If there were ever any doubt about how completely RIGGED the banking system is against depositors, allow me to introduce the following:
Exhibit A: Governments are working to make banks LESS safe
Yesterday an unelected bureaucrat that no one has ever heard of made a stunning announcement that has sweeping implications for anyone with a bank account.
Dombrovskis is Europeโs top financial services official, so he controls bank regulations in the European Union.
He issued a stern warning to global bank regulators yesterday that he is prepared to reject any further plans they might have to tighten bank capital requirements.
This might sound rather dry, but itโs incredibly important.
โBank capitalโ is the most critical component of any bank balance sheet.
Capital is like a bankโs rainy day fund; when things start to go bad, a bankโs capital provides a margin of safety to ensure that their depositorsโ funds are safe.
Strong banks have ample capital and are able to withstand crises.
Weak banks with low levels of capital collapse. And thatโs precisely what happened in 2008.
Most banks across the west had very low levels of capital. They had spent years making appallingly stupid โno money downโ loans with 0% teaser interest rates to borrowers with pitiful credit.
When that bubble burst, the banks lost billions of dollars. And it turned out that most of the banks at the time had razor thin levels of capital.
If youโre wondering why, the answer is quite simple: the less capital a bank maintains, the more money it can investโฆ so poorly capitalized banks tend to make more money.
Lehman Brothers was quite profitable.
But the bank infamously had capital worth just 3% of its total assetsโฆ meaning that if Lehmanโs investments fell by just 3%, they would be wiped out.
Lehmanโs investments fell by a lot more than 3%… so the bankโs capital was totally insufficient to weather the storm. The bank folded, and a huge crisis erupted.
Regulators vowed to never let that happen again.
And in the years since, the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, the primary global bank regulator, has been pushing banks to increase their capital levels higher.
European banks in particular still have pitiful balance sheets.
Their investment portfolios are stuffed full of negative-yielding bonds issued by bankrupt European governments.
And their capital levels are still so low withย many of them that there are whispers of taxpayer funded bailouts, from Italyโs Monte dei Paschi to Germanyโs global titan Deutsche Bank.
But despite these pitiful bank fundamentals, Dombrovskis is rejecting the Basel Committeeโs latest push to make banks safer.
According to the Financial Times, Dombrovskis is specifically complaining that the Basel proposals might lead to a โsignificantโ increase in the amount of capital that banks would maintain.
โฆ so in other words, the head of European financial services thinks itโs a bad idea for banks to have an extra margin of safety.
Bank profits are being prioritized over depositor safety, even at a time when so many of the banks are seeking taxpayer-funded bailouts.
In the eyes of the bureaucracy, bank profits come before depositor safetyโฆ which makes it completely obvious how rigged the system is against you.
Exhibit B: The Volker Rule farce
In another effort to make banks safer, the US government passed the Volker Rule as part of their new post-crisis financial regulation.
The Volker Rule forces banks to sell their riskiest assets, i.e. the stuff they shouldnโt have been buying to begin with, especially with their depositorsโ savings.
Problem is, those risky assets arenโt worth very much, and the banks are having a hard time finding a buyer willing to pay them 100 cents on the dollar.
So rather than take the loss, banks in the US keep requesting extension after extension.
Theyโve already had six years to offload their assets. Now the deadline has been extended all the way to 2022.
Yet in the meantime, the banks get to continue holding those assets on their balance sheet at 100 cents on the dollar, even though theyโre clearly not worth a fraction of that.
The whole thing is a giant scam designed to conceal obvious bank lossesโฆ a neat little arrangement between the political elite and banking elite.
Exhibit C: No one from Wells Fargo is going to jail
Wells Fargo is getting a very public slap on the wrist for falsifying customer bank accounts in its efforts to meet their sales goals.
And in addition to the embarrassment theyโll probably pay a series of steep damages, most of which will go to the government and class action lawyers.
But donโt hold your breath for any senior executives to be criminally indicted.
If you or I engaged in what Wells Fargo did, weโd already be turning big rocks into little rocks wearing a DayGlo orange jumpsuit.
Thereโs a word for what they did. Itโs called fraud. And the people at the top were either part of the scam, or they were too stupid to recognize an obvious crime.
Once again, itโs proof of a system thatโs totally rigged in favor of the banking eliteโฆ literally at your expense.
Modern banking is truly bizarre.
Theyโve created a system whereby we entrust our hard-earned savings to institutions that never miss an opportunity to abuse that trust.
In making a deposit at a bank, we become merely an unsecured creditor.
And in exchange for taking on that counterparty risk they provide almost zero transparency in what theyโre doing with the money.
Even still, they work in partnership with their friends in government (where a very swift revolving door exists) to legally conceal their true financial condition.
Your reward for all this risk? A whopping 0.1%, if youโre lucky.
Why take the chance?
Think about withdrawing at least a portion of your savings. Gold and physical cash are great alternatives.