Too Big To Fail
How The "Taper Tantrum" Cost US Banks $25 Billion In Q2 Net Income
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/30/2013 14:53 -0500Despite best effort to immunize banks from rate swings and debt MTM risk, a substantial amount of duration exposure has remained with the glorified hedge funds known as FDIC-insured bank holdings companies under the designation of “Available For Sale” (AFS) or those which due to their explicit short-term trading fate, would have to be subject to mark to market moves. It is the bottom line impact of these securities that threatens to crush bank earnings in the just concluded second quarter by an amount that could be as large as $25 (or more) billion.
Guest Post: Secrets And Lies
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/27/2013 16:37 -0500
Goebbels noted, "it thus becomes vitally important for the State to use all of its powers to repress dissent, for the truth is the mortal enemy of the lie, and thus by extension, the truth is the greatest enemy of the State." But Goebbels has been superceded. Repression is so last century. Why repress when you can simply drown it out. All it takes is for the media outlets to be owned by a few powerful and like-minded friends. A few media moguls and corporate giants, whose plastic pundits raise their voices while the dolly bird presenters flash their thighs. It’s all so full throttle and frantic, and charged with desire and greed. Anyone who disagrees is a conspiracy theorist. Anyone who breaks ranks is a whistleblower and whistleblowers are domestic terrorists, dysfunctional loners with personality problems and axes to grind. When the truth is vilified, hunted, gagged and goaled, then the State has chosen to go to war with the nation.
Frontrunning: June 26
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/26/2013 06:55 -0500- Anglo Irish
- Australia
- Bank of England
- Barack Obama
- Barrick Gold
- Belgium
- Ben Bernanke
- Ben Bernanke
- Bill Gross
- Bitcoin
- Bond
- Brown Rudnick
- Carbon Emissions
- Case-Shiller
- China
- Citigroup
- Cohen
- Commercial Paper
- Credit Suisse
- Creditors
- Crude
- Deutsche Bank
- European Union
- Fail
- Fannie Mae
- Federal Reserve
- Federal Reserve Bank
- Financial Derivatives
- France
- Freddie Mac
- Global Warming
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- GOOG
- Hong Kong
- Iran
- Israel
- Japan
- Merrill
- Mervyn King
- Mexico
- Monetary Policy
- Netherlands
- Newspaper
- Nomination
- Paid Content
- People's Bank Of China
- Portugal
- President Obama
- Quantitative Easing
- recovery
- Reuters
- SAC
- Too Big To Fail
- Volatility
- Wall Street Journal
- Wells Fargo
- Scalpel in Hand, Chinese Premier Li Stirs Reform Hopes (Reuters)
- Obama Sets Conditions for Keystone Pipeline Go-Ahead (FT)
- World’s Most Indebted Households Face Rate Pain (BBG)
- SAC Probers Weighing 'Willful Blindness' Tack (WSJ)
- Draghi Says ECB Ready to Act, Calls for Investment Over Tax (BBG)
- U.S. Tops China for Foreign Investment (WSJ)
- Basel Presses Ahead With Plans to Limit Bank Borrowing (FT)
- Gillard Ousted as Australia PM by Rival Rudd (FT)
- Japan Economic Strength Will Show in Stocks, Nishimura Says (BBG)
Guest Post: Why Are Markets Confused?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/25/2013 10:57 -0500
The market deals extremely poorly with paradigm shifts or cycle changes. One reason for this is that there has been no need for any strategy except for the just-buy-the-dip mantra. This may have ended and that could be the best signal to the markets since the global financial crisis started. Sorry to be the messenger, but the only way for investors to understand risk and leverage is by having them lose money. Essentially then, the balance of this year could be an exercise in re-educating the market to long-lost concepts such as loss, risk, inter-market correlations and price discovery. We even predict that high-frequency trading systems will suffer, as will momentum-based trading and, most interestingly, long-only funds. Why? Because, at the end of the day, they are all built on the same premise: predictable policy actions, financial oppression and no true price discovery. We could be in for a summer of discontent as policy measures and markets return to try to search out a new paradigm. This will be good news for all us.
Bankers: Do not Pass GO, Do Not Collect millions and Go Directly to Jail!
Submitted by Pivotfarm on 06/19/2013 09:11 -0500George Osborne is giving the Mansion-House (residence of the Lord Mayor of London) speech to the city tonight, an annual speech in which the Chancellor of the Exchequer traditionally gives his impression of the state of the British economy.
PRePaRe FoR FOMC...
Submitted by williambanzai7 on 06/18/2013 06:36 -0500How does one wean a klepto sucking machine?
Fred Feldkamp: The End of Off Balance Sheet Liabilities
Submitted by rcwhalen on 06/11/2013 08:52 -0500The 2011 actions of the FDIC ending the safe harbor for true sales locked in a solution to TBTF
High-Level American Intelligence Source: “We Hack Everyone Everywhere"
Submitted by George Washington on 06/07/2013 15:59 -0500Obama Asks Military to Draw Up Plans for Offensive Overseas Cyber-Strikes
Is the Government Also Monitoring the CONTENT of Our Phone Calls?
Submitted by George Washington on 06/06/2013 14:05 -0500Yes, Government Spooks May Be Listening
Guest Post: Why the Fed Can't Stop Fueling The Shadow Bank Kiting Machine
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/03/2013 16:53 -0500- AIG
- Bank Failures
- Central Banks
- Commercial Paper
- Counterparties
- Countrywide
- Excess Reserves
- Fail
- Fannie Mae
- Federal Reserve
- Fractional Reserve Banking
- Freddie Mac
- Guest Post
- Lehman
- Lehman Brothers
- MF Global
- Moral Hazard
- Nationalization
- None
- notional value
- Quantitative Easing
- Repo Market
- Shadow Banking
- Too Big To Fail
Fractional reserve banking is unlike most other businesses. It's not just because its product is money. It's because banks can manufacture their product out of thin air. Under the bygone rules of free market capitalism, only one thing kept banks from creating an infinite amount of money, and that was fear of failure. Periodic bank failures remind depositors of the connection between risk and reward. What is not widely appreciated is that the ensuing government bailouts allowed an underlying shadow banking system to not only survive but grow even larger. To the frustration of Keynesians, and despite an unprecedented Quantitative Easing (QE) by the Federal Reserve, conventional commercial banks have broken with custom and have amassed almost $2 trillion in excess reserves they are reluctant to lend as they scramble to digest all the bad loans still on their books. So most of the money manufactured today is actually being created by the shadow banks. But shadow banks do not generally make commercial loans. Rather, they use the money they manufacture to fund proprietary trading operations in repos and derivatives. No one knows when the bubble will pop, but when it does a donnybrook is going to break out over that thin wedge of collateral whose ownership is spread across counterparties around the world, each looking for relief from their own judges, politicians, bureaucrats, and taxpayers.
Revealed: Apple’s “Offshore” Cash Isn’t Even Offshore
Submitted by testosteronepit on 05/23/2013 11:57 -0500Money doesn’t stop at borders or oceans; accounting does.
Doug Casey: The Virtues of Capitalism
Submitted by Capitalist Exploits on 05/16/2013 14:00 -0500What almost everybody calls capitalism is actually fascism, a system where both consumer and capital goods are privately owned, but they are strictly regulated and controlled. This is a huge distinction.
The Fed Knows It's Created Another Bubble and Is Managing Down Expectations
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 05/11/2013 10:52 -0500
There is a term for when asset prices become detached from fundamentals, it’s called “A BUBBLE.”
Are We On The Verge Of Witnessing The Death Of The Paper Gold Scam?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/09/2013 16:25 -0500
The legal claims on physical gold far exceed the amount of physical gold that the banks actually have by a very, very wide margin. And right now the bankers are scared out of their wits because their warehouses are being drained of physical gold at a frightening rate. So what happens when their physical gold is gone but they still have lots and lots of people with legal claims to gold? When that moment arrives, it will represent the end of the paper gold scam. Many believe that the recent takedown of the price of paper gold was a desperate attempt by the bankers to put off that day of reckoning, but it appears to have greatly backfired on them. Instead of cooling off demand for precious metals, it has unleashed a massive "gold rush" all over the globe. This is creating havoc in the financial community, and at least one major international bank has already declared that it will only be settling those accounts in cash from now on. The paper gold scam is starting to unravel, and by the time this is all over it is going to be a complete and total nightmare for global financial markets. For years it has been widely known that the promises that banks have made regarding their gold far exceed their actual ability to deliver, but we have never reached a moment of such crisis before.
11 Reasons Why The Federal Reserve Should Be Abolished
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/07/2013 21:11 -0500- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Barack Obama
- Barclays
- Ben Bernanke
- Ben Bernanke
- Bond
- Chicago Cubs
- China
- Citigroup
- Credit Suisse
- Deutsche Bank
- Excess Reserves
- Fail
- Fannie Mae
- Federal Reserve
- Ford
- Freddie Mac
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Great Depression
- Housing Bubble
- Housing Prices
- Lehman
- Lehman Brothers
- Merrill
- Merrill Lynch
- Money Supply
- Morgan Stanley
- National Debt
- New York Times
- Reality
- Recession
- Royal Bank of Scotland
- Subprime Mortgages
- Too Big To Fail
- Turkey
- Wachovia
- Wells Fargo
If the American people truly understood how the Federal Reserve system works and what it has done to us, they would be screaming for it to be abolished immediately. It is a system that was designed by international bankers for the benefit of international bankers, and it is systematically impoverishing the American people. The Federal Reserve system is the primary reason why our currency has declined in value by well over 95 percent and our national debt has gotten more than 5000 times larger over the past 100 years. The Fed creates our "booms" and our "busts", and they have done an absolutely miserable job of managing our economy. So why is the Federal Reserve doing it? Sadly, this is the way it works all over the globe today. In fact, all 187 nations that belong to the IMF have a central bank. But the truth is that there are much better alternatives.










