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How Many More Warnings Do You Need About the Danger in Banks?

Published 05/09/2023, 03:13 AM

George Santayana once wisely noted that "those who do not remember the past are condemned to repeat it."

Throughout market history, market historians had many instances from which lessons in hubris should have been learned. Yet, most do not learn the lessons history has to offer.

We will not have any more crashes in our time.

This was said by John Maynard Keynes in 1927, two years before the stock market crash, which led to the Great Depression.

Stock prices have reached what looks like a permanently high plateau. I do not feel there will be soon if ever a 50- or 60-point break from present levels, such as they have predicted. I expect to see the stock market a good deal higher within a few months.

This was said on October 17, 1929, a few weeks before the Great Crash, by Dr. Irving Fisher, Professor of Economics at Yale University. Dr. Fisher was one of the leading US economists of his time.

I cannot help but raise a dissenting voice to statements that we are living in a fool's paradise, and that prosperity in this country must necessarily diminish and recede in the near future.

This was said on January 12, 1928 (a little more than a year and a half before the 1929 stock market crash) by E. H. H. Simmons, the President of the New York Stock Exchange.

There will be no interruption of our permanent prosperity.

This was also said a little over a year and a half before the 1929 stock market crash by Myron E. Forbes, the President of the Pierce Arrow Motor Car Co.

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And these are just a few of the popular quotes of their day.

By the way, have you ever heard of the Pierce Arrow Motor Car Company? You have not? Well, that is because they went bankrupt during the Great Depression. But I digress.

So, do you think our public officials have learned the lessons of history?

In 2017, Janet Yellen, who served as the Federal Reserve Chair at the time, said that the banking system is "much stronger" due to Fed supervision and higher capital levels. She followed that up with what I believe will be a history-making statement. Yellen predicted that because of the Fed's measures, another financial crisis is unlikely "in our lifetime."

I also want to remind you that this is the same Janet Yellen who said on December 11, 2007 (right before the market began to meltdown):

I don't foresee conditions in the banking sector getting as bleak as during the credit crunch of the early 1990s...

Well, in some ways, she was right. The conditions in 2008 were much worse.

Back in 2017, right after Ms. Yellen made her more recent proclamation about the "new and improved" banking system, I penned an article noting the following:

In 10 years from now, we will likely be adding Janet Yellen to the list of those who lacked the foresight to see what history should have taught them... I am sorry to tell you this Ms. Yellen, but history's lesson will be learned the hard way by those who have failed to already learn from the past, as Mr. Santayana has warned. This time is not different.

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What is also quite interesting is what Alan Greenspan was once quoted as saying regarding the Federal Reserve's ability to prognosticate the future:

We really can't forecast all that well, and yet we pretend that we can, but we really can't.

Maybe we can understand the context within which we should view Jerome Powell's statement yesterday that "the banking system is sound and resilient."

But, you see, Mr. Powell has no choice but to make statements like this whether he believes them true. Our government officials are now playing this game of chicken with us regarding the banking system. They know quite well that when the public loses faith in the banking system, they lose the game of chicken. Therefore, they have no choice but to publicly proclaim the strength of the system, despite their beliefs to the contrary.

And, to be honest with you, if they have reviewed the banks' balance sheets, as have we, then there is no way they can be honest in their assessment that "the banking system is sound and resilient." The underlying balance sheets suggest otherwise.

And, if you have money in the US banking industry, then you are simply a pawn in this game of chicken being played by our policymakers, and it is time for you to act. It is time for you to do a deep dive into the banks that house your hard-earned money to determine whether your bank is truly solid.

We're speaking of protecting your hard-earned money. Therefore, it behooves you to engage in due diligence regarding the banks which currently house your money. You have a responsibility to yourself and your family to make sure your money resides in only the safest of institutions. And, if you are relying on the FDIC, I suggest you read our prior articles, which outline why such reliance will not be as prudent as you may believe in the coming years.

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Latest comments

When a person says "to be honest with you" I immediately wonder if up until that point he was lying and I certainly don't assume the proclamations after the honesty alert are bankable.
The only thing your cherry picked quotes prove is that nobody knows what is coming in the future but we already know that. If someone is correct its simple luck and coincidence nothing more
I put most of my money in physical gold / silver, gold ETF and PM miners... This financial system is doomed to go into deep crisis...
Yeah, probably, one day... Will we live long enough to witness that phenomenon ?
In which case, how reliable is available data for assessing a bank's solvency? What are the sources you use? I have utilized Weiss and the Texas Ratio.The Weiss rating before SVB's collapse was reasonable. If you don't know where and what to look for, there isn't a ratings system for managerial business approach that was SVBs undoing.
Agreed!
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