• Home
  • Gold
  • Oil
  • Anarcho-Capitalism
  • Accountability
  • Be The Boss
  • Be A Man
  • Housing Bubble
  • Book Review
Search Code
GUN logo
Most Recent News

The Crash of the Banking Cartel

Zion, IL
By A.B. Dada
—
I can’t seem to wrap my head around any possible situation that can save many of the top tier banks in the U.S. and the rest of the world. There’s a problem that the Old Media is still ignoring, a problem that has the possibility to effect cash flow and the middle class more than the so-called “credit crunch” that we’re facing today. This problem is the absolute illiquidity of the big banks due to the pending litigation and fallout from the mortgage frying pan many have played with over the past few years.

As some of the regular readers know, the mortgage industry was a big game with big profits. The banks would happily loan money to people who had no credibility in their ability to pay that loan back. Because the banks thought that “housing prices always go up,” they felt they could loan money out to anyone, even the credit score poor, and if they had to foreclose, they’d make money on the foreclosure since “property values always go up.”

The banks didn’t have the money to make all these loans, which may number in the tens of millions of individual loans. Because this idea that property values always go up was so rampant for the past 3-4 years, banks took their loans, packaged them together, and sold them to a hungry bond market in the form of CDOs and MBSes. Basically, a bank could take 10 or 100 mortgages, and sell them for a nice commission to investors who also thought their money was safe. Many of these CDOs have fallen in value, some as much as 90-100% (meaning they’re worthless or near that). The investors will lose all or most of their money, is the thought. The banks profited by taking a nice chunk of a commission for producing the mortgage before it was sold off.

Here’s the catch, though, the saving grace for the CDO or MBS buyer-investor: many of these bond issues have contractual wording that protects the investor if the loan origination had any fraudulent activity. If the bank loaned money for a mortgage and the investor can find any fraud within that origination, their purchase is contractually invalid. If that situation comes true, and it seems it may in some cases, the bank would have to refund the investor 100% of their original investment, basically buying back the mortgage onto their own books.

Many loans are coming out as fraudulent. Mortgage brokers and agents accepted “stated-income” statements from borrowers, who inflated their incomes double or triple in value from reality. Some brokers and agents even inflated the borrowers’ incomes without the borrower knowing. Appraisals may also have been fraudulent as some mortgage brokers/agents shopped for appraisers who would give the mortgage lender a number that would maximize their profit. Many in the industry thought the fraud would be overlooked as the housing prices escalated. With the recent downturn in housing expected to continue (severely, still), those frauds are becoming evident.

If a bank has to buy back their loans, they will need cash (liquidity) to reimburse the investor who was defrauded. Many of these investors are fearful of redepositing these refunds back into banks (fearful that the money will be used to bail out other defrauded investors), so the banks can’t rely on their refunds coming back as deposits, to be refunded again. The banks up to now have been able to use some of their mortgages as collateral to borrow short term from the Federal Reserve, but the collateral is declining in value, so their ability to generate new liquidity from the Federal Reserve is becoming more difficult.

As the fraud involved in some (or many?) mortgages comes to light, more and more CDOs will be returned. Banks will be desperate for money, pushing interest rates on CDs and savings accounts up as they need to borrow from millions of small savers versus borrowing from the Federal Reserve. Higher rates on deposit accounts means higher interest rates on loans and credit, which will increase the cycle of foreclosures and home owners feeling the pain: as loan interest rates go up, housing prices tend to fall.

The banking cartel, centered around the fractional-reserve banking system, is in trouble. The money that was created by the Federal Reserve for the past decade is not being redeposited in the banks, so their cash capital is declining. As more people find themselves upside down on their mortgages, more will face foreclosure. As the foreclosures increase, the fraud on the books will come to light, forcing the banks to buy back more mortgages.

No Federal bailout can save the banks without utterly destroying the U.S. dollar. No investor will risk putting their money into banks if the banks may go bankrupt. The FDIC only insures the first $100,000 of a deposit, so those will millions of dollars to save or invest will stay away from the deposit accounts.

I have no idea what to recommend for those without millions. I believe that gold and silver is still the safest form of savings, but in a deflationary economy, which we may experience, the gold-dollar ratio and silver-dollar ratio will fall (although I believe the buying power of gold and silver will rise).

Markets will crash. Banks will shut down. Millions will be hurt financially. The question is: what will the powers that be, the powers that created this problem, do to try to save the system that is built on fraud and monetary value destruction?

Leave a Reply

XHTML: You can use these tags: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

    Get Daily Updates:

  • Enter your email address:


  • Or use RSS:

  • Subscribe in a reader

    Categories:

  • Auctions
  • bailout
  • Bank bankruptcy
  • Foreclosure
  • HELOC
  • Housing Bubble News
  • Mortgages
  • Negative Amortization
  • Refinance
  • short sales
  • Trailer Trash with Cash
  • Uncategorized
  • What is a bubble?

    Archives:

  • July 2008
  • December 2007
  • October 2007
  • September 2007
  • August 2007
  • February 2007
  • November 2006
  • October 2006
  • August 2006
  • July 2006
  • June 2006
  • May 2006
  • April 2006
  • March 2006

    Favorite Sites:

  • The LRC
  • Christian Anarcho-Capitalism