gastropod call - BIG BANK GOING DOWN SOON!

You heard it hear first - your "ET, gastropod news network" (LOL!!!) A BIG bank will soon be going "bye bye" As much as the assh0le Federal Reserve can try to hide the EXACT "playa" somebody (or at least most likely a single "playa" is in HUGE trouble.) "Somebody - the "dead bank walkin' " is tapin' the secondary window in a rather LARGE way!!! Searchin' the Federal Reserve's own site - we have NEVER seen the secondary window tapped this much (at least in a LONG time)... THIS IN SPITE OF TARP, TALF, PPIP, TLSF (FILL IN YOUR FED. ANAL SALVE OF CHOICE ACRONYM HERE) here is the call for ya'
scroll down to table "1a"
http://www.federalreserve.gov/releases/h3/Current/
- today's release August 13, 2009

-gastropod network news - out
 
Quote from Daal:

Are you referring to the ~$500m in secondary borrowings?
Doesnt seem much

Please take a look at the historical...especially as of within the last few years. We have had every alphabet soup program to rescue the asses of the banks, so that they don't have to "suffer the stigma" of hitting the secondary window. We have seen the Fed. give us TARP, Term Auction Facility, blah, blah blah ad infinitum of crap...to avoid the "secondary" window...somebody (or at least my guess is a single entity) has just tapped it to the tune of a half Billion..in spite of the alphabet soup!!!! Are you saying the alphabet soup has NOT helped. Don't become jaded over a "mere" half-billion - that is STILL like 17,500 jobs for a year or thousands of mortgages. The Fed has NOT surfed in the turf of a half billion in secondary window borrowings - at least not since the beginning of this recession...and I looked a bit further back to 2003 - nope!

-gastropod
 
Quote from Daal:

Or maybe bill gates just had an overdraft. $500m in this financial world doesnt look much

SECONDARY WINDOW.....REPEAT SECONDARY WINDOW! This is less than the pawn shop of the financial community. Whoever needed this $500 million did NOT have the collateral to make the PRIMARY window! At the primary...or Term Auction Facility...or whatever...they could have used dang near crap as collateral to get an "advance" from the Fed. - this entity does not even have CRAP to get a sweetheart deal from the Fed.

-gastropod
 
That is a significantly bigger number than we have seen in quite some time. Something is going down soon. LC will get another LDD.

Imagine if you can leverage that 100x. Maybe Soros is levering up to break the dollar?
 
bad assets just means bad loans...the borrower ain't returning the money..the borrower is broke.

bankers forgot the banking is a profession that requires due diligence in lending not rubber stamping loans based on computer models.

Quote from gastropod:

You heard it hear first - your "ET, gastropod news network" (LOL!!!) A BIG bank will soon be going "bye bye" As much as the assh0le Federal Reserve can try to hide the EXACT "playa" somebody (or at least most likely a single "playa" is in HUGE trouble.) "Somebody - the "dead bank walkin' " is tapin' the secondary window in a rather LARGE way!!! Searchin' the Federal Reserve's own site - we have NEVER seen the secondary window tapped this much (at least in a LONG time)... THIS IN SPITE OF TARP, TALF, PPIP, TLSF (FILL IN YOUR FED. ANAL SALVE OF CHOICE ACRONYM HERE) here is the call for ya'
scroll down to table "1a"
http://www.federalreserve.gov/releases/h3/Current/
- today's release August 13, 2009

-gastropod network news - out
 
Unless I'm missing something, we're not talking about an FDIC-insured member of the Federal Reserve. To quote:

The discount rate is the interest rate charged to commercial banks and other depository institutions on loans they receive from their regional Federal Reserve Bank's lending facility--the discount window. The Federal Reserve Banks offer three discount window programs to depository institutions: primary credit, secondary credit, and seasonal credit, each with its own interest rate. All discount window loans are fully secured.

Under the primary credit program, loans are extended for a very short term (usually overnight) to depository institutions in generally sound financial condition. Depository institutions that are not eligible for primary credit may apply for secondary credit to meet short-term liquidity needs or to resolve severe financial difficulties. Seasonal credit is extended to relatively small depository institutions that have recurring intra-year fluctuations in funding needs, such as banks in agricultural or seasonal resort communities.

The discount rate charged for primary credit (the primary credit rate) is set above the usual level of short-term market interest rates. (Because primary credit is the Federal Reserve's main discount window program, the Federal Reserve at times uses the term "discount rate" to mean the primary credit rate.) The discount rate on secondary credit is above the rate on primary credit. The discount rate for seasonal credit is an average of selected market rates. Discount rates are established by each Reserve Bank's board of directors, subject to the review and determination of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. The discount rates for the three lending programs are the same across all Reserve Banks except on days around a change in the rate.

Further information on the discount window, including interest rates, is available from the Federal Reserve System's discount window web site. See also the articles in the Federal Reserve Bulletin for July 2002 (51 KB PDF) and November 1994 (75 KB PDF).

Source: http://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/discountrate.htm

So, all discount window loans are fully secured, first of all, and second of all, whoever borrowed that half a bil is not a member of the Federal Reserve, at the minimum, which means it's not a really big bank.
Someone's in trouble, it seems, but on the evidence, it's probably not someone who'd cause a lot of trouble by going down.
Although, life is full of surprises.
 
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