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FDIC gets ready for bank failures

The FDIC employees are likely singing The Midnight Train to Georgia.

Georgia people better make sure they don't have uninsured deposits facing them and fast.
 
Speaking of, I was at the main HQ of the FDIC last week for work. On their loading dock was a pallet stacked with boxes labeled "Bank Failure Broshure". One of the boxes had been opened and I could see the newly printed pamplets labeled "What to do when your bank fails" or something to that effect. They're definitely kicking it into high gear there and are apparently having tons more conferences than usual. Last time I was there I saw signs pointing people toward the conference room for the topic of "Derivatives". I bet everyone left that conference more confused than they entered LoL
 
Getting ready to get worse. Read this one close. They are going to have to raise fees.

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aXGDnqbSdt.s&refer=home

Then if this blows up,

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601103&sid=a7c1n3_itkKE&refer=us

Wait until the end of next quarters on the report of problem banks.

The prior comments, about the Derivatives room at the FDIC, and if they blow up by even 25% will cause the meltdown.

Total derivative notional amounts were $1485 billion at July 31, 2008.
 
Indymac Federal, too funny

IndyMac will initially send roughly 4,000 modification letters to troubled borrowers. In the coming weeks it will send thousands more, the FDIC said.


They probably have 10k delinquent loans or more and they think the troubled borrowers are gonna refi? Whats the average loss on foreclosure, 40k or so? x 10,000, zikes.
 
Wow --- look at the bids this morning on the financials. Way, way up across the board. FNM and FRE are going to open up about $0.60 higher than their close (which is big on single digit midgets)

Everything is fiiiine. Move along nothing to see here muhaha
 
FDIC, borrow from treasury

(Reuters) - Federal Deposit Insurance Corp (FDIC) might have to borrow money from the Treasury Department to see it through an expected wave of bank failures, the Wall Street Journal reported.


The borrowing could be needed to cover short-term cash-flow pressures caused by reimbursing depositors immediately after the failure of a bank, the paper said.

The borrowed money would be repaid once the assets of that failed bank are sold.

"I would not rule out the possibility that at some point we may need to tap into (short-term) lines of credit with the Treasury for working capital, not to cover our losses," Chairman Sheila Bair said in an interview with the paper.

Bair said such a scenario was unlikely in the "near term." With a rise in the number of troubled banks, the FDIC's Deposit Insurance Fund used to repay insured deposits at failed banks has been drained.

In a bid to replenish the $45.2 billion fund, Bair had said on Tuesday that the FDIC will consider a plan in October to raise the premium rates banks pay into the fund, a move that will further squeeze the industry.

The agency also plans to charge banks that engage in risky lending practices significantly higher premiums than other U.S. banks, Bair said.

The last time the FDIC had borrowed funds from the Treasury was at nearly the tail end of the savings-and-loan crisis in the early 1990s after thousands of banks were shuttered.

The fact that the agency is considering the option again, after the collapse of just nine banks this year, illustrates the concern among Washington regulators about the weakness of the U.S. banking system in the wake of the credit crisis, the Journal said
 
Does anybody have a link to this "problem list" of banks they keep referring to?

It should be spread far and wide to give people a heads up.
 
LOL, if they told you

Does anybody have a link to this "problem list" of banks they keep referring to?

It should be spread far and wide to give people a heads up.

There would be a run on all 117 banks instantly causing a panic. This is for the elite only to short, get out of, transfer money from etc. Its top secret! You'll know on Fridays after depositors lose money.
 
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