WARNING Bank Deposits Will Soon No Longer Be Considered Money But Paper Investments
This weekend the G20 nations will convene in Brisbane, Australia to
conclude a week of Asian festivities that began in Beijing for the
developed countries and major economies. And on Sunday, the biggest deal
of the week will be made as the G20 will formally announce new banking
rules that are expected to send shock waves to anyone holding a
checking, savings, or money market account in a financial institution.
On Nov. 16, the G20 will implement a new policy that makes bank
deposits on par with paper investments, subjecting account holders to
declines that one might experience from holding a stock or other
security when the next financial banking crisis occurs. Additionally,
all member nations of the G20 will immediately submit and pass
legislation that will fulfill this program, creating a new paradigm
where banks no longer recognize your deposits as money, but as
liabilities and securitized capital owned and controlled by the bank or
institution.
In essence, the Cyprus template of 2011 will be fully implemented in
every major economy, and place bank depositors as the primary
instrument of the next bailouts when the next crisis occurs...
For most Americans with savings or checking accounts in federally
insured banks, normal FDIC rules on deposit insurance are still in play,
but anyone with over $250,000 in any one account, or held offshore,
will have their money automatically subject to bankruptcy dispursements
from the courts based on a much lower rank of priority, and a much lower
percentage of return.
This also includes business accounts, money market accounts, and any
depository investments such as a certificate of deposit (CD)...
after Sunday at the G20 meeting, the risks of holding any cash in a
bank or financial institution will have to be weighed as heavily and
with as much determination of risk as if you were holding a stock or
municipal bond, which could decline in an instant should the financial
environment bring a crisis even remotely similar to that of 2008.
From a technical perspective, this is moving in line with Murray
Rothbard's perspective on "bank deposit insurance," which he saw as a
scam:
[F]ractional reserve banking proved shaky, and so the New
Deal, in 1933, added the lie of "bank deposit insurance," using the
benign word "insurance" to mask an arrant hoax. When the savings and
loan system went down the tubes in the late 1980s, the "deposit
insurance" of the federal FSLIC [Federal Savings and Loan Insurance
Corporation] was unmasked as sheer fraud. The "insurance" was simply the
smoke-and-mirrors term for the unbacked name of the federal government.
The poor taxpayers finally bailed out the S&Ls, but now we are left
with the formerly sainted FDIC [Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation],
for commercial banks, which is now increasingly seen to be shaky, since
the FDIC itself has less than one percent of the huge number of
deposits it "insures."
The very idea of "deposit insurance" is a swindle; how does
one insure an institution (fractional reserve banking) that is
inherently insolvent, and which will fall apart whenever the public
finally understands the swindle? Suppose that, tomorrow, the American
public suddenly became aware of the banking swindle, and went to the
banks tomorrow morning, and, in unison, demanded cash. What would
happen? The banks would be instantly insolvent, since they could only
muster 10 percent of the cash they owe their befuddled customers.
Neither would the enormous tax increase needed to bail everyone out be
at all palatable. No: the only thing the Fed could do, and this would be
in their power, would be to print enough money to pay off all the bank
depositors. Unfortunately, in the present state of the banking system,
the result would be an immediate plunge into the horrors of
hyperinflation.
Thus, the removal of protection for large depositors is eliminating the
scam at this tier. It is, in other words, cutting down on moral hazard.
However, I do not suspect that the world's governments have suddenly
found Jesus/Rothbard. I suspect what is going on here is that the
government is fully aware that this change will create a separation
between bank deposits and government securities. Government securities,
especially short-term paper, will become a safer investment than large
banks deposits. This will drive funds away from banks and private sector
lending and push funds into the direction of government sponsored debt
(where there will be continued back up for such debt of the money
printing presses).
HT to William Bergman who emails:
About 15 years ago I got the "Best Manuscript" award at an academic
accounting conference for a paper titled "Accounting for Money." I made
the argument that fair value accounting principles were being
introduced inconsistently, in that cash and cash equivalents were
escaping unscathed.
No comments:
Post a Comment