15
Reasons Why U.S. Economic Crisis Is An Economic
Consolidation By Elite Banking Powers
The American Dream http://endoftheamericandream.com/archives/15-reasons-why-the-u-s-economic-crisis-is-really-an-economic-consolidation-by-the-elite-banking-powers
March 6, 2012 | The real estate market will continue
to suffer because banks are raising their standards and are lending less money.
http://albertpeia.com/15reasonscrisisconsolidation.htm
‘Is the United
States experiencing an "economic crisis" or an "economic
consolidation"? Did the financial problems of the last several years
"happen on their own", or are they part of a broader plan to
consolidate financial power in the
Well, yes, there are.
The
So is this part of a planned consolidation of the
#1) The FDIC is
planning to open a massive satellite office near Chicago that
will house up to 500 temporary staffers and contractors to manage receiverships
and liquidate assets from what they are expecting will be a gigantic wave of
failed
#2) But if the economic crisis is over, then why
would the FDIC need such a huge additional office just to handle bank
failures? Well, because the economic crisis is not over. The FDIC recently announced that the
number of banks on its "problem list" climbed to 702 at the end of 2009.
That is a sobering figure considering that only 552 banks were on the problem
list at the end of September and only 252 banks that were on the problem list
at the end of 2008.
#3) Waves of small and mid-size banks are going to continue to fail because the
#4) In fact, a lot more houses may be on the
#5) More than 24% of all homes with mortgages in the
#6) If all that wasn't bad enough,
now a huge "second
wave" of adjustable rate mortgages is scheduled to reset beginning in
2010. We all saw what kind of damage the "first wave" of
adjustable rate mortgages did. How many banks are going to be able to
survive the devastation of the second wave?
#7) In fact, one stunning new study forecasts that five million
houses and condos will go through foreclosure within the next
couple of years. If that actually happens it will be absolutely
catastrophic for the banking industry.
#8) But it is not just residential real estate that
is a problem. Many financial analysts now believe that the next
"shoe to drop" in the ongoing economic crisis will be commercial
real estate.
#9) So are the financial powers doing anything to
help? In 2008 and 2009 they did, but now it appears that they plan to
dramatically tighten credit. In fact, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben
Bernanke recently warned Congress that the Federal Reserve does not plan
to "print money" to help Congress finance the exploding U.S.
national debt. So either Congress will have to spend less money or borrow
it at higher interest rates from someone else. Either of those
alternatives will be bad for
#10) In addition, the Federal Reserve is in discussions with money
market mutual funds on agreements to help drain as much as 1 trillion
dollars from the financial system. But when you withdraw
money from a financial system it slows down an economy. Why would the
Federal Reserve want to do this now when the economy is struggling so much?
#11) There are also persistent rumors
that the Federal Reserve is plotting a series of interest rate
hikes. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke says that the Federal
Reserve may raise the discount rate "before long" as
part of the "normalization" of Fed lending. By raising that
rate, Bernanke says that the central bank "will be able to put significant
upward pressure on all short-term interest rates". But higher
interest rates will mean that it will cost more for everyone to borrow
money. This will also slow down the
#12) Recent data suggests that there has been a very
significant decline in the "real" M3 money supply, and every
time that this has happened in the past it
has resulted in a drop in economic activity. In fact, this
dramatic contraction in the money supply has many economic analysts
now warning that it is not a matter of "if" we will have a
"double-dip" recession, but of "when" it will occur.
#13) There are also signs that big
#14) In fact, in 2009
#15) Meanwhile, the biggest
So do you see what is going on?
The real estate crash of the last several years has left hundreds of small
to mid-size banks across the
These small to mid-size banks desperately need the
But now the big financial powers are reducing their lending, hoarding cash
and shrinking the money supply.
All of those things reduce economic activity.
Many businesses will fail because they cannot get loans.
The real estate market will continue to suffer because banks are raising
their standards and are lending less money.
Small to mid-size banks that are already on the edge of disaster are almost
virtually certain to collapse when the "second wave" of the housing
crisis starts hitting.
But when they do collapse the
So whether it is "planned" or not, what we are
witnessing is a consolidation of the banking industry in the
And that is not a good thing.’