

Monitoring what is going on at these four behemoth banks should make nightly network news and the front pages of newspapers – but rarely does. This lack of media attention allows a five-count felon bank like JPMorgan Chase to continue its serial crimes while simultaneously getting bigger. JPMorgan Chase was allowed by federal regulators to gobble up the failed First Republic Bank this year, despite the fact that JPMorgan Chase is currently being credibly charged in federal court by the Attorney General of the U.S. Virgin Islands with “actively participating” in Jeffrey Epstein’s sex-trafficking of underage girls for more than a decade.

What could be more damaging to a mom and pop bank’s reputation, with more than 5,000 Chase Bank branches dotting the landscape across America, than credible charges from the Attorney General of the U.S. Virgin Islands that JPMorgan Chase sold out young girls as sex slaves for more than a decade in order to get wealthy client referrals from Jeffrey Epstein?

The Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals called what the U.S. Department of Justice allowed to happen to these girls “beyond scandalous” and “a national disgrace.” And yet, the U.S. Department of Justice has left it to the Virgin Islands to bring civil charges while it remains missing in action on bringing criminal charges against JPMorgan Chase.

Allowing a bank with this serial history of outrageous crimes to get even bigger and more dangerous did not escape the attention of Senator Elizabeth Warren. On May 17, Warren sent a letter to federal regulators pointing out the problems with the JPMorgan Chase/First Republic deal. Warren wrote:

“…it resulted in a $13 billion cost to the Federal Deposit Insurance Fund – which will ultimately be passed on to ordinary bank consumers across the country – and made JPMorgan, the nation’s biggest bank, even bigger. JPMorgan will also record a $2.6 billion gain from the deal…”

Warren’s letter also noted the following:

“Under the Riegle-Neal Interstate Banking and Branching Efficiency Act of 1994, a bank holding company may not consummate a merger that would result in the bank holding more than 10% of the nation’s total deposits – a standard that JPMorgan already exceeds. However, because Riegle-Neal includes an exception for failed banks, the OCC has indicated that it did not need to take any action because the statute automatically provides a waiver. Separately, this merger required approval under the Bank Merger Act, which was granted by OCC. In its May 1 letter approving JPMorgan’s acquisition of First Republic, the OCC concluded that ‘The Transaction does not increase risk to the stability of the United States banking or financial system as it facilitates the orderly resolution of an insured depository institution in default,’ though it provides little detail about its analysis.”

There is a very compelling argument to be made that the JPMorgan Chase/First Republic Bank combination did, indeed, “increase risk to the stability of the United States banking or financial system,” because federal regulators had already assessed JPMorgan Chase to be the nation’s riskiest bank. (See Federal Data Show JPMorgan Chase Is, By Far, the Riskiest Bank in the U.S.)

Speaker Johnson Has No Understanding What He Is Doing and Is Playing With Fire–We Are Our Own Worst Enemy

By StevieRay Hansen | November 27, 2023

BanksterCrime: by Tyler Durden Authored by James Rickards via Daily Reckoning, Almost 10 years ago, I sat in a secure conference room at the Pentagon and explained to a group of U.S. national security officials from the military, CIA, Treasury and other agencies that the overuse of the U.S. dollar in financial warfare would eventually…

Loading

Government Debt Stood Above $33 Trillion in Fiscal Year 2023 America’s Runaway Debt Scenario: $1,000,000,000,000 In Interest

By StevieRay Hansen | November 24, 2023

BanksterCrime: by Tyler Durden Authored by Petr Svab via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours), The U.S. federal government has borrowed so much money that, over the past year, it has had to spend one-fifth of all the money it collected just on debt interest-which came to almost $880 billion. Americans paid some $450 billion less…

Loading

Six Big Banks Forced to Declare $9.3 Billion in Additional FDIC Expenses; Another Reason Their Talons Are Out for FDIC Chair Gruenberg

By StevieRay Hansen | November 23, 2023

2 Peter 2:19 ESV They promise them freedom, but they themselves are slaves of corruption. For whatever overcomes a person, to that he is enslaved. BanksterCrime: By Pam Martens and Russ Martens: The biggest banks in the U.S. that have been serially bailed out by the Federal Reserve since they blew up the financial system in…

Loading

Sexual Harassment at FDIC, Banking Rules Have Changed–America’s “Moral Authority”? What Does That Even Mean Anymore?

By StevieRay Hansen | November 21, 2023

BanksterCrime: By Pam Martens and Russ Martens: Senator Cynthia Lummis (R-WY) Last Tuesday the U.S. Senate Banking Committee convened for a hearing to take testimony from the key federal banking regulators – ostensibly to get more clarity on why the second, third and fourth largest bank failures in U.S. history had occurred this past Spring and…

Loading

Google Is Every Bit as Evil as the German Companies That Helped the Nazis

By StevieRay Hansen | November 20, 2023

BanksterCrime: Along with Microsoft, Amazon, and many other IT companies, Google also works as a government contractor. Technology now rules the nation, not the government. Every system required for basic survival is computerized and depends on the technology sector to operate. Google secured a portion of a sizable cloud contract from the CIA in November…

Loading

Last Year 12,000 Lobbyists Were Whispering in the Ear of Congress with a Bankroll of $4.1 Billion; Five Senators Are Demanding Transparency

By StevieRay Hansen | November 17, 2023

BanksterCrime: By Pam Martens and Russ Martens: Yesterday, five U.S. Senators who are members of the Senate Banking Committee issued a letter to Gary Gensler, the Chair of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), demanding that he issue a rule that would force publicly-traded companies to disclose the dollar amount of their lobbying expenditures as well…

Loading

While Americans Stand at Food Banks, Congress Sneaks in a $34,000 Pay Raise

By StevieRay Hansen | November 16, 2023

BanksterCrime: HNewsWire:   by Tyler Durden As House Democrats were set to hand power over to the Republicans following their midterm loss, they slipped in a provision into the House’s internal rules under the guise of aiding their less affluent members; a $34,000 allowance to ostensibly help with living expenses in Washington D.C. A deep…

Loading

Bank Regulator Who Approved the Riskiest U.S. Bank Getting Bigger in May, Wants to Do a Survey on Why Trust in U.S. Banks Is Tanking

By StevieRay Hansen | November 14, 2023

BanksterCrime: By Pam Martens and Russ Martens: Tomorrow, the Senate Banking Committee will hold a hearing to question federal banking regulators on what they are doing to restore public trust and financial stability to the U.S. banking system after the second, third and fourth largest bank failures in U.S. history occurred this Spring and caught regulators…

Loading

JPMorgan Chase Is Not the People Bank; They Transact Business With Criminals Such as Child Sex Trafficker Jeffrey Epstein Etc

By StevieRay Hansen | November 13, 2023

BanksterCrime: By Pam Martens and Russ Martens: WilmerHale Law Partner, Felicia Ellsworth On October 20 we reported that JPMorgan Chase, a serial recidivist when it comes to crime, had paid $1.085 billion in legal expenses in just the last six months. A nice chunk of that money went to the Big Law firm, WilmerHale, which has…

Loading

Do Not Comply With This Next Tyrannical Government Move No More Cash in Europe! The Digital Wallet Is Almost Here in the US–The Highway to the AntiChrist

By StevieRay Hansen | November 12, 2023

BanksterCrime: Do NOT COMPLY with this next tyrannical government move which just rolled out in Europe…It’s coming to the United States as we speak because the Federal Reserve is actively working on the very same thing, and the Biden administration wants it… Europe just took a major step towards totally removing your privacy. The European…

Loading

Bankster-Crime-Logo-1

 

 

Large-Logo-Menu-1

Beef in Bulk: Half, Quarter, or Eighth Cow Shipped to Your Door Anywhere within Texas Only

We do not mRNA vaccinate our cattle, nor will we ever!

Grass Fed, Grass Finished Beef!

Here is a discount code for HNewsWire readers to get 20 percent off first order:

HNEWS20

From Our Ranch to Your Table

Order Today

 

Revelation: A Blueprint for the Great Tribulation

Bankster-Template-1
Bankster-Template-2

A Watchman Is Awakened

Bankster-Template-3
Bankster-Template-4

Will Putin Fulfill Biblical Prophecy and Attack Israel?

Newsletter

Orphans

Support-Orphans

Editor's Bio

A-Long-Journey-Home

Recent News

Leave a Comment