Mike Whitney’s stuff on this is invaluable right now. From an article he wrote yesterday:
“On January 14, 2008 the FDIC web site began posting the rules for reimbursing depositors in the event of a bank failure. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) is required to determine the total insured amount for each depositor .as of the day of the failure and return their money as quickly as possible. The agency is modernizing its current business processes and procedures for determining deposit insurance coverage in the event of a failure of one of the largest insured depository institutions. (http://www.fdic.gov/news/news/financial/2008/fil08002.html#body)
The implication is clear, the FDIC has begun the death watch on the many banks which are currently drowning in their own red ink. The problem for the FDIC is that it has never supervised a bank failure which exceeded 175,000 accounts. So the impending financial tsunami is likely to be a crash-course in crisis management. Today some of the larger banks have more than 50 million depositors, which will make the FDICs job nearly impossible.
-—snip——
Capital is now being destroyed at a faster pace than it is being created. Thats why the Fed is looking for solutions beyond mere rate cuts. Bernanke wants direct government action that will provide immediate stimulus. But that takes political consensus and theres still debate about the gravity of the upcoming recession. The pace of the economic contraction is breathtaking. This weeks release of the Institute for Supply Managements Non-Manufacturing Index (ISM) was a shocker. It showed steep declines in all areas of the nations service sectorincluding banks, travel companies, contractors, retail stores etcThe Business Activity Index, the New Orders Index, the Employment Index, and the Supplier Delivery Index have all contracted at a historic pace. Everyone took a hit.
The numbers are so terrible, its beyond belief, said Scott Anderson, senior economist at Wells Fargo & Co.”