Sep
17
Posted (Van Santos) in Business on September-17-2008

From very early on I have held the belief that we are not in the middle of a banking collapse, rather we are in the middle of a market correction. It is also important to separate banks that are going under from the likes of Freddie Mac, Fannie Mae, Lehman and AIG. While all can be tied to the same cause, they fall into three separate categories.

Category 1

The retail banking industry, where you and I have our money, has seen 11 organizations close to date. Closures were directly connected to bad debt and an inability to provide liquidity for all deposits within the bank. It important to note, deposits in such banks are federally insured up to $100,000 per account.

Category 2

The recent bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers, a money center bank, falls into the commercial category. They are not a retail bank, nor did they do retail business, which means the government did not need to utilize the Federal bank insurance fund to cover monies. Again, the failure was tied to illiquidity due to bad debt.

Category 3

AIG is neither a retail bank nor a money center bank (brokerage) but an insurance provider to a number of industries, including banking. The liquidity crunch currently facing this organization is due to the insurance underwritten to cover banks debt (both retail and brokerages). No FDIC coverage, no “man on the street” unable to obtain his or her money because of the situation.

Retails banks will continue to fail due to bad debt, and would even fail in good markets due to mismanagement, I think it would be hard to say we have a banking collapse unless people were having difficulty obtaining their money. At that point we would truly be facing a banking collapse, which is why I am concerned to see that the Federal bank insurance fund dwindling and regulators consider options for replenishing it.

From the article:

The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., whose insurance fund has slipped below the minimum target level set by Congress, could be forced to tap tax dollars through a Treasury Department loan if Washington Mutual Inc., the nation’s largest thrift, or another struggling rival fails, economists and industry analysts said Tuesday.

Basically, if a large retail bank goes under the FDIC is out of money and needs to find additional funds, most likely in the form of a loan from the treasury. What happens, though, if several large retail banks collapse at the same time?

The FDIC predicts difficulty with one large retail institution; several closings could cause a shortage of funds available to the public. Take it on step further – what if the FDIC cannot obtain the money from the government in order to cover the deposits?

This is what a true banking collapse would be.

Related posts:

  1. Banking Collapse Update: FDIC chimes in
  2. FDIC admits it is in the red until 2012
  3. FDIC Friday (the 13th)
  4. 7(!) banks closed by the FDIC today.
  5. The Sky is Falling! (Also known as the banking collapse)

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