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THE FEDERAL RESERVE Fractional Reserve Lending (Banking 101)
Financial Sense Online ^ | 29 Nov 2005 | Douglas Gnazzo

Posted on 11/29/2005 1:19:18 PM PST by hubbubhubbub

"All the perplexities, confusion and distresses in America arise not from defects in the Constitution or confederation, nor from want of honor or virtue, as much from downright ignorance of the nature of coin, credit, and circulation." [1]

Abstract

Ignorantia juris non excusat (ignorance of the law does not excuse) is a well established principle dating back thousands of years. Roman and English law, precursors of the American system of jurisprudence, both recognized the maxim.

Be it not forgotten – justice excuses not the law. The laws of the land are to be made in pursuance of the Constitution. The Constitution has precedent. Any law not in pursuance of the Constitution is null and void, as if it never occurred. So the court has ruled.

"And there is virgin Justice, the daughter of Zeus, who is honored and reverenced among the gods who dwell on Olympus, and whenever anyone hurts her with lying slander, she sits beside her father, Zeus the son of Cronos, and tells him of men's wicked heart, until the people pay for the mad folly of their princes who, evilly minded, pervert judgement and give sentence crookedly." [2]

No man is above the law – not even the King. No law is above the Constitution – not even the King’s. All men are created equal. All men are judged accordingly. He without sin cast the first stone.

The ignorance of coin, credit, and circulation is unfortunately, a widespread occurrence – causing perplexities, confusion, and distress, all tearing at the social fabric of our nation. But who is guilty of these defects – who has caused them to be?

Is it the fault of the common man that he cannot understand the complexities of a monetary system that moved Lord Keynes to say that not one man in a million understands money?

No, the common man is not at fault, the blame lies elsewhere: it rests with those who have purposefully made the monetary policy so bizarre that even its keepers have a hard time understanding the delusion they have created.

John Kenneth Galbraith clearly understood the illusionary nature of the elite’s monetary economists when he stated that they:

“use complexity to disguise or to evade the truth, rather than to reveal it.” [3]

Fractional Reserves

The most dishonest monetary illusion is the shadow cast by fractional reserve lending.

"Because of 'fractional' reserve system, banks, as a whole, can expand our money supply several times, by making loans and investments." [4]

Let’s take a closer look at the sword of State the magi use to create their tricks of prestidigitation – the scepter of fractional reserves.

What is meant by fractional reserves? It would seem that reserves are reduced to a fraction, but a fraction of what? Perhaps we should seek the wise counsel of the Federal Reserve, as this is their raison d’etre.

Required Reserve Balances

“Required reserve balances are balances that a depository institution must hold with the Federal Reserve to satisfy its reserve requirement. Reserve requirements are imposed on all depository institutions – which include commercial banks, savings banks, savings and loan associations, and credit unions – as well as U.S. branches and agencies of foreign banks and other domestic banking entities that engage in international transactions.

Since the early 1990s, reserve requirements have been applied only to transaction deposits, which include demand deposits and interest-bearing accounts that offer unlimited checking privileges. An institution’s reserve requirement is a fraction of such deposits; the fraction – the required reserve ratio – is set by the Board of Governors within limits prescribed in the Federal Reserve Act.” [5]

According to the above, the Board of Governors set required reserve balances within limits as prescribed by the Federal Reserve Act that depository institutions must hold on account.

The required reserve ratio is clearly stated to be a fraction of demand deposits and interest-bearing accounts that offer unlimited checking privileges.

Notice the wording “since the early 1990s, reserve requirements have been applied only to transaction deposits”, as such language demonstrates that previous to the early 1990’s reserve requirements were applied to a larger composite – according to the usage of the word “only.”

Which in fact is true, as reserve requirements have been reduced several times since the Fed took control in 1913? A closer look at reserve requirements is in order.

Reserve Requirements

The Federal Reserve has the following to say in regards to reserve requirements:

“Reserve requirements have long been a part of our nation’s banking history. Depository institutions maintain a fraction of certain liabilities in reserve in specified assets. The Federal Reserve can adjust reserve requirements by changing required reserve ratios, the liabilities to which the ratios apply, or both.” [6]

Once again, we see the use of the word “fraction” when discussing reserve requirements, however, we now have the further clarification of reserves in “specified assets.” Obviously, these “specified assets” are critically important, as they are the reserves of our monetary system.

“A depository institution satisfies its reserve requirement by its holdings of vault cash (currency in its vault) and, if vault cash is insufficient to meet the requirement, by the balance maintained directly with a Federal Reserve Bank or indirectly with a pass-through correspondent bank (which in turn hold the balances in its account at the Federal Reserve).” [7]

Now we see that depository institutions satisfy their reserve requirements by holding cash (currency) in their vaults, or if short, they get some help from the Fed or a correspondent bank. The next logical question is: how much cash are they required to have on reserve in their vaults.

From the same Fed publication, we find the following table:

(table didn't come across)

As can be seen from the above chart there isn’t a heck of a lot of reserves on reserve. Three of the five categories listed in the chart have zero (0) reserve requirements. One of the five categories has three (3%) percent reserves, and the remaining category has approximately ten (10%) percent reserve requirements.

So, what are the ramifications of the above listed reserve requirements? From the Fed’s publication, we find the following:

Autonomous Factors

“The supply of balances can vary substantially from day to day because of movements in other items on the Federal Reserve’s balance sheet. These so-called autonomous factors are generally outside the Federal Reserve’s direct day-to-day control.

The largest autonomous factor is Federal Reserve notes. When a depository institution needs currency, it places an order with a Federal Reserve Bank. When the Federal Reserve fills the order, it debits the account of the depository institution at the Federal Reserve, and total Federal Reserve balances decline.

The amount of currency demanded tends to grow over time, in part reflecting increases in nominal spending as the economy grows. Consequently, an increasing volume of balances would be extinguished, and the federal funds rate would rise, if the Federal Reserve did not offset the contraction in balances by purchasing securities. Indeed, the expansion of Federal Reserve notes is the primary reason that the Federal Reserve’s holdings of securities grow over time.” [8]

Federal Reserve notes are those little green pieces of paper we all carry around in our wallet or purse and refer to as cash. A dollar bill is a Federal Reserve note, as are fives, tens, twenties, fifties, and one hundred dollar bills.

From where does the Fed get the Federal Reserve Notes? Good question. Let’s try and find the answer.

Notice in the above quote the last sentence, which reads, “Indeed, the expansion of Federal Reserve notes is the primary reason that the Federal Reserve’s holdings of securities grow over time.”

With the Fed’s holding of securities entering the picture, we now have two questions to answer: Federal Reserve notes come from where; and what securities is the Fed holding due to the expansion of Federal Reserve notes?

The Treasury

The Treasury has a role to play in this monetary game of musical chairs. The Fed has this to say regarding the Treasury:

“Another important factor is the balance in the U.S. Treasury’s account at the Federal Reserve. The Treasury draws on this account to make payments by check or direct deposit for all types of federal spending. When these payments clear, the Treasury’s account is reduced and the account of the depository institution for the person or entity that receives the funds is increased. The Treasury is not a depository institution, so a payment by the Treasury to the public (for example, a Social Security payment) raises the volume of Federal Reserve balances available to depository institutions.” [9]

From this we see that the Treasury has an account at the Federal Reserve, and that the Treasury draws on the account to make payments by check and direct deposit. Where did the Treasury’s account at the Fed come from? Rather than finding answers, we are discovering more questions.

Open Market Operations

“Open market operations are the most powerful and often-used tool for controlling the funds rate. These operations, which are arranged nearly every business day, are designed to bring the supply of Federal Reserve balances in line with the demand for those balances at the FOMC’s target rate.” [10]

The more we look, the greater our task becomes. That is good, as often times its not just the answers that matter, but asking the right questions as well. We are getting warmer by the minute.

“In theory, the Federal Reserve could conduct open market operations by purchasing or selling any type of asset. In practice, however, most assets cannot be traded readily enough to accommodate open market operations. For open market operations to work effectively, the Federal Reserve must be able to buy and sell quickly, at its own convenience, in whatever volume may be needed to keep the federal funds rate at the target level. These conditions require that the instrument it buys or sells be traded in a broad, highly active market that can accommodate the transactions without distortions or disruptions to the market itself. The market for U.S. Treasury securities satisfies these conditions.” [11]

United States Treasury securities are the main market the Fed uses to conduct open market operations. As the money supply continually grows, the buying of Treasury securities by the Fed occurs more often then selling.

Summary To Date

Fractional Reserves refers to monetary reserves required to be on deposit in banks. The reserve requirements go from zero, to 3%, to 10%. Federal Reserve notes (cash) are the predominant reserve deposit. When banks need cash, they go to the Fed. The Fed holds U.S. government securities in its accounts. The U.S. Treasury has an account at the Fed. The Fed conducts open market operation of buying or selling Treasury securities. The remaining questions before us are:

Where does the Fed get the ever-increasing supply of Federal Reserve notes? Where did the Treasury account at the Fed come from? Where The Money Comes From

Trillions of dollars are said to be everywhere. I remember as a kid that a million was a big number. Today billions of dollars are tossed around from computer to computer without the blink of an eye. Trillions are now the topic de jour.

Budgets, deficits, and international money flows are all described using trillions or parts thereof. We have come a long way. The financial wizards circle high above the common man. But perhaps the way so chosen is the wrong way, for the good of all of the people – not just the elite few who control the strings of the purse, and profit thereby.

Let’s go within the Temple of the Wizards of Finance, to see what arts the conjuring is done by, to see what potions and spells are cast within fortune’s cauldron, and what strange brew precipitates there from.

The Beginning

On that fateful day when Federal Reserve Notes were first issued, it is obvious that a huge number of dollar bills had to be printed. Now, the printing press is pretty much obsolete; the only money that actually gets printed is used to replace old and worn Federal Reserve notes already in circulation. In vogue today is electronic money – fast food style.

The process actually begins with the Treasury Department printing a piece of paper called a bond, which is done electronically. Treasury bonds are debt obligations (liability) of the government to repay a loan - with interest.

The Treasury sells bonds to the public. The bonds the public does not buy, the Treasury deposits with the Federal Reserve. When the Fed accepts the bond from the Treasury, it lists the bond on its books as an asset.

The Fed assumes the government will make good on its promise to pay back the loan. This is based on the belief that the government’s power to tax the people is sufficient collateral.

Because the Fed now has an asset that it didn't have before receiving the Treasury bond, the Fed can now create a liability that is offset by its new asset.

The liability that the Fed creates is a Federal Reserve check. It gives the Treasury the check in payment for the Treasury bond.

THERE IS NO EXISTING MONEY IN THE FED'S ACCOUNT TO COVER THIS CHECK.

The Federal Reserve check is endorsed by the Treasury and is deposited in one of the government's accounts at the Federal Reserve. The government can use the deposits to write checks against, to pay for government expenses.

This is the first new money flow to enter the system. Various government contractors, vendors, etc. receive these checks as payment for services rendered, and they take the checks and deposit them in their commercial banks.

The Second Step

This is when the wizards of finance perform their greatest feats of magic. The deposits in the commercial banks take on a sort of split personality or dementia, brought on by a preponderance of delusional thinking.

On the one hand, the deposits are the bank’s liabilities, as they owe the total sums to their depositors.

However, because of FRACTIONAL RESERVE lending, the bankers get to lend out 9 times what they have on deposit.

The commercial banks get to list the deposits as RESERVES.

In other words, FRACTIONAL RESERVE lending allows the commercial banks to create 9 times more money then they have on reserve. The banks lend money they don’t have, and:

They get to charge interest on it.

As the newly issued money is put to work by borrowers, they then spend it and the receiver then deposits it in their bank account, and the bank starts the reserve lending policy all over again. This is why the

Money supply must expand by the amount of interest owed on the debt.

If it didn't, the debt would not be able to be serviced. There is no money created without creating debt, they are one and the same. Wealth is not created by creating money by fiat – only debt. As the Fed has admitted:

"Commercial banks create checkbook money whenever they grant a loan, simply by adding new deposit dollars in accounts on their books in exchange for a borrower's IOU." [12]

Conclusion

Fractional reserve lending invokes the moral hazard of fidelity of contract. Banks have on deposit (reserve) at most 10% of the “money supply.”

This means that if more than 10% of depositors go to the bank at one time to withdraw “our” money – there isn’t any money to withdraw beyond the 10% reserves.

Which means that 90% of the money supply is non-existent, nothing more than a fleeting illusion.

The bank’s solvency stands on the faith that no more than 10% of depositors will want their money at the same time. This means that although

Banks may appear to be solvent – they are without question illiquid.

Fractional reserve lending insures and guarantees that banks cannot possibly be liquid.

Banking is the only type of business that is allowed to function this way. If any other business used a similar modus operandi it would be subject to censor, arrest, court, and possibly imprisonment. Banks cannot fulfill all of their contracts if demand occurred at the same time. Thus, the banks are illiquid.

Why the double standard? Why the dishonesty? Why are they afraid of gold and silver money as the Constitution mandates? Because it would make them tow the line or go bankrupt. Less they forget - be ever mindful - even Zeus cannot deny Destiny.

Coming Soon – Open Letter To Congress Seeking Redress For The Return To Honest Money

[1] John Adams in a letter to Thomas Jefferson [2] Hesiod, Works and Days [3] John Kenneth Galbraith Money: Whence It Came, Where It Went [4] Federal Reserve Bank, New York The Story of Banks, p.5. [5] The Federal Reserve System Purposes and Functions The Implementation of Monetary Policy [6] Same as above [7] Same [8] Same [9] Same [10] Same [11] Same [12] Federal reserve Bank of New York, I Bet You Thought, p.19


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Constitution/Conservatism
KEYWORDS: banking; buymygold; chickenlittle; econnuttery; fed; goldbuggery; goldgoldgold; goldmineshaft; goldshills; yukoncornelius
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To: hubbubhubbub
Deflation cripples debtors only. For everyone else it raises their standard of living.

How does it raise anyones standard of living?

61 posted on 11/29/2005 6:10:40 PM PST by Toddsterpatriot (The Federal Reserve did not kill JFK. Greenspan was not on the grassy knoll.)
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To: Travis McGee

Thanks for those quotes and link.


62 posted on 11/29/2005 6:14:13 PM PST by little jeremiah
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To: hubbubhubbub
Huh?????

The random half-sentence you clipped out of its context confused me, too. I'm not sure I have your point, but if it's what I think it is, you'll note I didn't claim Romans or pre-revolutionary French didn't know how to devalue their currencies. They just didn't know the economic effects that policy would have. It would take another couple of centuries for Friedman to come around and refine the monetary theory of inflation, which retrospectively explains lots of historical hyperinflation but which wasn't known at the time of those historical eras.
63 posted on 11/29/2005 6:15:07 PM PST by Turbopilot (Nothing in the above post is or should be construed as legal research, analysis, or advice.)
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To: hubbubhubbub

Thanks


64 posted on 11/29/2005 6:23:19 PM PST by 185JHP ( "The thing thou purposest shall come to pass: And over all thy ways the light shall shine.")
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To: Toddsterpatriot

1. Everything they buy is cheaper.

2. Their money is worth more.

3. Their debts owed are paid back in more valuable money.


65 posted on 11/29/2005 6:36:23 PM PST by hubbubhubbub
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To: hubbubhubbub
1. Everything they buy is cheaper.

So, everything that is produced, for instance automobiles, is cheaper?

66 posted on 11/29/2005 6:37:45 PM PST by Toddsterpatriot (The Federal Reserve did not kill JFK. Greenspan was not on the grassy knoll.)
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To: Turbopilot

The treasury prints "bonds and notes" that they sell to the Federal Reserve. The treasury doesn't print money that they then sell to the Fed.

No charge for corrections.


67 posted on 11/29/2005 6:40:10 PM PST by hubbubhubbub
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To: Toddsterpatriot

If it was laying around in $US it would be.

I don't work for a living cause I could not find anyone to pay me for taking naps.

I do make money though. LOL


68 posted on 11/29/2005 6:42:28 PM PST by hubbubhubbub
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To: Toddsterpatriot

Depends on where (what currency the automaker pays their costs of production in) the automobile is produced but you're getting the hang of it.


69 posted on 11/29/2005 6:45:44 PM PST by hubbubhubbub
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To: hubbubhubbub
Everything produced in the US. So, every year an American car would be cheaper than the year before?
70 posted on 11/29/2005 6:50:50 PM PST by Toddsterpatriot (The Federal Reserve did not kill JFK. Greenspan was not on the grassy knoll.)
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To: Toddsterpatriot
Does anyone have an example of the Federal Reserve buying bonds during an auction?

This used to occur in the '70s, and is no longer permitted. Having the Fed buy bonds directly from the Treasury "monetizes the debt" and was one of the engines of inflation in the 1970s. Now the Fed must purchase in the secondary market.

Which means that 90% of the money supply is non-existent, nothing more than a fleeting illusion.

It only seems like it's bad to those who think the money supply can be completely backed by gold, or gold and silver. This has never been the case in America. Under the gold standard specie was technically "money" and everything else, including most bank balances, was credit or 'bank money'. Beginning with Alexander Hamilton a large portion of the American money supply was 'non-existent' in that it wasn't directly backed with a deposit of gold. One of Hamilton's innovations to save the finances of the nascent American republic was to pay interest in gold and to accept currency as payment for tariffs and taxes. This had the effect of bidding up currency and Treasury debt to the value of an equivalent amount of gold.

71 posted on 11/29/2005 7:02:36 PM PST by Pelham
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To: hubbubhubbub
If you want to "score points" by nitpicking, it'd help to not be wrong.

From Merriam-Webster.com:

Main Entry: mon·ey
Pronunciation: 'm&-nE
Function: noun
Inflected Form(s): plural moneys or mon·ies /'m&-nEz/
Usage: often attributive
Etymology: Middle English moneye, from Middle French moneie, from Latin moneta mint, money -- more at MINT
1 : something generally accepted as a medium of exchange, a measure of value, or a means of payment: as [...] c : PAPER MONEY

Sounds like a Federal Reserve Note to me. FRNs are also included in M1, the most restrictive economic definition of money.

But hey...no charge for corrections.
72 posted on 11/29/2005 7:03:40 PM PST by Turbopilot (Nothing in the above post is or should be construed as legal research, analysis, or advice.)
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To: cynicom

The greenback was the paper money issued by Lincoln to pay for his war- which resulted in a run on gold at the time. You could find greenbacks as late as the 1963 currency issue- you can identify them by the legend "U.S. Note" in place of the more common "Federal Reserve Note".


73 posted on 11/29/2005 7:10:48 PM PST by Pelham
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To: Pelham

One day we will able to paper our walls with American money. Even start fires in wood stove with it.


74 posted on 11/29/2005 7:13:50 PM PST by cynicom
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To: Travis McGee
If you want to get some more laughs, at the expense of that great simpleton. Thank goodness we are SO MUCH SMARTER than him!

Jefferson opposed the First Bank of the United States on Constitutional grounds. Fortunately, Washington realized that Jefferson was full of it, ignored his protests and signed the bill proposed by Hamilton. The sound finances of the Federal Government enabled the United States to buy Louisiana from Napoleon with US Bonds. Yes, the USA had a better credit rating than France in 1803.

Jefferson was an expert on many issues; finance was not one of them.

75 posted on 11/29/2005 7:16:02 PM PST by You Dirty Rats (I Love Free Republic!)
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To: Toddsterpatriot
I thought the advantage of using gold was that the value of the currency would be fixed? If the gold is bouncing around it sounds like you're back to an unstable currency.

Unless gold is discovered at the rate of growth in the economy, then prices will be more unstable in a gold-based currency.

Fixing gold at $x per ounce keeps the price of gold stable, not the prices of everything else. If gold is discovered than prices will increase. If gold is not discovered in sufficent quantities then you have deflation.

76 posted on 11/29/2005 7:21:12 PM PST by You Dirty Rats (I Love Free Republic!)
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To: hubbubhubbub
How does deflation cripple the economy??????

See Japan in the past few years for a case study. Deflation discourages spending and lowers the velocity of money -- thus further lowering prices and eventually output. MV = PQ.

77 posted on 11/29/2005 7:23:47 PM PST by You Dirty Rats (I Love Free Republic!)
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To: You Dirty Rats; hubbubhubbub
If gold is not discovered in sufficent quantities then you have deflation.

Hmmmm...sounds familiar.

Some people claim that money supply doesn't impact prices. That they're only determined by supply and demand.

Supply and Demand determine prices. Once again Econ 101.

326 posted on 11/28/2005 7:07:07 AM CST by hubbubhubbub

78 posted on 11/29/2005 7:34:17 PM PST by Toddsterpatriot (The Federal Reserve did not kill JFK. Greenspan was not on the grassy knoll.)
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To: american spirit

Money is not supplied as debt but as a medium of exchange. The decision as to the proper rate of issuance is a technical question which the Fed is charged with answering. When it answers correctly things are fine when not adjustments must be made. But such answers will no longer be made by random discoveries of precious metals in random places.

The value of the money is what it obtains in exchange. It is a claim on the American or World economy. Or can be transformed into debt. But debt is not proper money for exchange purposes.

These issues require separation of the functions of money which have different aspects of importance.


79 posted on 11/29/2005 8:26:39 PM PST by justshutupandtakeit (Public Enemy #1, the RATmedia.)
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To: hubbubhubbub
Deflation cripples debtors only. For everyone else it raises their standard of living. [because]
1. Everything they buy is cheaper.

Everything would be cheaper, *including* labor.

2. Their money is worth more.

But they'd have *less* money since their labor would be worth less.

3. Their debts owed are paid back in more valuable money.

Scratching my head on that one. If deflation cripples debtors, seems to me that debts wouldn't get repaid at all.

80 posted on 11/29/2005 8:27:59 PM PST by Sandy
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