Regional Banks
Gold: The Solution To The Banking Crisis?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/29/2012 23:03 -0500
The Basel Committee on Banking Supervision is an exclusive and somewhat mysterious entity that issues banking guidelines for the world’s largest financial institutions. The Committee’s latest ‘framework’, is referred to as “Basel III”. The regulators have stubbornly held to the view that AAA-government securities constitute the bulk of those high quality assets, even as the rest of the financial world increasingly realizes they are anything but that. As banks move forward in their Basel III compliance efforts, they will be forced to buy ever-increasing amounts of AAA-rated government bonds to meet liquidity and capital ratios. Add to this the additional demand for bonds from governments themselves through various Quantitative Easing programs, and we may soon have a situation where government bond yields are so low that they simply make no sense to hold at all. This is where gold comes into play. If the Basel Committee decides to grant gold a favourable liquidity profile under its proposed Basel III framework, it will open the door for gold to compete with cash and government bonds on bank balance sheets – and provide banks with an asset that actually has the chance to appreciate. The world’s non-Western central banks have already embraced this concept with their foreign exchange reserves, which are vulnerable to erosion from ‘Central Planning’ printing programs. After all – if the banks are ultimately interested in restoring stability and confidence, they could do worse than holding an asset that has gone up by an average of 17% per year for the last 12 years and represented ‘sound money’ throughout history.
Guest Post: Gold-Bugs And Anti-Gold-Bugs
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/26/2012 15:07 -0500
An article by David Weiner on the MarketWatch site reminded me of just how weak the economic arguments against the gold standard are. Its title: "A Fool's Gold Standard." We examine this article here. The issue that divides the anti-gold bugs from the gold bugs is simple to state. The gold-coin standard places monetary authority in the hands of millions of economic participants who own gold. The gold bugs favor this. The anti-gold bugs oppose it. The rival camps are divided by rival systems of economic sovereignty. The gold bugs favor the sovereignty of the free market. The anti-gold bugs favor the sovereignty of the banking cartel, which is the joint creation of the federal government (Federal Reserve) and the states (state bank licensing). This is a replay of the arguments of Adam Smith against the arguments of the mercantilists. It is the logic of widespread, decentralized private ownership and voluntary contract versus the logic of government licensing, barriers to entry, and the legal right to counterfeit money. The anti-gold bugs do not want to put it this way. This is why gold bugs should always put it this way. Ultimately, this debate is between the logic of the free market as a social organization versus the logic of central planning. The battlefield is monetary theory and monetary policy.
Earnings Setup -- JPM, WFC, C, BAC
Submitted by rcwhalen on 10/12/2012 05:00 -0500Reports that the housing sector is recovering has generated more than a little irrational exuberance among investors regarding financials.
Guest Post: QE For the People - What Else Could We Buy With $29 Trillion?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/24/2012 08:58 -0500In a system that depends on lies and the credulity of the citizenry, the greatest lie is that the Federal Reserve's "quantitative easing" bailouts of the banks somehow help our citizens and communities. To clarify this, ask yourself this question: what else could we have bought with the $29 trillion the Fed loaned or backstopped to the banks? If you enjoy quibbling about the total sum of Fed support, be my guest; the Levy Institute came up with $29 trillion after poring over all the data, while the Government Accountability Office’s (GAO) tally topped $16 trillion. That's 100% of the nation's GDP and roughly 100% of the $16 trillion national debt. While we're asking about opportunity costs, let's ask what else we could have bought with the $10 trillion that the Federal government has borrowed and blown in the past 11.7 years. The national debt was $5.727 trillion when G.W. Bush was sworn into office on January 20, 2001. It had risen to $10.626 trillion when President Obama was sworn into office in January, 2009. It is now $16.016 trillion, an increase of $5 trillion in less than four years in "debt held by the public" (i.e. the Chinese central bank, the Japanese central bank, the Federal Reserve, etc.)
A Couple Of Apple Facts That Mainstream Media & Most Analysts Fail To Harp On
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 08/23/2012 08:23 -0500- Apple
- Bear Stearns
- Bond
- Commercial Real Estate
- Countrywide
- Fail
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- headlines
- Housing Market
- Investment Grade
- Lehman
- Lehman Brothers
- Lennar
- Market Crash
- Market Share
- Middle East
- Non-performing assets
- Price Action
- ratings
- Ratings Agencies
- Real estate
- Reggie Middleton
- Regional Banks
- Sovereign Debt
- Wall Street Journal
Here come the facts!!! Warning, if you get your feelings hurt over hearing the truth, simply move on. You may have a couple of quarters lefft.
Fed “Independence” Is a Scam … And No Reason to Prevent a Full Audit
Submitted by George Washington on 07/25/2012 00:53 -0500- AIG
- Alan Grayson
- Alan Greenspan
- B+
- Bank of New York
- Bernie Sanders
- Cato Institute
- Central Banks
- Consumer protection
- Corruption
- CPI
- Dell
- ETC
- Excess Reserves
- Federal Reserve
- Federal Reserve Bank
- Federal Reserve Bank of New York
- Foreign Central Banks
- General Electric
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Grayson
- Great Depression
- Housing Bubble
- John Paulson
- Joseph Stiglitz
- Lehman
- Lehman Brothers
- Monetary Policy
- Money Supply
- Morgan Stanley
- national security
- Paul Volcker
- Private Equity
- Quantitative Easing
- recovery
- Regional Banks
- Ron Paul
- San Francisco Fed
- Steny Hoyer
- TARP
- Testimony
- Transparency
- Unemployment
- World Bank
Independent from Congress … or from the American People?
Failing to Break Up the Big Banks is Destroying America
Submitted by George Washington on 07/21/2012 23:15 -0500- 8.5%
- Alan Greenspan
- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Bank of England
- Bank of International Settlements
- Bank of New York
- Ben Bernanke
- Ben Bernanke
- BIS
- CDS
- Central Banks
- Corruption
- Credit Default Swaps
- credit union
- Dean Baker
- default
- Fail
- Federal Reserve
- Federal Reserve Bank
- Federal Reserve Bank of New York
- Fisher
- Gambling
- Global Economy
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Great Depression
- Insider Trading
- Institutional Risk Analytics
- International Monetary Fund
- Israel
- Joseph Stiglitz
- Krugman
- Lehman
- LIBOR
- Main Street
- Marc Faber
- Market Share
- Matt Taibbi
- Mervyn King
- Milton Friedman
- Moral Hazard
- Morgan Stanley
- New York Fed
- New York Times
- Niall Ferguson
- Nomura
- None
- Nouriel
- Nouriel Roubini
- Obama Administration
- Paul Krugman
- Paul Volcker
- program trading
- Program Trading
- Prudential
- recovery
- Regional Banks
- Reuters
- Richard Alford
- Richard Fisher
- Risk Management
- Robert Reich
- Sheila Bair
- Simon Johnson
- Sovereign Debt
- Sovereigns
- Subprime Mortgages
- TARP
- Timothy Geithner
- Too Big To Fail
- Washington D.C.
- White House
Too Big Leads To Destruction of the Rule of Law
Libor: The Largest Insider Trading Scandal Ever
Submitted by George Washington on 07/08/2012 00:21 -0500Big Banks Are Rotten to the Core
Top 10 Warning Signs of a Global Endgame
Submitted by EconMatters on 07/02/2012 11:55 -0500While conflicts within and with the Middle East region are still among the top global risks, the paradigm has definitively shifted to China and Europe.
Crude Oil Market: A Perfect Bear Storm Despite the Euro Pop
Submitted by EconMatters on 06/30/2012 18:17 -0500A confluence of factors is forming a perfect storm for the oil market to face some major headwinds for the next 5 years.
Passing The Trash - Again
Submitted by Bruce Krasting on 06/27/2012 15:05 -0500In banking, what goes agound comes around - again.
After the Sovereign Debt Crisis Comes the Deleveraging
Submitted by EconMatters on 06/27/2012 08:39 -0500Darker days ahead from the long deleveraging process that just got started in Europe.
Guest Post: Black Is White, Hedges Are Bets, And Your Money Is Mine
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/14/2012 10:52 -0500As we witness the riotous dissolution of corrupted capitalism, we need not wait for the history books to identify the mile markers of self-destruction. If we are to rebuild capitalism, even as it is tearing itself down, then we will need to become street-smart detectives in analyzing the current economic murder-suicide in progress. Every fall has its tell-tale confirmations and corrupt capitalism is no exception. There arrive key points where a system’s own contradictions become so evident and self-damaging, where motive, means, and opportunity become so clear, that one can mount an informed, effective counter-offensive.
I’m sure many of you may be asking yourselves, “Well, how likely is this counterparty run to happen today?”
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 06/14/2012 06:48 -0500- Bank Run
- Barclays
- Bear Stearns
- Bond
- CDS
- Counterparties
- Covenants
- CRE
- CRE
- default
- ETC
- Eurozone
- Fail
- Fractional Reserve Banking
- France
- Greece
- Ireland
- Italy
- Japan
- Lehman
- Lehman Brothers
- None
- NPAs
- Portugal
- Regional Banks
- Repo Market
- Sovereign Debt
- Sovereign Risk
- Sovereign Risk
- Sovereigns
- Standard Chartered
- Stress Test
- Volatility
As Predicted Last Year, The French and the Greeks Are In A Race For The Biggest Bank Run! Each stock showcased has led the drop as well...
Graham Summers' Weekly Market Forecast (Do We Still Have Faith? Edition)
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 06/11/2012 07:03 -0500
With that in mind, I sincerely doubt €100 billion is going to solve Spain’s problems. The whole bailout reeks of desperation. And it likely will have political and financial implications that will quickly render the benefits of this move moot. Of course, when you’re facing systemic collapse, you don’t have time to debate implications and consequences. But I highly doubt that this move will do much to address Spain’s true problems.








