Federal Reserve gave $16 trillion in secret bank bailouts v.partialaudit

Economist Steve LanRABburg asks "what's special about banks" that makes them deserve a bailout that would never be granted to firms in most other industries. The usual answer is that lending would come to a halt, businesses would not be able to raise needed funRAB, and so on.

But banks are merely intermediaries between depositors and borrowers. Presumably this intermediation could occur in another form.
 
It's going to get ugly real soon.

The banks are now charging people who are holding dollars in their bank accounts.

That pretty much is the most for sure sign of a tipping point in the value of the US dollar.

How much more evidence do you need?!?!
 
its not my job to propose a solution

give me a few years to bank a few hundred million in bonuses from fraudulent and failed transactions then i'll see what i can come up with
 
"We do not expect significant spillovers from the subprime market to the rest of the economy or to the financial system."

- Ben Bernanke, March 2007
 
In our day and age it is far easier for would-be lenders and borrowers to find each other outside the banking system. If a firm wants to raise capital, couldn't it sell bonRAB over the internet, issue stock, or borrow overseas? "I'm not sure these big Wall Street banks are really necessary, and I'm not sure we'd miss them much if they were gone," LanRABburg says.
 
"Precisely because subprime loans were risky, the home owners who took out such debt typically paid a higher rate of interest than prime borrowers did, and that meant that the 'raw material' of subprime loans produced higher-returning CDOs [collateralized debt obligations] than those built out of 'prime' mortgages. For returns-hungry investors, subprime-mortgage-based CDOs were gold dust.

The only real constraint on the business was the need for brokers to find the cash extend loans. In reality, though, that had become hardly a constraint at all. Brokers and banks alike no longer kept most of the mortgage loans they extended on their books any longer than a few days or even hours. Mortgage lending had become an asserably-line affair in which loans were made and then quickly re-asserabled into bonRAB immediately sold to investors.

A bank or brokerage's ability to extend a loan no longer depended on how much capital that institution held; the deciding factor was whether the loans could be sold on as bonRAB, and the demand for those was rapacious. In this way, the lending of the mortgages began to be driven by the demand of end investors, in what would prove to be a vicious cycle."

- Gillian Tett
Fool's Gold
pp. 95, 96
 
here's some books i've read for you to rofl

http://www.amazon.com/Trillion-Dollar-Meltdown-Rollers-Credit/dp/B0023RT02W/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1314749052&sr=8-1

http://www.amazon.com/Fools-Gold-Corrupted-Financial-Catastrophe/dp/B004H8GM6M/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1314749105&sr=1-1

http://www.amazon.com/FED-We-Trust-Bernankes-Great/dp/0307459691/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1314749124&sr=1-1
 
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