Bank Closings Signal Coming Collapse

Thursday, March 29, 2012
By Paul Martin

Paul A Drockton M.A
MoneyTeachers.com

Here are the March, 2012 Bank Closings and their cost to the Federal Deposit Insurance Fund:

Premier Bank, Wilmette, Illinois: $64.1 million.

Covenant Bank & Trust, Rock Spring, Georgia: $31.5 million

New City Bank, Chicago, Illinois: $17.4 million

Metro City Bank, Doraville, Georgia: $17.9 million

Total Cost to FDIC: $131 million

How Much Money Is in The Fund?

“The unaudited DIF balance — the net worth of the fund — rose to $9.2 billion at December 31 from $7.8 billion at September 30… The contingent loss reserve, which covers the costs of expected failures, fell from $7.2 billion to $6.5 billion during the quarter. Estimated insured deposits grew 3.1 percent in the fourth quarter.” (Source)

Banks pay into the fund based on assets. American taxpayers will cover the rest. The above list of banks are small players, yet, 12 months of similar failures would cost 1.5 billion dollars. This is why the FDIC contingent loss reserve fell from 7.2 billion to 6.5 billion in the last quarter of 2011 alone. They spent over a billion in January 2012.

Big Banks Cost Big Money:

FDIC spent almost a billion dollars on failed banks in January of 2012 alone. One of the bigger hits came from Tennessee Commerce Bank. This bank could cost FDIC up to 1.3 billion dollars:

“Tennessee Commerce had $1.2 billion in assets and is the largest bank failure of 2012. The loss to the FDIC Deposit Insurance Fund was $416.8 million.

“The quality of assets at Tennessee Commerce Bank was so poor that the acquiring institution purchased only $203.9 million (17%) of the failed Bank’s assets. The FDIC, which is already holding $30 billion of failed bank assets, got stuck with the balance of $854 million of junk loans to be disposed of later.” (Source)

The Elephant in the Room:

Global Derivatives exposure is estimated at 1,000 trillion dollars. It could be double that. No one really knows. Bank of America and JP Morgan transferred 70 trillion dollars of derivative exposure to their FDIC insured accounts. This is a move towards insolvency that cannot be ignored.

Ron Paul’s audit of the Fed disclosed an additional 34 trillion dollars in Federal Debt, add this to the 15 trillion currently being reported. Then add this to the liabilities we will incur when JP Morgan and Bank of America go under. The total will exceed 119 trillion dollars.

The Rest…HERE

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