dsentell
Member
- Joined
- Aug 3, 2007
- Messages
- 2,188
Gold, buy on the dips.
They need to crash this system so the sheep will accept the new amero currency.
Bingo!
That is exactly what I have been expecting for quite some time . . .
Gold, buy on the dips.
They need to crash this system so the sheep will accept the new amero currency.
I withdrew my money from the bank today. If the banks are insolvent I wonder when it will become so obvious that the public will be able to see it.
Gold, buy on the dips.
They need to crash this system so the sheep will accept the new amero currency.
How long before we see them put the NAU in our face? Five years? Ten Years? Or sooner?
I'll guess five years. What do you all guess?
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Gold, buy on the dips.
They need to crash this system so the sheep will accept the new amero currency.
Panic Early, Beat the Rush!
Please explain the original post in laymans terms.... I don't understand what all this means.
Does anyone have a goldmoney.com account? How safe is this? I mean, how can we be sure that our gold is in the vault and that we can get it whenever we want?
Banks today are insured by the taxpayers. How can we be sure that buying gold through these companies is safer?
So this is not some kind of bank run as some have suggested. It's a symptom of the fact that banks are losing money (and reserves) due to loan defaults, and the Fed has stepped in to avoid massive bank failures.
there is a little known Federal Reserve law that allows banks to operate at 0% reserves if its needed to save the system.
We are headed for hyperinflation in my opinion
So do you think we're out of the hole so to speak? Is this a sign of more market failures occuring in the future or perhaps major inflation?
Oh and thanks for the link to bullionvault. Cool stuff.
edit:
Looks like BullionVault charges a minimum $4 per month on top of commission charges. I think I'll just stick with a DGC like pecunix which only charges when you transfer money to another pecunix member. I think they have allocated storage too.
Banks can get money from the TAF, sometimes for as little as 1%. This beats the discount window. In the past, banks kept their own reserves as much as possible, because they could pay less interest on CDs and savings accounts than the fed discount rate.
However, with the TAF and banks able to borrow money at 1% or 1.5%, they don't have much incentive to offer decent rates on CDs (why would they pay consumers even 2%, when they can get it for less thru the TAF?)
So this explains the huge pile-on to get the cheap borrowed reserves.
It seems to me like this is going to feed another cycle of easy credit - why not take high risk loans and charge 10% on money they borrowed at 1% - even if a good number default, they will still make out like bandits.
Also, this seems to be leading to a lot more inflation (in the monetary sense) because the reserve requirements are so low that a LOT more loans can be made and this will mean a big increase in money in circulation.
Banks don't borrow directly from the TAF. They have to put up existing assets, just like they do at the Discount Window. The difference is that they can put up assets of much lower quality and with maturity dates much further in the future.
Profit margins are much higher than that for banks. Let's say a bank pays 5%/yr interest on its reserves. It can then create the money for up to nine times the amount of their reserves in new loans. Let's say the bank makes loans at 6%/yr. But that's on nine times the number of dollars. So for every $100 in reserves, the bank pays $5 in interest/yr and is able to create $900 in new loans, on which they charge 6%/yr, or $54. So $100 in reserves can generate $49/yr in earnings.
So I understand that this has basically the same requirements as the discount window, but does this mean that $50 billion or whatever is new borrowing on top of the usual borrowing, or is it the same borrowing just done through the TAF instead of the discount window? Does the TAF foster more borrowing, less, or the same?
I always though the borrowing through the discount windows would be factored into the "non-borrowed reserves", but apparently the FED is claiming that's not true of a shift to TAF would cause such a big "technicality".
Gold, buy on the dips.
They need to crash this system so the sheep will accept the new amero currency.