Tag Archives: 99%

Think You’ve Got Cash In The Bank? Think Again

5 Feb

From the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) website:

Click to enlarge

That’s $53.2 billion in Australian notes on issue.

Sounds like a lot, right?

According to the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS), in December 2011 there were 11.441 million employed people in Australia.

So $53.2 billion in notes equals just $4,655 per employed person.

Doesn’t sound like so much now, does it?

But wait. There’s more.

According to the RBA’s spreadsheet titled “Assets – Selected Assets and Liabilities of the Private Non-financial Sectors”, it seems that “Households and unincorporated enterprises” have $668 billion in “Financial Assets – Deposits.”

And “Private non-financial corporations” supposedly have another $318 billion in “Financial Assets – Bank Deposits.”

So that’s $986 billion in “Deposits” for households and private (non-bank) businesses … combined.

Versus a grand total of only $53.2 billion in actual Australian notes issued by the RBA.

Confused?

If so, then it is probably because you have not yet seen through the biggest, longest-running con in the history of the human race.

It used to be called “money-lending”.

Now it’s called “banking”.

In a nutshell, the “money” that most people think is in the bank … isn’t.

That’s why, during the peak of the GFC in October 2008, the RBA was printing up billions in extra cash, trying to keep up with a silent bank run:

The private banks keep reserves of cash distributed in 60 storerooms across the country with an average of about $35 million in each. They get topped up by the Reserve Bank before Christmas, when demand for cash typically rises by about 6 per cent, and at Easter, when there is a smaller increase.

[TBI note: That’s only $2.1 billion in stored ‘reserve’ cash at Aussie banks at any time … or a mere $183.50 for every employed person in the country!]

But in early October, the Reserve Bank started getting calls from the cash centres for more, especially in denominations of $50 and $100.

The Reserve Bank has its own cash stash. It is coy about exactly how much it holds, but it is understood to be in the region of $4 billion to $5bn.

As the Armaguard vans worked overtime ferrying bundles of $10,000 out to the cash centres, the Reserve Bank’s strategic reserve holdings of $50 and $100 notes started to run low and the call went out to the printer for more. The Reserve Bank ordered another $4.6bn in $100s and another $6bn in $50s…

Households pulled about $5.5bn out of their banks in the 10 weeks between US financial house Lehman Brothers going broke – the onset of the global financial crisis – and the beginning of December. That is roughly 80 tonnes of cash salted away in people’s homes. Mattress Bank is doing well, was the view at the Reserve. A year later, only $1.5bn had been put back.

(see Our Banking System Operates With Zero Reserves)

You see, dear reader, the global banking system is a colossal con-fidence trick.

Banksters have a government-issued exclusive licence to operate the most insidious “business” in the history of the human race.

They make a killing by lending us vast quantities of … digits. At interest.

Electronic code, in their computers.

Not actual cash money.

When you sign a form to borrow from a bank, the bank is ‘licenced’ to legally create new “money” to lend you. Right out of thin air.

The “money” loaned to you, does not exist.

It is just a new number, on their books.

Your new “loan”, is their new “Asset”.

What you have signed your working life away for, is nothing more than a new electronic bookkeeping entry.

You are working and slaving away, to pay back borrowed binary code … plus “interest”.

Tragically, most folks worldwide have fallen for this centuries-old con game.

Indeed, we have all been born into it. So, we consider it “normal”. We have known nothing different:

Most folks think that when they borrow from a bank, they are borrowing real money that someone else deposited.

Most folks think that banks pay interest to attract depositors, and then, lend that money out at a higher interest rate to people wanting a loan.

It just ain’t so.

As you can see from the RBA’s own statistics, even the “money” that we think we have deposited in the bank … just isn’t there.

There’s only $53 billion in actual cash notes issued by the RBA.

In total. For the whole country.

Versus $986 billion in “Deposits” that businesses and private citizens – you and I – think we have in the banks.

That’s about one (1) actual dollar in “face value”, for every eighteen dollars fifty (18.50) that we falsely imagine is deposited in the bank under our name.

If the “money” lent to you by banksters was only the money they had on deposit from other customers, then how would you explain the fact that (according to the RBA’s “Bank Lending by Sector”) Australian households owed $1.18 Trillion to the banks at December 2011 (including $721 billion for Owner-Occupier housing) … and Australian businesses owed a further $773 billion?

$53 billion in legal tender cash notes issued by the RBA.

$1.95 Trillion in bank loans to households and businesses … at interest.

That’s $36.80 in bank loans … at interest … for every $1 in actual cash printed by the RBA*.

It’s all bull$h!t folks.

By our lazy, ignorant complicity, in agreeing to allow our governments to grant banksters the exclusive power to create “money” and lend … electronic digits … at interest, we have all agreed to a system of human slavery.

Our own slavery.

We have enslaved ourselves, by agreeing to go along with this “system”.

It’s long past time that we all woke up.

And stopped playing along with the con game of “money”-lending.

And especially, of money-lending at “interest”.

There is a very good reason why so many great wise men – Plato, Aristotle, Cato, Cicero, Seneca, Moses, Philo, Buddha, and many many more – all denounced the evil of money-lending at interest. Indeed, it is the same reason why the only Biblically-recorded instance of Jesus Christ resorting to violence, was when he chased the money-lenders out of the Temple with a whip.

The wisdom of the ancients is even more relevant today.

In our modern technology-driven world – where “money” is now not even real gold and silver laboriously dug out of the ground, but mere electronic digits created at the tap of a keyboard and click of a mouse button – there is simply no intellectual or moral justification for the vast majority of mankind to continue allowing a tiny minority to profit from the life and labour of everyone else, by lending “money” at “interest” under government licence.

It is time to demand that our governments enact a single, simple, real reform that would change the whole world for the better.

For everyone.

(Except banksters)

It is time to ban usury … in the original meaning of the word.

And if our elected representatives refuse to act against the banksters’ interest, in our best interest?

Then the following essay outlines my suggestion for one way to beat the bastards at their own game –

The People’s NWO: Every Man His Own Central Banker

* Some may correctly point out that Australian banks do not only take “deposits” from Australians; they also borrow “money” from abroad, in order to lend in Australia. Indeed, this gives rise to the ever-controversial topic of the banks claiming that increases in the cost (ie, interest rate) they are paying for “wholesale” money they have borrowed from abroad supposedly justifies their refusal to pass on the full value of “official” interest rate cuts by the RBA. Nevertheless, the central point of this article remains unchallenged. According to the RBA at December 2011, AFI’s (All Financial Intermediaries) held $308.6 billion in “Offshore Borrowings” – a very far cry from the $1.95 Trillion in loans-at-interest to Aussie households and businesses. More important to note is that these “Offshore Borrowings” too, are mere electronic digits … not actual cash.

Aussie Banks Put Taxpayers On The Hook For Another $130+ Billion

7 Nov

Back in July we saw that Australia is a kleptocracy (“rule by thieves”).

Courtesy of esteemed business commentator Robert Gottliebsen, we discovered that the very design of our political system means that our political parties are beholden to the banks who loan them the money to run their election campaigns:

To understand the pivotal role of Australian banks in the funding of political parties requires a deep knowledge of how the system works.

For the most part, in the vicinity of three quarters of a major party’s funding in most elections comes from the public purse. The ‘public purse’ amounts are allocated to parties after the election in accordance with the proportion of the votes that are achieved.

But there is no forward allocation of money. The distribution of ‘public purse’ money is strictly governed by the proportion of the votes actually achieved.

ALP organisers are not looking forward to meeting with their bankers as the election nears. They are deeply apprehensive that as a result of current opinion polls, their bankers will slash the amount of election funding available to the ALP and lock it into a low vote.

Some criticised my article as only assuming that banks actually use this power over our politicians to ensure favourable policies.

However, while tacitly conceding that “yes”, it does look bad that our political parties must go begging bowl in hand to the banks to get loans to cover the cost of running their election campaigns, critics and doubters continue to wilfully ignore the multitudinous evidence in support of our basic contention.

Examples?

The Guarantee Scheme for Large Deposits and Wholesale Funding that was introduced in response to the GFC. It remains the only thing standing between our banks and their having their credit ratings slashed by the ratings agencies.

The ban on short-selling of bank shares.

And the daddy of them all, the Clean Energy Future legislation. Politicians and cheerleaders purport it to be all about using “market mechanisms” to reduce CO2 emissions. In reality, it is nothing more than a new bankster-designed derivatives scam, to replace the banksters’ mortgage-backed securities derivatives scam that caused the ongoing and worsening GFC (see Ticking Time Bomb Hidden In The Carbon Tax).

Now, we have yet more evidence that banksters rule this country. Just as they rule the USA, the UK, and Europe.

What is this latest evidence?

The Green-Labor government, enthusiastically prompted, aided and abetted by the Coalition, has just passed legislation that further helps give a leg up to the banks … while skewering we the taxpayers ever more firmly on the bankers’ hook (debt).

And putting your bank savings at risk too.

Michael West at the SMH takes up the story:

Here is a tale of two leg-ups: a tale to raise the hackles of the so-called 99 per cent and a tale which plays to the contrast between the US and Australia when it comes to corporate welfare.

Late last week, amid the parliamentary din surrounding the carbon tax, a little bill slipped through the Senate with minimal fuss.

This was the “covered bond” legislation – yet another friendly leg-up to the banks and one which effectively lumps another $130 billion of risk into the lap of taxpayers.

But first, late on Tuesday night this little story flashed up on Bloomberg: “Bank of America hit by a credit downgrade last month, has moved derivatives from its Merrill Lynch unit to a subsidiary flush with insured deposits, according to people with direct knowledge of the situation.

”The Federal Reserve and Federal Deposit Insurance Corp disagree over the transfers, which are being requested by counterparties, said the people, who asked to remain anonymous because they weren’t authorised to speak publicly.”

Translating from “Bloomglish” into English: a cabal of powerful “counterparties” (read banks) had, with the connivance of the US Fed, shifted a load of derivatives (probably the gnarliest credit default swaps on their books) from that part of the bank not backed by taxpayers to that part of the bank which was backed by taxpayers

Yep. There’s that word “derivatives” again.

… on these fair shores, the banks now enjoy the fillip from “covered bonds”. Covered bonds will allow the banks to raise capital a bit more cheaply. They are issued to big institutional investors but, unlike other corporate bonds, rank ahead of depositors in the event of trouble. They are safer, therefore carry a lower yield.

Let’s not forget the banks have already been propped by guarantees on their wholesale funding and deposits, not to mention the short-selling ban and asset swap arrangements with the Reserve Bank.

Now, with covered bonds – which had previously not been allowed as they provide senior secured funding for bondholders at the expense of depositors – the taxpayer is on the hook for banks’ deposit liabilities.

Mind you the taxpayer is on the hook anyway as the financial crisis demonstrated banks are a cherished species too big to fail.

Observers estimate their cost of funds should be 30 basis points lower thanks to covered bonds, although few expect this little earner to be passed on to customers.

Covered bonds shift risk away from the wholesale bond investors to the taxpayers – and we are talking about $130 billion worth of risk, possibly increasing as time passes. There is no quid pro quo. At least with the sovereign guarantee for wholesale funding the banks were required to pay a fee.

This leg-up is perhaps best-described as a backdoor sovereign guarantee.

Bank shareholders can take comfort from the fact that their government lobbyists, as usual, have been working overtime to have their way with Canberra.

Regular readers will not be in the least surprised to learn that the Banking Amendment (Covered Bonds) Bill 2011 that enabled this latest leg-up for banks, enjoyed enthusiastic bipartisan support from our political class.

Indeed, Hansard reveals that the only real point of argument between our political parties, was over the fact that the Shadow Treasurer Joe Hockey wanted credit for the idea. The Opposition were rather put out that Labor had simply stolen Joe’s idea and acted on it 12 months later … in just the same way that Labor recently stole the Liberal Party’s plan to steal your super.

Oh, by the way … did we forget to mention?

Until recently, Joe’s wife was head of foreign exchange and global finance at Deutsche Bank. A 14-year investment bankstering veteran, in fact.

And Joe himself is a banking and finance lawyer, who “kiboshed a ‘phenomenal job’ in New York as chief advisor to the CEO of one of the world’s biggest banks” to return home “for the ‘unfinished business’ of politics and to fulfil a lifelong destiny as ‘a warrior for the Australian people'”.

Lovable, cuddly, amiable Joe. Can there possibly be three lower forms of bloodsucking societal parasite – the lawyer, banker, and politician? Our Joe is all three.

Just like his close mate from uni, and Goldman Sachs’ man in Oz, carbon-trading pusher Malcolm Turnbull.

Interestingly, only one year ago when Joe was first floating his 9-point banking plan that included the covered bond idea, both the RBA and the banking regulator APRA were apparently not overly enthusiastic.

From Dow Jones Newswires via The Australian, 30 November 2010:

The introduction of covered bonds into Australia could threaten depositors and debt investors, both the RBA and APRA regulator said. Covered bonds are common in Europe but Australian financial institutions can’t issue them because domestic law requires banks to place depositors above all other creditors in their claims on assets.

The worry for regulators is the bonds would subordinate depositors as they typically give the bond-buyer recourse to both the issuer and the pool of mortgages, or other secured collateral that stay on the bank’s books and “cover” the bond.

“Covered bonds are common in Europe”. The epicentre of ongoing global financial turmoil and banking systemic risk.

Hmmmmm. Another brilliant idea then, that we must follow.

Between them, Australia’s big four banks have a fund-raising task of around $140 billion, much of which is sourced in foreign-currency borrowing, though domestic investor appetite is strong. The smaller banks have largely depended on the securitisation market and are further hurt by high deposit costs.

Smaller institutions in Australia fear they would be at a disadvantage if the major lenders could issue covered bonds, especially as the debt would probably initially be pitched to overseas investors who are mostly familiar with the biggest banks.

So not only does this enthusiastically bipartisan-supported legislation benefit the big banks, at the risk of savers and taxpayers.

Contrary to all the high-sounding rhetoric from both “sides” of Australian politics about “free markets” and increasing competition, the covered bond legislation will actually reduce competition in the domestic banking sector, in favour of the Big Four banks.

Shadow Assistant Treasurer Mathias Cormann tacitly conceded as much, in his speech in favour of the Bill in the Senate:

Covered bonds are likely to be used mainly by the big four banks, although the bill does provide for ADIs to enter into an aggregating entity to issue covered bonds as well. It is unlikely that the smallest authorised deposit-taking institutions will use this funding facility.

And sure enough, the Commonwealth and the NAB are the first out of the blocks to increase their share of the Big Four’s monopoly. And hence, increase their Too Big Too Fail protected species status:

Two of Australia’s biggest banks are planning to test support from global investors for covered bonds, with the push coming just days after Canberra approved new rules allowing banks to sell the new form of bonds.

The race is on between Commonwealth Bank and National Australia Bank to become the first Australian lender to issue a covered bond, with both planning a series of investor meetings in Europe and the US from later this month.

A covered bond gives money market investors a claim on the underlying assets such as mortgages if a bank runs into difficulty.

Previously depositors had the rights to all of the assets of a failing bank.

It’s very important to understand the significance of this new legislation.

A vital place to start, is in understanding what a bank considers to be an “Asset”, and what it considers to be a “Liability”.

Most Australians simply have no clue that the vast majority of our banks’ so-called “Assets”, are actually loans.  Your bank loan – whether it be a housing loan, car (personal) loan, or business loan, is considered the bank’s asset. Recall what we saw above:

The worry for regulators is the bonds would subordinate depositors as they typically give the bond-buyer recourse to both the issuer and the pool of mortgages, or other secured collateral that stay on the bank’s books and “cover” the bond.

Your mortgage or car loan or whatever is the bank’s “asset”, which they will now put into “pools” and use as collateral for their new ‘covered bonds’. In practical reality, these are just another form of Residential Mortgage-Backed Security (RMBS), or Collateralised Debt Obligation (CDO). A derivative. Or as Warren Buffet called them in 2003, “financial weapons of mass destruction”.

What about bank “Liabilities”?

Your “savings” with the bank, are their liability.  If you come to the bank and want your money, they have to give it to you (in popular urban myth, at least).

So how to understand the significance of these “covered bonds”, in context of bank Assets versus Liabilities?

Here’s how Senator Cormann described covered bonds in his Senate speech:

Covered bonds are bonds issued by a financial institution that is secured by a pool of assets.

Remember, the “assets” of banks are actually the loans they sign people up to. So the “pool of assets” that is the security (collateral) for the covered bonds that our banks will sell to raise cash from foreign investors, will include “assets” like your loan with the bank.

Can you say “My house/car/business loan is not owned by NAB; it is really owned by a Russian mafia-financed Wall Street-based hedge fund, or an “Old European monied class” generationally wealthy inbred globalist lunatic’s private investment fund, or a Chinese sovereign wealth fund”?

Back to Senator Cormann:

In the event of [bank] insolvency, the holder has recourse to the pool of assets underpinning the bonds, and the holders of covered bonds have first rights to the pool of assets covering them ahead of shareholders and ahead of other holders of debt.

If the bank goes belly up … say, because Australia’s housing market continues its downhill slide, and the banking Ponzi scheme of selling ever more loans implodes here in Australia, just as it has throughout the Western world … then holders of these new covered bonds have first rights to the banks’ “assets”. Meaning, they have first rights to you, your “assets” and your future earnings, my dear debt slave.

But not only that. If you are a saver, that means you are effectively a holder of bank debt. Remember – a bank’s debts (or “liabilities”) include what they owe you – the savings of depositors in that bank.

And the key thing to understand, is that buyers of these new covered bonds have first rights to any real (ie, not loan) “assets” the bank may have, before you get your savings.

Our politicians are keen to reassure otherwise, of course. Here’s Senator Cormann again:

The rights of other holders of debt are protected in two ways. First, the proportion of Australian assets [loans] that can be committed to covered bond pools is limited to eight per cent. Second, the financial claim scheme provides a government guarantee for small depositors, currently up to a limit of $1 million, which will be reduced to $250,000 from February 2012. These protections are crucial, because the introduction of covered bonds is a major departure from one of the core elements of the banking system in Australia, which has been the primacy of the claims of depositors.

Ok.

So even though the government’s new law gives (foreign) holders of covered bonds first rights to the banks “assets”, even before other holders of bank debt such as Aussie savers (ie, depositors), the government wants to reassure you that your savings will be protected anyway, by the government guarantee for small depositors.

Ummmm.

Can you see the circular reasoning, the gaping flaw in logic (ie, the Big Lie) here?

The government has no money with which to guarantee anything.

Firstly, a government guarantee is simply a promise to use taxpayers’ money for something.

So in this instance, the government is saying don’t worry, all is well with covered bonds, because even though holders of those bonds get first rights on the banks’ assets, if that means Aussie savers are left out when (not if) a bank collapses, we the government will guarantee to pay out the Aussie savers who have been shafted using their own future earnings (taxes).

Secondly, our government (ie, the taxpayer) is under a mountain of debt already.

$218 billion worth of debt, in fact.

And they are not making any headway at all on reducing that debt. Quite the reverse:

Click to enlarge | Source: Australian Office of Financial Management (AOFM)

Their latest budget is already shot to hell. In just 5 months.

So when (not if) our banks go to the wall – as they will, since according to Fitch Ratings ours are amongst the most vulnerable to Europe’s debt crisis – then our government has no savings, no surplus with which to “guarantee” anything.

All they have, is the promise of the taxes you and your kids will pay in the future.

Oh yes, silly me.

There is another source of “money” with which the government can “guarantee” the safety of your savings.

They can borrow more.

But then … that’s no solution either.

Because you’ll just have to pay that back too.

You and your kids.

At its dark heart, Australia’s political system is no different to the USA. The UK. Or Europe.

We are all captive to banksters.

Our politicians of all sides are not only beholden to the banks (campaign funding loans).

They not only pass laws that only benefit banksters, at the expense of society (carbon derivatives scheme scam).

They are selling this country … they are selling you, the worker (and thus, the wealth generator) … into perpetual debt servitude.

With every single additional dollar of debt, with every financial guarantee, with every legislative leg-up for the banks, with every pledge of money that isn’t theirs to globalist parasite bodies like the UN and the IMF, what our politicians are really doing is this.

They are selling you, and your children, to foreigners (see Our Government *Officially* Does Not Know Who Owns More Than 60% Of Australia’s Debt).

Australia is not a democracy.

It is a kleptocracy.

Ruled by thieves:

Senator CORMANN (Western Australia) (13:11): As I have mentioned, this is an idea that was promoted by the shadow Treasurer, Joe Hockey, as far back as October last year. It was a very prominent part of the coalition’s nine-point banking plan and was copied in Treasurer Swan’s announcement of the government’s Competitive and Sustainable Banking System plan. While we are disappointed that it took the Treasurer so long to finally act on this, we are pleased that we are now finally dealing with this legislation and commend it to the Senate.

William Black, associate professor of Law and Economics, former financial regulator, and author of “The Best Way To Rob A Bank Is To Own One”, says it best.

To rob a country … own a bank:

The late George Carlin was right (must watch):

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