What is Risky In Life - Zero Reserve or Full Reserve Banking?

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Since the inception of the Federal Reserve System, our fractional reserve banking system has steadily degraded reserve ratio requirements until they finally just did away with them altogether and ushered in our brave new era of zero reserve banking. Banks are not tasked with maintaining any specific thresholds of reserves and now manage liquidity by buying and selling debt instruments as necessary.

It works great - until it doesn't. As the Federal Reserve embarked on QE and lowered interest rates towards zero several years ago, banks loaded up their balance sheets with low interest bearing debt. When the Fed reversed course with QT and raising rates to combat inflation, many banks were caught with balance sheets full of upside down investments. Unable to keep pace with the yields offered by Money Market Funds (MMFs), they are facing deposit redemptions as money is pulled from the banks to chase yields in MMFs. The situation is leading to fears of a systemic crisis as half of America's banks are reportedly already insolvent.



The Fed Knows Best? They Certainly Know Irony​


Consider the saga of Custodia Bank:

Custodia Bank applied for both membership in the Federal Reserve System and for a Fed Master Account. Custodia Bank planned to use a full reserve banking model to satisfy risk requirements of Wyoming where it got it's charter, except it planned to serve the crypto industry. So, with America's War on Crypto (and Operation Choke Point 2.0) in full swing, the Fed denied Custodia's applications with the justification that:

Great job fellas! You certainly understand risk management controls and liquidity risk management practices and know a solid bank when you see one. The last decade is replete with examples (see graph above).

Narrow Thinking​


Now consider the saga of the Narrow Bank:

The issue that led to the current wave of regional bank failures was deposit draw downs and then, in SVB's case, a run on deposits from customers holding large, uninsured deposits - the very customers that the Narrow Bank sought (seeks) to service.

Great job fellas! Another triumph of risk management for masses.
 
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Mr. Kaloudis


 
Ok I'm going to start out with a basic question. Is it not true that people are pulling their money out of these regional banks not because of fear but because you can get 4 percent at a Goldman Sachs account and no way any of these regional banks can compete with that, in fact not even close because of their bond and mortgage rate loan exposure?
 
Yes, Money Market Funds are seeing inflows as bank deposits are shrinking. Deposit flight is causing the banks stress because they don't have sufficient reserves and are having to take losses to raise cash.

That said, the banking problems that started with Silvergate (the first bank to fail) had to do with crypto firms that drew down deposits because of market/business requirements. Had Custodia bank been granted it's membership and master account, it's possible that none of the regional banks would have failed.
 
Yes agree!
 
... A 100 percent safekeeping bank, one that did not make any loans but only parked money at the Fed, in T-Bills, or in time-matched treasuries as suggested, would have no discernable risk. ...


I guess Mish isn't aware that the Fed has explicitly rejected this idea several times already...
 
Banking crisis out of sight and out of mind:
More:



 


The system has imposed regulatory barriers to growth on the small banks (in an attempt to prevent the whole system from toppling like dominos). You better have good red tape kung fu if you want to play in the big boy pool.
 
TrustTexas Bank got slapped by the FDIC on October 30:
(.PDF):

 
FDIC report shows bank stress still running high. Not looking good for a resolution on the BTFP program:
 


So it's possible that the increase in the use of the BTFP is not indicative of stress but banks wanting free money from the Fed. We won't really know until the (if) the BTFP program ends I guess.
 

https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/other/a-bitcoiners-narrow-bank-everywhere-but-here/ar-AA1l6H8e
 


Here's an idea... how about letting stablecoins use narrow banking and eliminate these risks altogether.

The BIS is accepting comments on this issue, so I submitted the following:
I wonder if they will publish it?
 
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A central banker admits a hard truth (referring to stablecoins):
Bank of Korea Governor Rhee Chang-yong said:
Their widespread adoption could diminish the role of central bank money and impair the effectiveness of monetary policies.


There will be no free market competition in currencies. The global monetary system is all about control.
 
...
I guess Mish isn't aware that the Fed has explicitly rejected this idea several times already...

Mish is banging the drum again and in this post, he does mention that the Fed has rejected previous attempts:

 
The reference links in this article do not work for me, which is unfortunate because I am interested to know what he is referring to with the BoE comment in point #8.


 
BIS paper authored by four people including someone from the San Fran Fed:

We find ourselves today in the midst of purportedly supply shock driven inflation (thanks C19, supply chain disruptions igniting monetary expansion). They know this induces default risk to the point of a systemic banking crisis. And yet, they refuse to consider narrow/full reserve banking for the masses.
 
The Federal Reserve Board on Tuesday announced the execution of the enforcement action listed below:

Marblehead Bancorp, Marblehead, Ohio, and Marblehead Bank, Marblehead, Ohio
Written Agreement dated December 14, 2023
...


Skimming through the actual agreement:


That bank seems to be getting slapped for their incompetent management team as well as FUBAR finances. Yikes.
 

Did you ever hear of the Independent Treasury Act of 1920?

The Independent Treasury Act of 1920 suspended the de jure (meaning "by right of legal establishment")Treasury Department of the United States government.

Our Congress turned the treasury department over to a private corporation, which when seen in its true light, is a fascist monopolistie cartel, the Federal Reserve and their agents.

The bulk of the ownership of the Federal Reserve System, a very well kept secret from the American Citizen, is held by these banking interests, and NONE is held by the United States Treasury:
  • Rothschild Bank of London
  • Rothschild Bank of Berlin
  • Warburg Bank of Hamburg
  • Warburg Bank of Amsterdam
  • Lazard Brothers of Paris
  • Israel Moses Seif Banks of Italy
  • Chase Manhattan Bank of New York
  • Goldman, Sachs of New York
  • Lehman Brothers of New York
  • Kuhn Locb Bank of New York
The Federal Reserve is at the root of most of our present statutory regulations, "laws", in the control and regulation of virtually all aspects of human activity in the United States, through successively socialistic constructions laid upon the Commerce clause of the Constitution.

Basically, the Federal Reserve is the "STATE" of the United States.

Thomas Jefferson once said:

"I believe that banking institutions are more dangerous to our liberties than standing armies".​

The Gold Standard is how we undo all of this corruption.
 

 
What is really happening with the BTFP right now?





Is it evidence of stress in the banking sector or a stealth bailout to the banks?
 
ZH says small/regional banks are only able to function thanks to the Fed's help and if the BTFP ends in March as scheduled, they will be in trouble:


That aligns with Rickards' prediction:

 
Does this count as the first bank failure of 2024? Maybe not technically...


More:


~~~

BTFP update:
 
this one gets my attention......i am assume the unrealized losses are not general accross the board and are concentrated in certain bank types or sectors.....also i thought banks had to keep track of and acknowledge as part of their reporting non and under performing assets .... 33% unrealized losses in the context of 10% reserve is stark ....time for a bit of my own research in my banks....this is a
"emperor is not wearing any clothes" stat

Edit to add: might not be quite as bad as i first thought as its a % of equity
 
...also i thought banks had to keep track of and acknowledge as part of their reporting non and under performing assets ....

That's the rub. I'm short on time ATM, so can't look it up, but there was a change in the way they had to mark these assets recently. We're learning about them now. They weren't (required to be) reporting them before as I understand it.
 
That's the rub. I'm short on time ATM, so can't look it up, but there was a change in the way they had to mark these assets recently. We're learning about them now. They weren't (required to be) reporting them before as I understand it.
it might not be quite as bad as first thought....as its a % of bank equity ....but bears some research
 

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what i am trying to reconcile is the term "equity"

is it bank portfolio assets or is it bank ownership equity

"What is a banks equity?
Capital is sometimes referred to as “net worth”, “equity capital”, or “bank equity”. Bank capital are funds that are raised by either selling new equity in the bank, or that come from retained earnings (profits) the bank earns from its assets net of liabilities."
 
The eye of Sauron destroyed another narrow bank:
More:

 
Custodia bank is suing the Fed. This report says a resolution might come in March:
More:

 
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Caitlin is the founder/CEO for Custodia bank
 
In zero reserve banking news...
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This X thread is worth reading:

 
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