end of the free money era?
CDUB98 said:
We shall see.
Some think the Fed will be forced to lower interest rates back to near zero later this year to avoid a recession/bad news for Dems.
It's only one point of view though.
Beginning of death wobble if this happensCDUB98 said:
Some think the Fed will be forced to lower interest rates back to near zero later this year to avoid a recession/bad news for Dems.
Would just delay the inevitableCDUB98 said:
We shall see.
Some think the Fed will be forced to lower interest rates back to near zero later this year to avoid a recession/bad news for Dems.
It's only one point of view though.
Blackstone gating withdrawals was a canary in the coal mine:cgh1999 said:
Liquidity is going to be a MAJOR issue for every bank. Every bank I know is desperate for deposits to fund their loans and/or bond portfolios.
It won't just impact highly leveraged banks, but also conservative banks. The cost of deposits for many banks exceeds the return on their securities portfolios. So, they'll either lose money on the negative arbitrage or sell securities to avoid that. Which will further devalue their securities.
Leveraged banks (high loan to deposit ratio) may fare better assuming their loan portfolio is primarily floating rate debt. They'll still make money as long as their loans perform.
Which brings us to door #3. Mega cap REiTs are turning the keys over. Which means the little guys are in trouble. Which means their lenders are going to struggle.
Which brings us to door #4. Quantitative easing and government stimulus. The two things that put us into an inflationary environment will be the tools used to bail out the Banks after the economy gets crushed.
Folks - our country is addicted to crack. I don't think we have the stomach to hit bottom and have a true recovery.
[url=https://www.mysanantonio.com/business/article/banks-feel-sting-of-fed-fight-against-inflation-17831461.php][/url]Quote:
The bank had $209 billion in assets and $175.4 billion in deposits as the time of failure, the FDIC said in a statement. It was unclear how much of deposits was above the $250,000 insurance limit at the moment, but previous regulatory reports showed that much of Silicon Valley Bank's deposits were above that limit. Link
Stat Monitor Repairman said:
Don't know if this is true or not, but 💀 pic.twitter.com/WBE6N3TtNT
— Reddit Lies (@reddit_lies) March 10, 2023
TxTarpon said:
A run on Silicon Valley Bank?
Silicon Valley Bank (NASDAQ: SIVB) issued 5,000 PPP loans totaling $2.46 billion in 2020.
Silicon Valley Bank uses some of its PPP fees to create a scholarship program
Silicon Valley Bank's parent to repay all its $235M in TARP money[url=https://www.mysanantonio.com/business/article/banks-feel-sting-of-fed-fight-against-inflation-17831461.php][/url]Quote:
The bank had $209 billion in assets and $175.4 billion in deposits as the time of failure, the FDIC said in a statement. It was unclear how much of deposits was above the $250,000 insurance limit at the moment, but previous regulatory reports showed that much of Silicon Valley Bank's deposits were above that limit. Link
Oh no! Over the limit!?!
Banks used to do short term transfers of funds between banks to cover their differences between depositary amounts and what they had loaned out. Never was a big deal...until no other bank would agree to loan the cover money...even for a weekend.Quote:
If their assets are greater than the deposits, then the depositors can be made whole if these assets are liquidated.
I think the bank customers will be made whole.
Companies will get loans to make payroll while this mess is sorted.
Yesterday few traders traded $SIVB.
— unusual_whales (@unusual_whales) March 10, 2023
But on March 7th a trader traded $SIVB $200 P 3/17/2023, the only volume all at ask.
They turned $0.13 per contract into $39.10 today at open.
They turned ~$4000 into ~$1,212,100.
Here's how: pic.twitter.com/WNRcrkWUqB
I'd really like to know who bought 96 $SIVB 17 March 23 $150 P's on March 6 for $0.01. They're trading around $64.30 right now.
— Archimedes (@AlphaTrader00) March 10, 2023
$96 into $617,184
aka a +642,900% gain
Has anyone ever seen a bigger % options pay off?
I sure haven't pic.twitter.com/8k8QYT2qrt
C@LAg said:the obvious solution is to ban CDUB.CDUB98 said:
And now looking and finding I posted on it twice?
Good gawd. Guess I drank too much last night.
everywhere.
ac04 said:
the next round of QE will make the COVID round look small.
you are watching MMT fail in slow motion. we need prices to both go up and go down. we need rates to both go down and go up. we need both more debt and less debt. we need perpetual money printing and no money printing. none of it makes any sense.