Banking Troubles on the Horizon?

Guest Post by Paul Craig Roberts

The failure of Silicon Valley Bank (16th largest bank in US) last Friday resulted from depositors withdrawing their funds in response to a drop in value of the bank’s bond portfolios caused by the Federal Reserve’s ill-considered hikes in interest rates.  The mindless policy implemented by the Federal Reserve cures inflation by producing bank runs, failed banks, and unemployment.  The Federal Reserve and neoliberal economists are still stuck in the worn out thinking of 20th century Keynesianism.

Yesterday federal regulators seized New York’s Signature Bank which was overwhelmed by deposit withdrawals. The banks’ failures, with troubles reported afflicting Republic Bank (14th largest in the US) and reports that many Wells Fargo depositors experienced zero balances due to a glitch of the digital revolution has left those fortunate enough to have bank balances an entire weekend to work themselves into a panic about the safety of their own bank deposits.  The question is whether panicked depositors rush to withdraw their money today (Monday, March 13, 2023). Hoping to avoid this, the Federal Reserve announced yesterday on Sunday that it would provide banks with cash to meet withdrawals. The Federal reserve announced that all depositors in Silicon Valley and Signature banks, including those with deposits above the insured amount, would be protected. https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/pressreleases/monetary20230312a.htm

With the Federal Reserve backstopping the banking system as it is supposed to do (and failed to do during the Great Depression),  bank problems and the panic they produce will hopefully be contained.  In the last 14 months, bank reserves have declined by $1.3 trillion.  https://www.nasdaq.com/articles/analysis-declining-u.s.-bank-reserves-add-wrinkle-to-contentious-debt-ceiling-issue  This means that banks are short the cash to meet withdrawals and would have to sell financial assets to meet withdrawals.  These sales would depress the prices of the financial assets, and impair the banks’ balance sheets.

Of course, as during the previous financial crisis, government and financial executives will make reassuring statements, such as the one made by Treasury Secretary Yellen last Friday when she reassured the public that the American banking system is resilient and well capitalized.

But is it? The five banks labeled “too big to fail” have $188 trillion in derivatives.  https://www.usbanklocations.com/bank-rank/derivatives.html The brutal fact is that 5 US banks have risk exposure that is twice the size of the GDP of the entire world. https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/NYGDPMKTPCDWLD   It is incomprehensible that 5 US banks have sufficient capital to back derivative bets that are twice the size of world GDP.

We owe the financial crisis earlier this century, and we will owe the next financial crisis, to the mindless repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act.  This legislation was passed in 1933 to deal with the crisis at that time.  The law did so by separating commercial from investment banking.  This prevented commercial banks from using deposits for speculative purposes.  The law prevented financial crisis for 66 years until it was repealed in 1999 during the Clinton administration.  Alan Greenspan, the Federal Reserve Chairman at that time, argued that markets were self-regulating and did not need Washington’s help.  This suited the big banks fine.  You can learn about the consequences from Michael Lewis’ books.  In short, a couple of Wall Street firms failed along with banks and insurance companies. The five largest banks were protected by Quantitative Easing, thus leading to explosive growth in the Federal Reserve’s balance sheet, inflated values of financial instruments, and the current possibility of another financial crisis.

Congress and economists would not admit their mistake in repealing the highly successful Glass-Steagall Act, but public resentment of big bank bailouts caused Congress to pretend to fix the situation.  Congress “fixed” the problem it had created by legislating the ability of your bank to seize your deposits to prevent its failure.  The law was deceptively called the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010.  It claimed to “protect the American taxpayer by ending bailouts,” but did so by bailing out banks with the depositors’ money instead of federal tax revenues.  It was said to be a “bail in” instead of a “bail out.”  Ellen Brown explains it here:  https://www.unz.com/article/what-will-happen-when-banks-go-bust-bank-runs-bail-ins-and-systemic-risk/

There was no valid reason for overturning Glass-Steagall.  It happened because public policy has ceased to be in the public interest, instead serving private agendas.  The commercial banks wanted to participate in the speculative ventures like investment banks and enjoy the same high earnings.  Instead of using their own money, they wanted access to the money of their depositors.  Free market ideologues serving their free market ideology provided the justification.  But as we relearned a few short years afterward, markets are not self-regulating.  Thus the consequent distortion of the economy by a decade of Quantitative Easing, the consequences of which are not over.

What can be done?  Repeal Dodd-Frank Monday morning.  It is the most foolish legislation since Prohibition.  It protects the banks and the general taxpayer at the expense of depositors, thus encouraging runs on banks.  It took a completely mindless Congress to pass such destructive legislation.

Also drive home the message that all deposits are protected.  It is important to realize that among deposits too large to be insured are monies for payrolls of large businesses.

Then set to work with legislation requiring banks to restructure their investment bank operations and separate them in a different entity from deposit based banking with deposits insulated from investment banking.

The effect would be to re-establish Glass-Steagall.

It is possible that darker forces are at work. The five big banks, knowing that they are protected by the Fed, regard bank failures as opportunities to buy up assets for pennies on the dollar.  The three New York banks, who control the New York Fed, the operating arm of the Federal Reserve, might even have their greedy eyes on Bank of America and Wells Fargo.

 

A Looming Derivativer Tsunami?

The existing trillions of dollars of derivative bets were made when interest rates were lower.  When these contracts are reset, it will be at higher interest rates, so the value of the bets would be adversely affected.  Ellen Brown explains what might be a Derivative Tsunami.  https://scheerpost.com/2023/03/12/ellen-brown-the-looming-quadrillion-dollar-derivatives-tsunami/?utm_source=substack&utm_medium=email

One still reads in the financial media that banks finance businesses and new investment, but they don’t.  Banks finance purchases of existing assets and speculative derivative bets that produce profits for investment banks but nothing real for the economy.  Indeed, derivatives have become extreme risks with no productive purpose.

If the Federal Reserve has any intelligence, this signals the end of the rising interest rates.  Inflation will have to be brought under control with supply-side, not demand-side policy.

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26 Comments
Jocko
Jocko
March 14, 2023 7:40 am

Biden’s inflationary polices.
Yellen’s Treasury printing money.
Powell’s Fed raising interest rates
Bank holding no/low interest government debt no one will buy
Depositors wanting their money
What could go wrong?

The Central Scrutinizer
The Central Scrutinizer
  Jocko
March 14, 2023 7:48 am

Depositors lose their money?

Anonymous
Anonymous
March 14, 2023 7:46 am

The top dozen articles at https://mises.org/ are all over this latest bank catastrophe.

Of course, Mises Inst. has always done this, for decades now. Ron Paul has always been all about Rothbard & Co. It’s all there at Mises.org, for free, for decades. Brilliant young folks become fresh scholars there every year, from all over the globe. And the old boys who are left are tops, too. Read how all of this could have been prevented – now, and forever.

P.S.: I don’t work there, and they don’t know me. This is real stuff – for a change.

A cruel accountant
A cruel accountant
  Anonymous
March 14, 2023 8:39 am

Mises.org does great work!

Iggy
Iggy
March 14, 2023 8:05 am

Brought to you by rent seeking Jews since 1913.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Iggy
March 14, 2023 10:07 am

And by the compliant masses who seek to live beyond their means by magic.

The few can never rule the many, without the many complying in their subjection. It’s simple arithmetic, not mystic, cargo-cult nonsense.

Withdraw. Secede. Refuse. Build back better.

Iggy
Iggy
  Anonymous
March 14, 2023 10:25 am

The few have always ruled the masses and when they are challenged they starve and kill them off until they comply.Exactly what is happening now.

overthecliff
overthecliff
  Iggy
March 14, 2023 10:39 am

True observation.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  overthecliff
March 14, 2023 1:11 pm

The few need the many acting as enforcers, again, due to arithmetic, ergo, the masses are still the problem.

A cruel accountant
A cruel accountant
March 14, 2023 8:37 am

Be your own central bank.

Pay off all your debts as soon as possible.

My house is paid off is yours.

Do not buy a new car a new house go on vacation or out eat till all the debt is paid off.

This a warning. If you do not do this you will suffer immensely. !!!!!!

Iggy
Iggy
  A cruel accountant
March 14, 2023 9:22 am

They’re just going to seize your assets to give to niggers as reparations.

m
m
  Iggy
March 14, 2023 10:38 am

Enjoy your perpetual debt serfdom, then.

Iggy
Iggy
  A cruel accountant
March 14, 2023 10:27 am

You only think your house is paid off.

overthecliff
overthecliff
  Iggy
March 14, 2023 10:42 am

I pay rent to St. Charles County,Mo. every year. That is for my house that has no mortgage. The rent is equal ro about 1/10 the value of the house, if I sold it. Right again, Iggy.

A cruel accountant
A cruel accountant
  Iggy
March 14, 2023 11:13 am

You are right about that. I still have to pay my real estate (rent?) every year.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  A cruel accountant
March 14, 2023 1:12 pm

To the .gov which trans-indoctrinates the next generation. We must abolish the state.

anon a moos
anon a moos
  A cruel accountant
March 14, 2023 10:42 am

You don’t really OWN anything. Stop paying your extorsion fees and see how long you ‘own’ your house. You have the illusion of ownership, nothing more.

Show me the man and I’ll show you his crime. Everything you own is gone when they manufacture your crimes, or just show you your crime from one of the many VOLUMES of laws these parasites have crafted over the decades.

bucknp
bucknp
  A cruel accountant
March 14, 2023 11:27 am

You sound frugal enough. I certainly don’t miss keeping up with the Jones.

Living amongst hillbillies is ok. It’s those on meth that are of concern as far as taking vacations. Those on meth tend to become super human when it comes to burglarizing others properties.

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
March 14, 2023 9:53 am

Reintroducing Glass-Steagall is a noble idea, Paul, but someone will have to come up with more donations to the politicians than the big banks provide. We have the very best government that money can buy and the more money you spend on politicians, the more carve-outs you get for yourself.

Paleocon
Paleocon
March 14, 2023 10:32 am

PCR again misses the big picture. Biden’s response to SVB effectively nationalized the US banking system. CBDC right around the corner.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Paleocon
March 14, 2023 1:55 pm

With big banks going under, CBDC’s can’t be far behind—and if we don’t STOP them, “lockdown” will be total, and eternal, for us all
Once the economy has melted down, CBDC’s will be proffered as the ONLY way we can get “back to normal”—a “cure” that will turn out to be as catastrophic, in their way, as those “vaccines”
https://markcrispinmiller.substack.com/p/with-big-banks-going-under-cbdcs

overthecliff
overthecliff
March 14, 2023 10:37 am

This is it. The horizon is here.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  overthecliff
March 14, 2023 1:57 pm

And almost no one has heard of CBDCs or social credit, nor links between graphene vaxes and 5G, or 15-min smart cities and smart meters, or vax-laden foods, etc. They still think schools need more money, even though everyone was better educated with less money decades ago . . .

Matthew Clark
Matthew Clark
March 14, 2023 11:34 am

It is not a good idea to bail out banks, or depositors, as it leads to greater risk taking. History has shown that. If interest rates are kept down deflation will crash the economy as to few dollars will be chasing to many goods. The fed is in a crisis of it’s own making. They kept interest rates artificially low from 2008 until the last year approxiametely. Now the chickens has come home to roost. We need to end the fed. Let market dictate rates. Then having Glass Stegall, or not having it, will be irrelevant.

WilliamtheResolute
WilliamtheResolute
March 14, 2023 11:45 am

The failure of Silicon Valley Bank resulted from hedge fund manager and CIA cutout Peter Thiel telling his investors to pull their money…this is a WEF false flag designed to create panic and destroy regional banks, it’ll drive much needed deposits to the failing mega banks…the term too big to fail is always used at the expense of the mom and pops, the little guys. CBCD is waiting for you in the wings…do you want your ID on your right hand or forehead?

Anonymous
Anonymous
  WilliamtheResolute
March 14, 2023 1:14 pm

With big banks going under, CBDC’s can’t be far behind—and if we don’t STOP them, “lockdown” will be total, and eternal, for us all
Once the economy has melted down, CBDC’s will be proffered as the ONLY way we can get “back to normal”—a “cure” that will turn out to be as catastrophic, in their way, as those “vaccines”
https://markcrispinmiller.substack.com/p/with-big-banks-going-under-cbdcs

https://mises.org/wire/bank-crisis-was-predictable-was-fed-lying-or-blind

https://mises.org/wire/how-easy-money-killed-silicon-valley-bank

https://mises.org/wire/yes-latest-bank-bailout-really-bailout-and-you-are-paying-it

https://mises.org/wire/our-economic-illiteracy