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SilverSurfer

05/06/12 11:05 PM

#174897 RE: StephanieVanbryce #174896

and they will keep on "doing the right thing the wrong way" http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-17979942

on a bigger and bigger scale and it's not just because "they" don't give a crap about regular folks, which "they" don't, but because they also don't have any other way to continue the fiat money scheme, even if it means the villians get richer and richer in the crooked croney process...
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SilverSurfer

05/08/12 9:57 PM

#174964 RE: StephanieVanbryce #174896

The banking system, especially the mainstream banking system, was not in peril at all. The toxic securitized mortgage assets were not in the Main Street banks and savings and loans; these institutions owned mostly prime quality whole loans and could have bled down the modest bad debt they did have over time from enhanced loan loss reserves. So the run on money was not at the retail teller window; it was in the canyons of Wall Street. The run was on wholesale money—that is, on repo and on unsecured commercial paper that had been issued in the hundreds of billions by financial institutions loaded down with securitized toxic garbage, including a lot of in-process inventory, on the asset side of their balance sheets.

The run was on investment banks that were really hedge funds in financial drag. The Goldmans and Morgan Stanleys did not really need trillion-dollar balance sheets to do mergers and acquisitions. Mergers and acquisitions do not require capital; they require a good Rolodex. They also did not need all that capital for the other part of investment banking—the underwriting business. Regulated stocks and bonds get underwritten through rigged cartels—they almost never under-price and really don't need much capital. Their trillion dollar balance sheets, therefore, were just massive trading operations—whether they called it customer accommodation or proprietary is a distinction without a difference—which were funded on 30 to 1 leverage. Much of the debt was unstable hot money from the wholesale and repo market and that was the rub—the source of the panic.

Bernanke thought this was a retail run à la the 1930s. It was not; it was a wholesale money run in the canyons of Wall Street and it should have been allowed to burn out
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/guest-post-emperor-naked