Greenspan says banks need much more capital

Quote from ipatent:

According to this their capital situation has improved considerably..

http://www.federalreserve.gov/releases/h3/Current/

This is the first time I've looked at this report. Am I reading this correctly - that banking reserves are up almost 2000% (from $43 Billion to $828+ Billion) from about a year ago?

Geez, why are they still sitting on all that money? Would think they'd start putting it to work after year-end pretty quickly.
 
Quote from sandygray66:

This is the first time I've looked at this report. Am I reading this correctly - that banking reserves are up almost 2000% (from $43 Billion to $828+ Billion) from about a year ago?

Geez, why are they still sitting on all that money? Would think they'd start putting it to work after year-end pretty quickly.

The nonborrowed reserves is the most important, IMO; I think it is the same as the banks' capital.
 
Quote from sandygray66:

I see. Thanks gbos and ipatent.

I'd guess that going positive for the first time this year is a sign of progress.

The TARP disbursements helped, but most of it was the Fed printing new money and loaning it to the banks in exchange for questionable collateral.

The question now is what is on the Fed's balance sheet.
 
Quote from ipatent:

The nonborrowed reserves is the most important, IMO; I think it is the same as the banks' capital.

reserves have nothing to do with bank capital. reserves are just a tool for monetary policy and a buffer of liquidity for banks
 
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