1 (edited by twosidedeath 02-Sep-2011 19:31:51)

Topic: U.S. said ready to sue big banks over mortgages

http://www.marketwatch.com/story/us-said-ready-to-sue-big-banks-over-mortgages-2011-09-02


personally i think this should have been done while it was happening because it was obvious then. but better late then never right? well thats actually what i opened this thread for. we know the world economy is swaying back and forth daily without any serious means of support and as shown in thier article they took a slow and stead growth and flipped it. all those announced banks dropped in stocks and for obvious reasons.

what it comes down to is now that the economy is in a sense dependant on these banks to produce cash and keep the money wheels turning, what will the long-term, short-term effects be from this alone, i know there are a lot of other factors, but try to isolate.

short-term we will see a decrease in the market, any bank that may somehow get off the hook "just look at how well bp managed to get through thier last major oil spill" the stocks will immediately jump back up and possibly grow more knowing that thier competition now has to dodge that bullet.

long-term. i expect layoffs, not that i care for bankers in the business sense but they are people, and jobs are jobs. possible recession from a run-effect. personally i feel they should have taken one bank on at a time, not take on the whole system at once. they now have all the bankers worried for cash, and as we all know, our banks arent able to produce large ammounts of actual cash. defaults may occur. less loans, in turn less jobs for other companies.


BUT there are definately positives. as many know americas a bit short on cash. well them bankers sure could help out there with thier record profits and all. better business practice? if the charges are serious enough the banks will refrain from doing them again, but if this is just some slap on the wrist for quick cash then they will simply keep doing it for the profit. in an effort to keep customers and loyalty we could also see more competition between banks, which seems to be rather laid back at this time.


now i would like to hear from the experts. or at least the few that are way more experienced in these matters then myself. i still beleive this to be extremely important any way you cut this.

Re: U.S. said ready to sue big banks over mortgages

This is not money taken from banks with "record profits."  These particular banks got the worst of the recession hit.  Let's look at their quarterly reports.


http://articles.latimes.com/2011/jul/20/business/la-fi-banks-earnings-mortgages-20110720

"Earnings at BofA were sideswiped after the nation's largest bank booked an $8.5-billion charge to settle legal claims related to its troubled mortgage division. The nation's largest bank reported that mortgage problems triggered a net loss of $8.8 billion and pushed revenue down 55% from the same period a year earlier to $13.2 billion."


http://topics.nytimes.com/top/news/business/companies/goldman_sachs_group_inc/index.html

"Goldman Sachs reported second quarter profit of $1.05 billion in July 2011, a weak showing that reflected the firm

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Re: U.S. said ready to sue big banks over mortgages

Banks are collectively holding almost a trillion dollars in excess of their requirement.  There is absolutely no legal requirement against this money being lent out.  However, the banking industry is nearly paralyzed due to a mix of lack of customers and the fact that the banks are suddenly becoming more stringent with giving loans.  The result... $1 trillion dollars that is just sitting there.  Long story short, the moment we can get these banks to start lending out their excess reserves, the quicker the economy is going to recover.


why would a bank that is supposedly barely surviving want to lend up to the max? having 90% of thier balance sheet be non-existant money in the sense that they "lent it out" when its not thier money they lend out in the first place. this causes bubbles in the economy, yea looks good in the short term. causes recessions later when they burst

and when the government is 14 trillion in debt 1 trillion isnt a lot. the last thing a bank needs is to have 3 trillion in toxic assets show up on thier spread sheets

4 (edited by Zarf BeebleBrix 03-Sep-2011 06:59:50)

Re: U.S. said ready to sue big banks over mortgages

> twosidedeath wrote:

> why would a bank that is supposedly barely surviving want to lend up to the max? having 90% of thier balance sheet be non-existant money in the sense that they "lent it out" when its not thier money they lend out in the first place. this causes bubbles in the economy, yea looks good in the short term. causes recessions later when they burst


That's... exactly how banks throughout history have operated.  That's the very definition of a bank!  They accept deposits from people, which are then lent out to businesses, home buyers, etc.  The lent money is never actually owned by the bank... the bank is an agent to pool consumer assets to form loans.  Even the most conservative banks use this fundamental system.  I'm not exactly sure how you think a bank is supposed to operate if they're not supposed to lend money which isn't theirs.  Lending that cash is the most fundamental way by which banks profited, as can be indicated by the fact that, if you look on that chart, it indicates that in the past 60 years, this is the only time banks have really held significant reserves above legal requirements.


> and when the government is 14 trillion in debt 1 trillion isnt a lot. the last thing a bank needs is to have 3 trillion in toxic assets show up on thier spread sheets


First of all, that's not just $1 trillion sitting there.  Bank deposits generally have what economists call a multiplier effect, in which the money will be lent out, re-invested, re-deposited, re-invested, and overall continually sent through a cycle which creates overall economic growth.  The multiplier effect generally runs between 2 and 4 times the initial deposit, but today is reduced to a 1.2% rate due to the huge reserves (i.e., if those excess reserves were gone, there would be a higher average multiplier rate).  But when that money is just sitting in the bank idling, it doesn't actually produce any growth.  It's dead weight on the economy... no better than if we threw the money into the sun.  If that $1 trillion was actually in circulation, it would mean adding not just that $1 trillion, but another $1 to $2 trillion in growth (full disclosure: once that trillion starts getting into circulation, the Fed would hike up interest rates to prevent inflation from getting too high... so the growth may not be as high... but I'm also using a relatively small multiplier effect here, so I think my numbers may be accurate).

Second... I don't get why you compare government debt to bank holdings to determine significance.  The two have very little to do with one another.  What you should be doing is comparing it to overall GDP.  Results in the same number ($14 trillion), but I just want this on the record... what's the reason for that comparison?

Third... look at the comparison.  US GDP is $14 trillion.  Banks have $1 trillion in excess reserves.  A conservative multiplier effect would add another $1 trillion in growth from that trillion.  That's over a 7% growth rate in the economy just from the conservative multiplier effect (more than enough to put the economy out of a recession).

Fourth... something doesn't seem right here.  You were so excited about suing the banks for $4 billion to help out the US debt, but then decide the number $1 trillion doesn't seem impressive, relative to US debt?  Something seems terribly wrong with the math here.

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Re: U.S. said ready to sue big banks over mortgages

i was never exited about suing the banks. in fact most of the effects i described in my first post were about negative long and short term effects versus the one positive reason of proper business terms. and the reason i have said "bank-run" a dozen times now is the exact reason banks SHOULD NOT be handing out money that isnt thiers at least to the extent that you demand. a bank run is simple, a bank loans out cash, the lender, or the original depositors decide they want thier cash elsewhere, oh look the bank cant get that cash, and thats a very lame form of a bank-run. its basically defaulting on a payment.

secondly heavy fractional banking creates inflation, which also means thier money is worth less. odd eh? but when a bank loans out cash that is not infact thiers, in the belief that only 10% of thier investors will withdrawn thier cash at any given time, there becomes an excess of cash in the monitary system.

last i dont believe that loaning out $1 trillion dollars even creates a GDP of 1 trillion, more likely that whatever return will be simply a fraction of that and even less significant then the possibility of banks collapsing, which would put thousands of companies out of business.

6 (edited by Zarf BeebleBrix 11-Sep-2011 06:48:33)

Re: U.S. said ready to sue big banks over mortgages

> twosidedeath wrote:

> i was never exited about suing the banks. in fact most of the effects i described in my first post were about negative long and short term effects versus the one positive reason of proper business terms. and the reason i have said "bank-run" a dozen times now is the exact reason banks SHOULD NOT be handing out money that isnt thiers at least to the extent that you demand. a bank run is simple, a bank loans out cash, the lender, or the original depositors decide they want thier cash elsewhere, oh look the bank cant get that cash, and thats a very lame form of a bank-run. its basically defaulting on a payment.


1: I was only using that statement to point out an inconsistency (Why is $4 billion considered a positive relative to US debt, yet not $1 trillion?  Seems odd...)
2: Bank runs haven't happened since the 1930's, and for good reason.  Ever since the 1930's, the US developed a large banking infrastructure to create safeguards which safeguard a person's assets.  The FDIC insures up to $250,000 (was only $100,000 until 2008) of each depositor's cash, so all the people with small accounts will still have their money in the event of a bank collapse.  The bank reserve requirements are meant to ensure some money is there for depositors.  If those reserves fall below legal levels, banks can obtain short term loans from the Federal Reserve (that's actually the loan referenced when we discuss interest rate changes made by the Federal Reserve).
I'd say the current financial crisis sort of proves that bank runs don't happen in the US anymore.  If there was ever a time in which depositors would be running to a bank to pull out their deposits, it would have been in the fall of 2008, when most every bank was asking the government for a bailout and the government actually failed to pass the first bailout.



> secondly heavy fractional banking creates inflation, which also means thier money is worth less. odd eh? but when a bank loans out cash that is not infact thiers, in the belief that only 10% of thier investors will withdrawn thier cash at any given time, there becomes an excess of cash in the monitary system.

You're right here.  However, for one, that doesn't mean a bank should just be sitting on those massive reserves.  They're still a business which could make profits by expanding their market share within the economy in excess of inflationary trends.

Second, and more important, the US economy could actually use a little inflation.  The Federal Reserve's been doing anything it can to encourage lending, and thus inflation, in our economy.  Interest rates are at historic lows, and Bernanke has said he'll be keeping those rates at those lows for I believe at least a year.  If this was a normal economy with those interest rates, inflation would easily surpass 10%.  The only reason we're not seeing any inflation, and thus any recovery is because so much of the cash the Federal Reserve is injecting into the economy is sitting idly in bank vaults, as mentioned before.

Third, inflation and growth rarely occur on a 1%-1% basis.  In reality, unless the monetary policy is having significant problems, a healthy economy can outpace inflation...

Fourth, this inflationary worry is pretty much inevitable.  The moment the banks start to recover, these funds will inevitably return to the economy... and we'll see an inflationary trend again.  Then it will be the Fed's job to step in and try to prevent too big a price shock.  It's like a bandaid we're inevitably going to have to rip off.  tongue

> last i dont believe that loaning out $1 trillion dollars even creates a GDP of 1 trillion, more likely that whatever return will be simply a fraction of that and even less significant then the possibility of banks collapsing, which would put thousands of companies out of business.

Here's a couple graphs of importance:
http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/data/MULT_Max_630_378.png

One more focused on the past decade.
http://images.tradingmarkets.com/2009/Howto/0309Hansen2.jpg

The graph indicates the strength of the money multiplier effect in the US for each period of time, relative to M1 currency.  Okay, so I was slightly off regarding the strength of the multiplier... we're normally at... about 1.7%, not 2%.  Anyway, the multiplier effect is exactly as I described it: that increases or decreases in the M1 supply will pass through the economy in a given year, expanding the economy by that amount.

As you can see, this multiplier completely dropped like a rock with the start of the financial crisis.  The reason is very simple: The most important piece in creating the multiplier effect of currency, the bank distributing the money in the form of loans, just isn't happening.  Once the money gets deposited in a bank... the bank's portion of the multiplier effect doesn't happen.  It just sits there.  Meanwhile, the Federal Reserve's been injecting currency into the money supply to hopefully stimulate growth, to no avail (liquidity trap).  Hence why, on average, there's no multiplier effect in our economy anymore.


EDIT: Oh, right... one final note: If we're in an inflationary period, it's stupid for the banks to be holding those reserves anyway.  With no other reinvestment or lending, that cash doesn't actually produce any growth, which means the only change in value of that currency is inflation.  The result: the bank just ate a net loss in buying power of anywhere from 1-4% for the year.

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