I
picked this up elsewhere on the web today. Perhaps this will be confirmed
elsewhere, but not yet. Apparently it's all over Twitter.
I recall Mike Ruppert back in 2011 warning that the Powers-that-be would collapse the economy.
I recall Mike Ruppert back in 2011 warning that the Powers-that-be would collapse the economy.
Something
VERY Serious is Happening with Banks - they've almost stopped lending
TO EACH OTHER
10
February, 2018
A
little over three weeks ago, I became aware of a sudden and dramatic
change in the US Banking System that made my stomach sick. I
"sat" on this story for almost three weeks hoping what I
found was some type of anomaly or data error. It's not.
Bankers
have almost completely stopped lending . . . . TO
EACH OTHER.
The
plunge in "InterBank Lending" was so sudden and so
substantial that it looks as though it is actually a PLAN, not
happenstance or situationally appropriate.
It
LOOKS like the Bankers are intentionally choking the US Economy and
they're doing so at levels far FAR worse than what took place during
the "Fiscal Crisis" of 2007-08.
For
more than 45 years, the Federal Reserve has tracked virtually E V E R
Y aspect of banking in the United States. They literally look at
EVERY financial metric and provide incredible amounts of public
reporting to anyone willing to spend time on the Federal Reserve
Electronic Data (FRED) web site.
As
your trusted media servant, I peruse vast amounts of information
every day to keep you abreast of what's taking place, and give you
insight as to how and why certain things happen. So when I
undertook my usual perusal of FRED and saw what I am about to show
you, I was shocked.
INTERBANK LENDING
First,
let me explain what INTERBANK lending is. The interbank
lending market is a market in which banks extend loans to
one another for a specified term. Most interbank loans are for
maturities of one week or less, the majority being overnight. Such
loans are made at the interbank rate (also called
the overnight rate if the term of the loan is
overnight).
A
sharp decline in transaction volume in this market was a major
contributing factor to the collapse of several financial institutions
during the financial crisis of 2007.
Banks
are required to hold an adequate amount of liquid assets, such
as cash, to manage any potential bank runs by clients.
If a bank cannot meet these liquidity requirements, it will need to
borrow money in the interbank market to cover the shortfall. Some
banks, on the other hand, have excess liquid assets above and beyond
the liquidity requirements. These banks will lend money in the
interbank market, receiving interest on the assets.
The
interbank rate is the rate of interest charged on short-term loans
between banks. Banks borrow and lend money in the interbank lending
market in order to manage liquidity and satisfy regulations such
as reserve requirements. The interest rate charged depends on
the availability of money in the market, on prevailing rates and on
the specific terms of the contract, such as term length. There is a
wide range of published interbank rates, including the federal
funds rate (USA), the LIBOR (UK) and
the Euribor (Eurozone).
Having
now explained what INTERBANK LENDING is, and how it is H U G E
L Y important for those funds to be available so banks can go about
their daily business without running afoul of the law or Depositor
needs, take a look at the FRED Data for INTERBANK LENDING for the
last twelve months: (Click image to enlarge)
Yes.
You see that correctly. INTERBANK
LENDING CAME TO A VIRTUAL HALT, plunging
from $68.034 BILLION for the week of December 27, to a terrifying
level of $13.237 Billion as of January 3, 2018. That's
a DROP of EIGHTY-ONE PERCENT (81%) in one week.
Of
course, some folks may have a knee-jerk rection to this and say
something like "Hey Hal, it was the week between Christmas and
New Years. Business was slow. Don;t worry about it." OK.
But this has never . . . . and I can prove N E V E R . . .
happened before!
To
show you how utterly extraordinary this is, take a look at 45
years of INTERBANK LENDING from the FRED reports:
Going
all the way back to 1973, INTERBANK LENDING has never ---- N
E V E R --- been this low. Not even in the "Recession"
of 2008-2009 ! ! ! ! Each of those years had a week between
Christmas and New Years. NOT ONCE IN 45 YEARS did the Interbank
Lending grind to a halt as it is now.
Let
me put this in perspective for you. As of January 3,
2018, the Interbank Lending is about $13 Billion
for the week. The FRED Data goes back to January 3, 1973 at
which time it was $29 Billion.
Therefore,
45 years later. in an economy that is much, MUCH bigger,
the Interbank
Lending has collapsed to about 1/2 of what it was in 1973.
WHY?
What
happened to cause this? Good question. And it is a
question that NO ONE in the Banking Community seems willing to speak
with me about.
For
those unfamiliar, I live in New Jersey, about three miles due west of
the Empire State Building in midtown Manhattan, New York City. I can
pull my car out of my driveway and be in midtown Manhattan in minutes
(barring traffic!).
We've
got ALL the banks here; ALL of the biggest, most powerful, most
influential banks.
We've
got back-office Bank Operations occupying entire skyscrapers.
Tens-of-thousands of people in the Banking industry . . . . and I
know a LOT of those people, socially and professionally. NONE of
them will talk about this. Not a peep. Nothing.
Even
the Federal Reserve told me "no comment."
THAT
is troubling to me.
Usually,
no matter what the story, someone . . . usually quite a few
someones . . . . are willing to talk, even if it's
off-the-record. Not on this topic. Lips are sealed.
That
tells me "trouble." It also tells me that the recent
major swings in the Stock Markets are directly related to this.
GOLD? Nope!
If
Interbank Lending has suddenly stopped . . . . because Bankers have
DECIDED to stop lending to each other (as opposed to not trusting
each other), then it stands to reason that Banks which NEED liquidity
to meet regulations and cash requirements, would have to get that
cash from somewhere else. The easiest place: The
Stock Markets . . . . the Banks can sell-off stocks they have
acquired and use the cash to bolster themselves.
This
makes a lot of sense when you consider that, on Friday, February 2
(one month into the collapse of InterBank Lending) the Stock
Market fell 666 points. If this was due to economic worries by
the general public, we would expect to see a rise in the price of
Gold. It is well established that when Investors are worried
about the future, they buy Gold. But that didn't
happen.
On
Thursday February 1 - the day BEFORE the 666 Drop in Stocks, Gold
closed at $1,349.46, which marked the high for the week. Friday
opened with the price of gold slightly off at $1,345.35, and then the
yellow metal pulled back to end the week at $1,333.39. The
price of gold WENT DOWN as STOCKS WENT DOWN.
So
the money pouring OUT of the Stock Market was NOT going into Gold!
The cash was going somewhere else. But where?
Days
later, on Monday, February 5 - the first open market day since the
666 plunge, The Dow Jones industrial average plunged more than
1,100 more points as stocks took their worst loss in six and a half
years.
Between
Friday and Monday, those two days of steep losses erased the market's
gains from the start of this year and ended a period of
record-setting calm for stocks.
But
again, Gold wasn't phased. Gold closed at $1339.41, up a measly two
cents from the Friday before!
To
me, this is proof that the hundreds-of-billions of dollars coming out
of the Stock Market on Friday, February 2 and again on Monday,
February 5 is NOT due to Investors seeking safety. The
money is going somewhere else.
SPECULATION
Now,
I am not a licensed financial planner and cannot offer financial
advice. All I am doing here is my job as a
Reporter/Journalist/Radio Host, to present the facts and offer my
personal views which are clearly evident on their face. DO NOT
MAKE ANY FINANCIAL DECISIONS BASED ON WHAT I PUBLISH HERE.
Consult with a Licensed Financial Expert before making any financial
decisions.
Having
said that, I still must ask: Why has the Interbank Lending ground to
a virtual halt and where is the money going form all the Stock market
sales?
It
seems to me that either:
1)
Banks are selling-off their own Stocks to get cash to sustain
themselves (very bad sign) OR . . . . .
2)
Someone is pulling HUGE amounts of cash OUT of US Banks and they are
scrambling to survive. (Much worse), or
3)
The Bankers have decided they don't like new found American
Nationalism and are deliberately choking our economy to force a
Globalist Agenda upon our President and our people by breaking our
economy and saying Globalization is the only way.
I
can't help but wonder - and this is pure speculation on my part -- if
perhaps Saudi Prince Alwaleed, having recently been released from
custody in Saudi Arabia, is somehow trying to punish the US for the
"situation" he found himself in, and may be pulling-out his
cast wealth? I
have NO EVIDENCE to substantiate this,
but when a guy THAT wealthy, gets imprisoned (and reportedly
tortured) he may have an axe to grind and definitely has the wealth
to hurt those who may have hurt him. We also know he is no fan
of our President.
Or
could this be something else? Something far worse?
Could
this be a situation that mimics the 1981 movie with Jane Fonda, Chris
Christopherson and Hume Cronin entitled" ROLLOVER?"
The situation being reported in this post could very well be the
start of real-life efforts portrayed in that movie!
You
folks had best prepare, right now. Just in case. Have
emergency cash (to survive, not to pay bills) emergency food,
emergency fuel for cars, trucks, generators. Extra medicines you may
need to survive. and such. Those interested in a list of
items to have so as to "Prep" may find THIS
LINK useful.
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