You think you’re the first person to talk down to me? Go to hell. |
You wrote: “How about we uncover that FDIC can only cover 3 to 4 percent of holdings if many banks go at once? Is Dodd-Frank going to fix FDIC?” The FDIC does not set reserve requirements. Reserve requirements are much higher than 3-4 percent. But only 3-4 percent of SVB’s deposits were insured. So it sure seems you were mixing the two up. |
The stress tests for interest rate risk were not severe enough to have caught SVB, and the bank would have passed the liquidity requirements easily--60% of its balance sheet was in securities, mostly governments. |
D- impression. |
The federal reserve sets the reserve requirements. It's currently at ZERO. Fractional banking can be risky. Zero reserve is awful. The FDIC backs accounts to 250K per individual per institution. That FDIC insurance does not need to be raised. The zero reserve needs to be raised significantly in this shell game. Any questions? |
Dude, you don’t have a clue what you’re talking about. |
From the article: one of the most pressing issues is making payroll... |
SVB failed because they bought a ton of bonds with almost 0% yields before rates started rising. The fed raising rates means newer bonds have way higher yields, so the ones SVB hold have to be sold at huge losses. |
Talk to Mark Warner and Tim Kaine, they’re Corporate Dems |
https://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/reservereq.htm |
I get you googled reserve requirement and found this. It doesn’t say what you think it says. |
Look at that, MMT has no risks and the govt can print money for an infinite amount of time to grease the economy. Why are soooo many boom bust cycles caused by the federal reserve and easy money? And here they wanted to keep injecting more and more stimulus and keep rates cut for forever. The sugar rushes always, aalllllways cause a diabetic crash when the piper eventually must be paid.
Everyone was so confident and felt good when their stock portfolios, 401ks, and home values got artificially pumped from 2009-2021 as the fed kept interest rates artificially low, trillions of dollars were injected into the economy, and the fed blew up their balance sheet to almost $10 trillion. Now the fake economy is collapsing when the inflation demon has been awoken and the consequences for sugar rush must be paid. Time and time again, lax monetary and fiscal policies blow up the economy. There are no free lunches and easy money. It's amazing how people still don't learn this lesson. |
https://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/reservereq.htm |
This lineman is done. Enjoy the rich coffe talks |