Too Big To Fail
Why The State Has Failed to Reform Our Broken Financial System
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/16/2014 12:39 -0500Expecting the state to truly reform the nation's engines of financialization is like asking the cocaine addict married to the wealthy dealer to divorce the dealer.
U.S. and UK Test Big Bank Collapse - Risk Of Bail-ins
Submitted by GoldCore on 10/13/2014 10:51 -0500Regulators from the U.S. and the UK are in a “war room” today conducting financial war games to see if they can cope with fall-out when the next big bank collapses. "We are going to make sure that we can handle an institution that previously would have been regarded as too big to fail. We're confident that we now have choices that did not exist in the past," Osborne said at the International Monetary Fund's annual meeting.
The $70 Trillion Problem Keeping Jamie Dimon Up At Night
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/11/2014 17:44 -0500Yesterday, in a periodic repeat of what he says every 6 or so months, Jamie Dimon - devoid of other things to worry about - warned once again about the dangers hidden within the shadow banking system (the last time he warned about the exact same thing was in April of this year). The throat cancer patient and JPM CEO was speaking at the Institute of International Finance membership meeting in Washington, D.C., and delivered a mostly upbeat message: in fact when he said that the industry was "very close to resolving too big to fail" we couldn't help but wonder if JPM would spin off Chase or Bear Stearns first. However, when he was asked what keeps him up at night, he said non-bank lending poses a danger "because no one is paying attention to it." He said the system is "huge" and "growing." Dimon is right that the problem is huge and growing: according to the IMF which just two days earlier released an exhaustive report on the topic, shadow banking (which does not include the $600 trillion in notional mostly interest rate swap derivatives) amounts to over $70 trillion globally.
How Finance Quietly Took The World Hostage
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/04/2014 17:05 -0500The punchline, and what is by far the scariest, is that rising from 19% to a record 30%, and by far the biggest use of funds, is finance, the one industry that doesn't actually lead to growth but merely finds ways to mask the lack of growth with pro-forma adjustments and stacks leverage upon leverage on ever declining underlying equity and cash flows, until the entire system crashes as it did in 2001, 2008 and, well, soon.
5 U.S. Banks Each Have More Than 40 Trillion Dollars In Exposure To Derivatives
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/25/2014 20:11 -0500When is the U.S. banking system going to crash? We can sum it up in three words. Watch the derivatives. It used to be only four, but now there are five "too big to fail" banks in the United States that each have more than 40 trillion dollars in exposure to derivatives.
Frontrunning: September 9
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/09/2014 06:32 -0500- Apple
- Bank of England
- Barclays
- Boeing
- Carl Icahn
- China
- Credit Suisse
- Deutsche Bank
- European Union
- Fail
- Federal Reserve
- Finland
- General Electric
- General Mills
- Geothermal
- Germany
- Henderson
- Hertz
- Insider Trading
- Iraq
- Ireland
- ISI Group
- Jeff Immelt
- JetBlue
- Keefe
- Lennar
- Lloyds
- Merrill
- Morgan Stanley
- Natural Gas
- NFIB
- Nomura
- Reuters
- SAC
- Shenzhen
- Six Flags
- Testimony
- Too Big To Fail
- Ukraine
- United Kingdom
- Wells Fargo
- Showtime for Apple: Big phones, smart watches and high expectations (Reuters)
- Bank of England Gov. Mark Carney Signals Spring Rate Rise (WSJ)
- Quebec Shows Scots Question Returns Even If Answer Is No (BBG)
- Hush money with a 9 year vesting period: Ex-SAC Fund Manager Martoma Sentenced to Nine Years in Prison (BBG)
- Dreams on hold, Brazil's 'new middle class' turns on Rousseff (Reuters)
- Fed to Hit Biggest U.S. Banks With Tougher Capital Surcharge (WSJ)
- Egypt court sentences Brotherhood leader, cleric to 20 years in jail (Reuters)
"A Printer And A Prayer" - The Three Problems With The Fed "Liquidity Coverage Ratio" Plan
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/03/2014 18:28 -0500Today we learned that as part of the domestic "macroprudential" effort to ensure firms don't run out of cash in a crisis, the so-called Liquidity Coverage Ratio, US regulators said banks likely will have to raise an additional $100 billion to satisfy the new requirement, the WSJ reported. The disclosure is part of the final draft of the so-called Liquidity Coverage Ratio, released by the Fed earlier today, and which was promptly passed on a 5-0 vote Wednesday that will subject big U.S. banks for the first time to so-called "liquidity" requirements. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. and the Treasury Department's Office of the Comptroller of the Currency adopted the rules later in the day. On the surface, this is all great macroprudential news: forcing banks to hold even more "high quality collateral" is a great idea, to minimize the amount of money taxpayers will have to fork over when the system crashes once again as it certainly will thanks to the unprecedented Fed micromanaging interventions over the past6 years. There are just three problems...
A World Without Fractional Reserve Banks And Central Planning
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/28/2014 20:17 -0500"In a very real sense, it is fractional reserve banking and not money itself that is the root of so many of today’s evils. Whenever fractional reserves are permitted, the banking system – including the one that exists today throughout the world – comes to resemble a classic Ponzi scheme which can only function as long as most people don’t try to get at their money."
Lacy Hunt: The World Economy's Terminal Case Of Debt Sclerosis
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/25/2014 19:18 -0500Today, the world economy is in uncharted territory. Never before has the developed world carried this much debt. Never before have the central banks of those same countries expanded their balance sheets so much. Never before has so much sovereign debt been outright monetized. Never before have major financial institutions been officially designated as “too big to fail” and thereby been granted special license to assume gigantic risks. Dr. Lacy Hunt, economist and current executive vice president of Hoisington Investment Management Company, expects the macroeconomic situation to get worse from here...
The G-20's Solution To Systemically Unstable, "Too Big To Fail" Banks: More Debt
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/23/2014 19:45 -0500Another day, another brilliant scheme from the think-tank that is the G-20: prevent systemic collapse from TBTF banks loaded up with record amounts of debt by forcing them to... issue more debt.
Helen Davis Chaitman on "In Bed with Wall Street"
Submitted by ilene on 08/13/2014 22:10 -0500- Arthur Levitt
- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Bond
- Citigroup
- Consumer lending
- Corruption
- Fail
- Fannie Mae
- Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission
- FINRA
- Freddie Mac
- Global Economy
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Insider Trading
- JPMorgan Chase
- Morgan Stanley
- New York Stock Exchange
- President Obama
- Robert Rubin
- Securities and Exchange Commission
- Too Big To Fail
- Wells Fargo
The stories make you want to take all of your money out of the stock market and put it in your mattress!
Too Big to Fail Has NOT Ended … It’s Only Gotten WORSE
Submitted by George Washington on 08/06/2014 23:21 -0500Despite Krugman's “Mission Accomplished” Announcement, the Giant Banks Are Worse Than Ever
Wall Street Isn't Fixed: TBTF Is Alive And More Dangerous Than Ever
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/06/2014 17:33 -0500Practically since the day Lehman went down in September 2008 Washington has been conducting a monumental farce. It has been pretending to up-root the causes of the thundering financial crisis which struck that month and to enact measures insuring that it would never happen again. In fact, however, official policy has done just the opposite. The Fed’s massive money printing campaign has perpetuated and drastically enlarged the Wall Street casino, making the pre-crisis gamblers in CDOs, CDS and other derivatives appear like pikers compared to the present momentum chasing madness. In a nutshell, the Fed’s prolonged regime of ZIRP and wealth effects based “puts” under risk assets has destroyed two-way markets.
The Slide To Collapse Is Greased With Self-Interest
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/04/2014 09:28 -0500Self-interest is intrinsically self-liquidating on a systemic level. This is how systems collapse: those who have offloaded risk (a.k.a. skin in the game) to the system itself and guaranteed their job, income, pension or rentier skim via the State will continue to support the Status Quo that has benefited them so handsomely even as the ship tumbles over the waterfall to its destruction.
Useful Idiots and the Something For Nothing Society - Part 1 of 3
Submitted by tedbits on 07/24/2014 13:00 -0500






