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I know they are gonna bust me on the sex toys.Anyone besides me, and some pundits, think this is a deliberate blowing-up of the banking world?
We SEE what they want. FedNow is on the shelf, waiting for launch.
And it's not going to be voluntary; and there are all kinds of tracking tools in the pipeline, I'm told. Learn your spending habits and develop a profile on each person who buys anything online or with a credit card.
All that's left is to set up Social Credit Scores.
And with the Xiden misAdministration's plan, LAUNCHED NOW, to give LOWER interest mortgages to people with POORER credit scores...we SEE they have a REAL interest in Social Engineering using your own money,
I think the banks are being scuttled. What's left will be, not bailed out by the FDIC, but absorbed into the Fed. Which will become the State People's Bank.
CBDC coming in three, two, one...
... on Friday ... U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen told bank chief executives that more mergers may be necessary following a series of bank failures.
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The regional bank crisis has been partly blamed by some on aggressive interest rates by the U.S. Federal Reserve, which forced some lenders to seek new capital to make up for a fall in the value of assets linked to interest rates.
Fed Chairman Jerome Powell said on Friday the after-effect of recent banking sector troubles is expected to take some pressure off the U.S. central bank's interest rake hiking cycle.
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PacWest Bancorp’s stock jumped 9% Monday after the bank announced the sale of a portfolio of 74 real-estate-construction loans with a principal balance of about $2.6 billion as it moves to refocus on its core community-banking business.
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PacWest said it is selling the loans to a unit of real-estate-investment company Kennedy Wilson Holdings.
“Kennedy Wilson or its designees will also assume all remaining future funding obligations under the acquired loans of approximately $2.7 billion,” PacWest said in a regulatory filing.
The bank has also agreed to sell an additional six real-estate-construction loans with a principal balance of about $363 million to Kennedy Wilson.
The sale of the loans is subject to Kennedy Wilson’s satisfactory due diligence. The company will place $20 million into a third-party escrow account that will be refundable.
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Apple customers struggle to get money out of Goldman Sachs-operated savings accounts
Apple launched a high-yield savings account with an APY of 4.15% in partnership with Goldman Sachs in April, but one month later some account holders are struggling to move their money out of the account.
Georgia resident Nathan Thacker told The Wall Street Journal that he has been trying to transfer $1,700 form his Apple account to JPMorgan Chase since May 15.
Read the rest here:
Apple customers struggle to get money out of Goldman Sachs-operated savings accounts
Apple Savings accoun holders have reportedly been having issues transferring funds out the account, with some customers’ money completely disappearing for up to seven business days.nypost.com
Sal's take:
PANIC At HUGE Bank As Customers Can't Access Funds!
Jun 6, 2023
13:55
Kennedy-Wilson (NYSE:KW), a real estate investment firm, and certain affiliates of Fairfax Financial Holdings (OTCPK:FRFHF) have closed on the purchase of an initial tranche of loans as part of a $5.7B loan portfolio acquisition from Pacific Western Bank (NASDAQACW).
The first part of the transaction, totaling $3.25B in total commitments and $1.8B in current principal balance, was acquired for $1.6B. An additional 12 loans, totaling $800M in commitments, are expected to close on a rolling basis by no later than July 31, 2023.
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Pacific Western Bank found a taker for another billion in construction loans as it attempts to survive its deposit outflows.
Cain International acquired more than $1.2 billion in construction loan commitments from PacWest, the Commercial Observer reported. The London-based firm’s acquisition is focused in New York, with the majority of the undisclosed properties in New York City.
The loan portfolio includes 10 construction loans for multifamily and student housing projects with an aggregate balance of approximately $500 million. ...
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Following the failures of Silicon Valley Bank and First Republic Bank, PacWest has been acting aggressively to stay afloat. Last week, Fairfax Financial moved in as the majority buyer of a construction loan portfolio from the bank, replacing Kennedy Wilson, which is retaining a minority stake in the debt.
Fairfax is paying $2 billion for 63 loans, which is about 95 percent of the portfolio in question. Last month, Kennedy Wilson had agreed to purchase 74 loans for $2.4 billion, discounted from the $2.6 billion principal balance of the selected loans.
I've never seen truer words ever typed on the BBBY boards.
"No matter how this plays out, JPM needs to go straight to hell."
The Bank for International Settlements (BIS), a bank for central banks, is warning of further financial stress as central banks continue to hike rates to battle the growing risk of "inflationary psychology" settling in.
Despite an already aggressive hiking cycle, central banks must do more, with many countries still struggling to bring inflation under control, the BIS said in its Annual Economic Report 2023 released Sunday.
"The key policy challenge today remains fully taming inflation, and the last mile is typically the hardest," said BIS general manager Agustin Carstens. "The burden is falling on many shoulders, but the risks from not acting promptly will be greater in the long term."
The last inning of battling inflation and restoring price stability will be the hardest for central banks, according to the BIS report. But the more central banks hike, the higher the risk of financial stress and bank failures, the BIS report said.
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Rising interest rates will deepen losses on securities held by banks and motivate savers to pull cash from accounts, squeezing the main way these companies make money. Losses on commercial real estate and other loans have just begun to register for banks, further shrinking their bottom lines. Regulators will turn their sights on midsized institutions after the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank exposed supervisory lapses.
What is coming will likely be the most significant shift in the American banking landscape since the 2008 financial crisis. Many of the country’s 4,672 lenders will be forced into the arms of stronger banks over the next few years, either by market forces or regulators, according to a dozen executives, advisors and investment bankers who spoke with CNBC.
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Shirley, you jest.Don't expect anymore free toasters
(*snork*) (*snigger*) (*snicker*)But I digress...mind running off-topic is, I guess, either autism or the writer's gift.
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Banks fell broadly after Moody's downgraded the credit rating on several banks, including M&T Bank and Pinnacle Financial. The credit agency also placed Bank of N.Y. Mellon and State Street on review for a downgrade.
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U.S. regulators on Tuesday announced a combined $549 million in penalties against Wells Fargo
and a raft of smaller or non-U.S. firms that failed to maintain electronic records of employee communications.
The Securities and Exchange Commission disclosed charges and $289 million in fines against 11 firms for "widespread and longstanding failures" in record-keeping, while the Commodity Futures Trading Commission also said it fined four banks a total of $260 million for failing to maintain records required by the agency.
It was regulators' latest effort to stamp out the pervasive use of secure messaging apps like Signal, WhatsApp or Apple's iMessage by Wall Street employees and managers. Starting in late 2021, the watchdogs secured settlements with bigger players including JPMorgan Chase, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and Citigroup. Fines related to the issue total more than $2 billion, according to the SEC and CFTC.
The firms admitted that from at least 2019, employees used side channels like WhatsApp to discuss company business and failed to preserve records "in violation of federal securities laws," the SEC said Tuesday.
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A Fitch Ratings analyst warned that the U.S. banking industry has inched closer to another source of turbulence — the risk of sweeping rating downgrades on dozens of U.S. banks that could even include the likes of JPMorgan Chase.
The ratings agency cut its assessment of the industry's health in June, a move that analyst Chris Wolfe said went largely unnoticed because it didn't trigger downgrades on banks.
But another one-notch downgrade of the industry's score, to A+ from AA-, would force Fitch to reevaluate ratings on each of the more than 70 U.S. banks it covers, Wolfe told CNBC in an exclusive interview at the firm's New York headquarters.
"If we were to move it to A+, then that would recalibrate all our financial measures and would probably translate into negative rating actions," Wolfe said.
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As of June 30, according to regulatory filings, Republic Bank held $6 billion in assets and had 35 branches in Pennsylvania and New Jersey. More than half of its deposits were uninsured. Its SEC filings are not up-to-date but in its 10-Q (quarterly report) for the period ending September 30, 2022, it had this to say about those uninsured deposits:“As of September 30, 2022, our 100 largest bank depositors accounted for, in the aggregate, 16% of our total deposits. The majority of these deposits are not insured by the FDIC and could present a heightened risk of withdrawal, if such depositors materially decreased the volume of those deposits, it could reduce our liquidity. As a result, it could become necessary for us to replace those deposits with higher-cost deposits or FHLB borrowings, which would adversely affect our net interest income and, therefore, our results of operations.”
Republic First Bancorp’s stock price has declined by 96 percent in the past 12 months as of yesterday’s closing price. Its stock was delisted from Nasdaq last month and it closed at a stunning 27-1/2 cents in over-the-counter trading yesterday.
Republic First Bancorp is far from the only bank holding company that has suffered huge share price losses over the past 12 months. HomeStreet (ticker HMST) has lost almost 75 percent of its market value. It’s a West Coast bank with 60 branch offices in Washington state, Oregon, California and Hawaii. As of June 30, it had assets of $9.5 billion.
PacWest Bancorp, parent of Pacific Western Bank, has also suffered steep share price losses, losing over 70 percent in the past year. Pacific Western Bank has 77 branches and $38 billion in assets as of June 30.
A much smaller bank holding company, Carver Bancorp, is the parent of Carver Federal Savings Bank, which has 7 branch offices in New York and $713 million in assets as of June 30, according to the FDIC. Its stock has lost 56 percent of its value over the past 12 months.
This is just a tiny sampling of the ongoing wreckage to equity values in the banking sector – raising the very serious question as to how this is all going to shake out before year’s end.
UPDATEThis one is a bit different. It's a rant about banks in general. Thought it worth a listen.
MAJOR ALERT! Banks Are CLOSING Coin Shop Accounts! This Is HUGE!
Aug 28, 2023
14:01
Banks are being more aggressive against some businesses and individuals. Coin shops as well. This is the second one recently that got their account shut down. Check out this video:• My Coin Shop Bank Accounts Were Close...
They supposedly did that as a result of 2008 Crash, right? Right?US Fed's top bank cop defends effort to hike bank capital
The U.S. Federal Reserve's top regulatory official defended a sweeping proposal to overhaul bank capital rules before the country's largest bank lobby on Monday, arguing the benefits of a bigger cushion outweigh any additional costs banks might face.www.reuters.com
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Fed Vice Chair for Supervision Michael Barr’s speech at an American Bankers Association conference will mark his first on bank regulation since the central bank in July unveiled the complex “Basel Endgame” proposal overhauling how banks gauge the amount of capital they must hold against potential losses.
The proposal implements international capital standards agreed by the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision in the aftermath of the 2007-2009 financial crisis. ...
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High interest rates will put some borrowers in more precarious positions, the IMF warned in its Global Financial Stability Report. Around 5% of banks globally are vulnerable to stress if those rates remain higher for longer, it estimated, and a further 30% of banks — including some of the world's largest — would be vulnerable if the global economy enters a prolonged period of low growth and high inflation.
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... Bank of America, which reports its quarterly earnings tomorrow morning at 6:45am.
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Looking at the bank's charge offs, which will be a closely watched topic since Bank of America has one of the highest carried Held to Maturity losses of all banks, the bank reported net charge-offs of $931 million, below the estimate of $995.4 million while the provision for credit losses rose to $1.23 billion, but below the estimate $1.3 billion. Unlike JPM, BofA actually built reserves for future losses to the tune of $303 billion, "driven primarily by credit cards" which together with CRE is emerging as the biggest threat to the financial system. ...
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