Filed under: Big Banks, California, central bank, Credit Crisis, DEBT, Dollar, Economic Collapse, economic depression, Economy, FBI, FDIC, global economy, Great Depression, Greenback, indymac, Inflation, JP Morgan, liquidation, merill lynch, nationalization, Oppression, Police State, Stock Market, US Economy, Wall Street | Tags: federal bank, Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, run on banks, uninsured deposits
Police Threaten IndyMAC Customers With Arrest
Daily News
July 15, 2008
Police ordered angry customers lined up outside an IndyMac Bank branch to remain calm or face arrest Tuesday as they tried to pull their money on the second day of the failed institution’s federal takeover.
At least three police squad cars showed up early Tuesday as tensions rose outside the San Fernando Valley branch of Pasadena-based IndyMac.
Federal regulators seized Pasadena-based IndyMac on Friday and reopened the bank Monday under the control of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. Deposits to $100,000 are fully insured by the FDIC.
Worried customers with deposits in excess of insured limits flooded IndyMac Bank branches on Monday, demanding to withdraw as much money as they could or get answers about the fate of their funds.
When it was clear some wouldn’t get in before closing, FDIC employees apparently took down names and told them to return Tuesday.
Other customers began lining up at 1:30 a.m. Tuesday, and by dawn, tensions escalated because people on the list were getting priority.
By 8 a.m., about 50 people on the list waited in one line and many more waited in another.
Five people were allowed in at a time.
Customers became infuriated, and police told them they could be arrested if they didn’t remain calm.
Police stood by at some other branches around Southern California but there were no other reports of problems.
$1 Billion of uninsured deposits lost in IndyMAC collapse
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080716/ap_..hV3SphAft82dzYRq61lv24cA
IndyMac depositors line up for cash after seizure
http://www.reuters.com/article/topNews/idUS..pNews&rpc=22&sp=true
http://www.azcentral.com/news/artic..mortgage-investigation0716-ON.html
Merill Lynch Posts Loss Of $4.6 Billion
http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/2..gVyF2eFsdB6zZUjUSc5tL2oOrgF
Bank Shares Plummet Amid Stability Fears
http://biz.yahoo.com/rb/080714/financial_shares.html?printer=1
Banks hit by fallout from the crisis at IndyMac
http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-indymac15-2008jul15,0,431088.story
List Of Troubled Banks Worries Wall Street
http://abcnews.go.com/Blotter/story?id=5374205
JP Morgan CEO: ’We’re very early in the loss curve’
http://www.housingwire.com/2008/07/..mon-prime-mortgages-look-terrible/
Filed under: Bear Stearns, Big Banks, central bank, Credit Crisis, DEBT, Dollar, Economic Collapse, economic depression, Economy, FDIC, Great Depression, Greenback, indymac, Inflation, liquidation, nationalization, Stock Market, US Economy, Wall Street | Tags: Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, IndyMac Federal Bank, run on banks
The Second Largest Bank Failure in U.S. History
IndyMac Bank seized by federal regulators
AFP
July 11, 2008
The federal government took control of Pasadena-based IndyMac Bank on Friday in what regulators called the second-largest bank failure in U.S. history.
Citing a massive run on deposits, regulators shut its main branch three hours early, leaving customers stunned and upset. One woman leaned on the locked doors, pleading with an employee inside: “Please, please, I want to take out a portion.” All she could do was read a two-page notice taped to the door.
The bank’s 33 branches will be closed over the weekend, but the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. will reopen the bank on Monday as IndyMac Federal Bank, said the Office of Thrift Supervision in Washington. Customers will not be able to bank by phone or Internet over the weekend, regulators said, but can continue to use ATMs, debit cards and checks. Normal branch hours, online banking and phone banking services are to resume Monday.
Filed under: 2-party system, Bear Stearns, bernanke, Big Banks, Congress, Federal Reserve, foreclosure, George Bush, Goldman Sachs, henry paulson, housing market, JPMorgan, left right paradigm, liquidation, middle class, nationalization, neocons, Neolibs, Paulson, real estate, Senate, Taxpayers, US Treasury, virginia, Wall Street | Tags: Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
U.S. Taxpayers to pay for Wall Street Banking Collapse
WSWS
July 10, 2008
In speeches delivered Tuesday, Federal Reserve Board Chairman Ben Bernanke and Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson outlined the ruthless class policy being carried out to place the burden for the financial and housing crisis on the backs of working people.
Bernanke indicated that the Fed would extend its policy of offering unlimited loans to major Wall Street investment banks. The provision of Fed funds to non-commercial banks and brokerage firms, a departure from the Fed’s legal mandate without precedent since the Great Depression, is part of a policy of bailing out the banking system to the tune of hundreds of billions of dollars. The Fed announced its loan program for investment banks last March when it dispensed $29 billion to JPMorgan Chase as part of a rescue operation to prevent the collapse of Bear Stearns.
In his speech, Treasury Secretary Paulson acknowledged that home foreclosures in 2007 reached 1.5 million and predicted another 2.5 million homes would be foreclosed in 2008. But he made clear that nothing would be done to save the vast majority of distressed homeowners from being thrown onto the street.
Paulson, the former CEO of Goldman Sachs, said that “many of today’s unusually high number of foreclosures are not preventable.” With a callous indifference reminiscent of Marie Antoinette’s “Let them eat cake,” he went on to say that “some people took out mortgages they can’t possibly afford and they will lose their homes. There is little public policymakers can, or should, do to compensate for untenable financial decisions.”
In other words, low-income home owners who were lured into high-interest mortgages by predatory mortgage companies and banks are getting their just deserts! Of course, the Wall Street CEOs and big investors who made billions of dollars by speculating on these loans, creating a vast edifice of fictitious capital that was bound to collapse, are not to be held accountable for any “untenable financial decisions.” On the contrary, they are to be subsidized with hundreds of billions of dollars of credit, ultimately to be paid for by public funds.
The two speeches, presented at a Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation forum on the housing crisis held in Virginia, underscore the real social interests—those of the financial aristocracy—that are being protected by the policies of the Fed, the Bush administration, and the Democratic Congress.
Bernanke made clear that his call for an extension of loans to big investment banks is part of a more comprehensive proposal to systemize and regularize federal subsidies and bailouts for troubled banking giants. Particularly significant was the following remark: “Because the resolution of a failing securities firm might have fiscal implications, it would be appropriate for the Treasury to take a leading role in any such process, in consultation with the firm’s regulator and other authorities.” The implication is that the US Treasury should be ready to fund bank bail-outs with whatever taxpayer funds are necessary.
In neither speech was there even a hint that the government has any responsibility to protect home owners, or that the people responsible for the “lax credit and underwriting standards” that led to the current crisis might be called to account by regulators, Congress, or the courts.