COMING TO AN ATM NEAR YOU

14 comments

Posted on 21st March 2013 by Administrator in Economy |Politics |Social Issues

, , , ,

How can a country function with its banks closed for 10 days? Think about what it will be like when ATMs in our country aren’t functioning. On September 18, 2008 our banking system was being drained of cash. It will happen again.

Pictures From A Cyprus ATM Line

 
Tyler Durden's picture

Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/21/2013 10:20 -0400

For a few days, the people of Cyprus were calm, quietly and orderly accepting the unreality of the levy being imposed upon them – incredulous that it was even possible. As we reach the 4th day of bank closures, amid rolling rumors and ECB threats, it appears the people have reached a tipping point as this series of images from Cyprus ATM lines indicates – the bank-jog has arrived. When will it become a full blown sprint?

 

It appears the catalyst for this latest move is the ECB threat and EU concerns over the future of the two biggest insolvent banks: As AFP reports:  EU calls on Cyprus to set capital controls and merge 2 biggest banks Laiki and Bank of Cyprus.

  • *EU WANTS CYPRUS TO ADOPT MEASURES BEFORE BANKS RE-OPEN, ANSA
  • *EU WANTS CYPRUS TO ADOPT MEASURES TO STOP DEPOSIT FLIGHT: ANSA

 

 

Via @Imeldaflattery

 

Via NYT

 

Via Sigma Live

 

 

 

Via @janinel83

 

 

Via @jkozakou

 

 

Source: Twitter and Fred

PEAK SPORTS SALARIES

10 comments

Posted on 1st June 2012 by Tampa Gold in Economy

, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

 http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/northamerica/usa/9303708/NBA-star-DeShawn-Stevenson-installs-cash-machine-in-his-kitchen.html

I think that we are at the precipice of peak sports salaries. We have a failing economy, everyone is broke or they do not have the discretionary cash to attend sports events like in the past. Where the teams are going to get the money to pay those exorbident salaries is a mystery to me. You need steady revenue steams to accomplish that and with the consumer at the end of his rope, that’s not gonna happen.

Deshawn Stevenson….thank you for the eye opening hubris that was professional sports. I predict that you will be broke in less than two years from today.

……
For the sports star who has everything there remains one tiresome problem – how do you get hold of your millions without having to leave the house?

Basketball player DeShawn Stevenson has come up with the answer and had a cash machine installed in his own kitchen, next to the toaster.
Stevenson, 31, who has earned more than $26 million so far in a 12-year playing career in the NBA, was so proud of his latest unique accessory that he posed for a photograph with it.
The 6ft 5 ins defensive player, who sports a large tattoo of Abraham Lincoln on his neck, is currently with New York team the Brooklyn Nets.
He previously played for teams in Utah, Orlando, Washington DC and Dallas. He was arrested last year for public intoxication in Texas.
It was not clear whether his free-standing cash machine will charge Stevenson and his friends a fee each time they use it.

DON’T BE LATE

2 comments

Posted on 13th December 2011 by Administrator in Economy |Politics |Social Issues

, ,

Do you know where your money is?

This Is What Your ATM Will Look Like During a Bank Panic *Video*

Mac Slavo
December 12th, 2011
SHTFplan.com

Thousands of Latvians lined up at bank counters and ATMs over the weekend in an attempt to withdraw their savings from Swedbank, the country’s largest banking institution.

Swedbank’s Latvian chief Maris Mancinskis on Monday called the rumors “absurd.” He said the bank is functioning normally and all depositors will have access to their funds via bank machines.

Mancinskis said some 10,000 Latvians withdrew over 10 million lats ($20 million) on Sunday.

Latvia’s 10th largest bank, Latvijas Krajbanka, is currently being liquidated after regulators uncovered fraud on a massive scale. Depositors were left without access to their money for days.

Via: Total Collapse

As rumors of imminent collapse began to build due to the bank’s reported liquidity problems in Estonia and Sweden, Latvians panicked and headed for their cash. This was the scene outside of numerous ATM’s in Latvia’s capital city, Riga:

There are various reasons for why a bank run may occur in the U.S., but the overwhelming driving mechanism will be panic. Once the public realizes that a particular insititution can’t make good on its debt or the country’s currency goes into a death spiral, depositors will be out in droves. ATMs will be limited on cash and generally allow withdrawals of about $300 per day. Likewise, banks will simply not have enough money to pay out the entire account balance of every depositor, so they will more than likely implement withdrawal restrictions similar to what you might get from an ATM.

At that point, the future of your finances will fall into the hands of the federal government by way of the FDIC, which itself is wholly under-capitalized and unable to effectively cover the deposits of a single major U.S. bank, let alone the entire banking system.

In Latvia the situation looks as if it is somewhat controlled (or not everyone has yet realized what is happening), but as we pointed out last week when it was reported that Greeks were quietly withdrawing their money from their banks, if you are late in learning of an imminent collapse or don’t make the decision in time, you may very well joins thousands of other panic stricken account-holders in the parking lot of a bank that has no more money left to issue.

There will be very little, if any, warning before such an event occurs. That’s why they call it a bank run. One morning depositors wake up and learn that their life savings are about to be disappeared. The inevitable emotional effect when faced with such losses is stress, anxiety, panic and fear. This is what it looked like at Northern Rock bank in the UK after the bank was declared insolvent in 2006:

Not to worry though, because this can’t happen in the United States. We’ve got a modern day centrally managed economy, secretive monetary policy, banks that will do whatever it takes to hide losses, and financial regulatory agencies that are happy to look the other way if there’s any sign of trouble.

Author: Mac Slavo
Date: December 12th, 2011
Website: www.SHTFplan.com