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Post a Comment On: Sipsey Street Irregulars

"Insolvent"

5 Comments -

1 – 5 of 5
Blogger jon said...

the article glosses over what happens when you abandon the mark-to-market rule and pretend like you still have valuable assets during a crunch, which is that you take existing capital and bailouts and dump it into payroll, among other things, and keep paying the very people who have failed to foresee the very real possibility that their assets would become worthless -- for more of that same quality labor!

neither a lender nor a borrower be.

February 13, 2009 at 6:42 AM

Anonymous Brass said...

Of course they're insolvent. Anyone who has any clue about how fractional reserve banking works takes it as an axiom.

Get as much money as you can out of the bank, convert it to tangible precious metals, keep these tangibles in a safe place, and leave only what you need in the bank.

Even the wizards running the Federal Reserve can't print more gold and silver, thereby devaluing it.

February 13, 2009 at 9:28 AM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

We are so screwed!

The author of this article clearly nails what the problem is. The problem is the government interference in the markets. They began by lowering interest rates, pushing sub-prime mortgages out to insolvent borrowers, and refusing to charge the players with fraud. We are not talking about more or less regulation, but a flat out refusal to deal with absolutely corrupt fraud.

The government then tried to solve the problem that THEY created by refusing to let banks fail. So now we have a growing horde of zombie banks (that are truly insolvent) that continue to have blood pumped through them but the brain has been long dead.

When you study the derivatives market (betting on bank assets) you realize that short of drastic intervention (declaration that any players in the game have just lost all their 'chips') there is no possible recovery for the system. I don't see that this government of demopublicrats sees the problem, much less the solution.

They are merely arguing over HOW to spend the money, not whether or not to spend it!

There is a great commentator on the markets over at:

http://market-ticker.denninger.net/

Thanks,
Ben

February 13, 2009 at 10:22 AM

Blogger MALTHUS said...

"The [banking] industry...uses the value of a bank's assets as they are carried on its books rather than the market prices calculated by economists."

Please, someone tell me what other industry would be allowed to value its assets as the HIGHER of cost or market? FASB accounting standards require businesses to value their assets as the LOWER of cost or market.

As Jon has noted, when you abandon mark-to-market valuations, the banks' assets are able to be inflated on the their balance sheets so as to maintain the illusion of solvency. The reason that fedgov has to loan money to banks is because their assets are worth less than their liabilities--in effect, they are insolvent.

February 13, 2009 at 11:32 AM

Anonymous TJP said...

Yes, I am once again necro-posting:

"None of the experts' research focuses on individual banks, and there are certainly exceptions among the 50 largest banks in the country. Nor do consumers and businesses need to fret about their deposits, which are insured by the U.S. government."

Let's take a basic look at how depositors' insurance works:

Q: Who pays the premiums?

A: The banks.

Q: Where do you they get the money?

A: From profits based on investing deposits and fees.

Q: If the bank is insolvent, where does the money come from?

A: You'll love this: the U.S. Treasury.

Q: Where does the Treasury Department get that money?

A: From your taxes.


We're bailing out ourselves. This is an enormous scam, whereby the bureaucrats are simply standing between us and our wallets, and making it more expensive and prone to waste and graft. The deposit insurance fund was recently only 1 percent of its capacity. That's because they've been dumping it in the general fund for years.

I've been saying if for a while now: the state now exists solely to preserve itself. When the state talks about safety, security or the common good, they mean only those employed by the state.


WV = "refile"; refile this under more imaginary solutions by faith-based command economy believers.

February 23, 2009 at 1:28 PM

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