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FDIC: Open Letter to Bloomberg News about FDIC Deposit Insurance Fund

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  • FDIC: Open Letter to Bloomberg News about FDIC Deposit Insurance Fund

    Open Letter to Bloomberg News about FDIC Deposit Insurance Fund



    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE


    September 25, 2008
    Media Contact:



    Andrew Gray (202-898-7192)


    Mr. John McCorry
    Executive Editor
    Bloomberg News

    Dear Mr. McCorry:

    Bloomberg reporter David Evans' piece ("FDIC May Need $150 Billion Bailout as Local Bank Failures Mount," Sept. 25) does a serious disservice to your organization and your readers by painting a skewed picture of the FDIC insurance fund. Let me be clear: The insurance fund is in a strong financial position to weather a significant upsurge in bank failures. The FDIC has all the tools and resources necessary to meet our commitment to insured depositors, which we view as sacred. I do not foresee – as Mr. Evans suggests – that taxpayers may have to foot the bill for a "bailout."

    Let's look at the real facts about the FDIC insurance fund. The fund's current balance is $45 billion – but that figure is not static. The fund will continue to incur the cost of protecting insured depositors as more banks may fail, but we continually bring in more premium income. We will propose raising bank premiums in the coming weeks to ensure that the fund remains strong. And, at the same time, we will propose higher premiums on higher risk activity to create economic incentives for poorly managed banks to change their risk profiles. The fund is 100 percent industry-backed. Our ability to raise premiums essentially means that the capital of the entire banking industry – that's $1.3 trillion – is available for support.

    Moreover, if needed, the FDIC has longstanding lines of credit with the Treasury Department. Congress, understanding the need to ensure that working capital is available to the FDIC to provide bridge funding between the time a bank fails and when its assets are sold, provided broad authority for us to borrow from Treasury's Federal Financing Bank. If necessary, we can potentially raise very large sums of working capital, which would be paid back as the FDIC liquidates assets of failed banks. As per our authorizing statute, any money we might borrow from the Treasury must be paid back from industry assessments. Only once in the FDIC's history have we had to borrow from the Treasury – in the early 1990s – and that money was paid back with interest in less than two years.

    Finally, Mr. Evans' suggestion that the "government" could ever be "on the hook for uninsured deposits" demonstrates a misunderstanding of FDIC insurance. To protect taxpayers, we are required to follow the "least cost" resolution, which means that uninsured depositors are paid in full only if this is the least costly option for the FDIC. This usually occurs when a bidder for the failed bank is willing to pay a higher price for the entire deposit franchise. We are authorized to deviate from the "least cost" resolution only where a so-called "systemic risk" exception is made. This is an extraordinary procedure which we have never invoked. And again, any money we borrow from the Treasury Department must be repaid through industry assessments.

    I am confident in the strength of the FDIC's resources to make good on our sacred pledge to insured depositors. And, remember, no depositor has ever lost a penny of insured deposits, and never will.

    Andrew Gray
    Director
    Office of Public Affairs
    Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
    the article:

    FDIC May Need $150 Billion Bailout as More Banks Fail

  • #2
    Re: FDIC: Open Letter to Bloomberg News about FDIC Deposit Insurance Fund

    Not this article ?


    Exploiting FDIC Loopholes Enriches Former U.S. Bank Regulators

    By David Evans


    Sept. 25 (Bloomberg) -- As chief of staff of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. from 1999 to 2002, Mark Jacobsen was responsible for a safety net that protects U.S. savers. He now runs a company that critics say is designed to stretch that net to its breaking point.

    Jacobsen, 42, is president and co-founder of Arlington, Virginia-based Promontory Interfinancial Network, a company that makes it easy for a wealthy depositor to keep FDIC-insured cash in separate accounts at multiple banks. It offers customers up to $50 million of FDIC insurance, 500 times the single-account limit approved by Congress.

    ``When I first saw Promontory, I was amazed that the regulators would let it fly,'' says Sherrill Shaffer, a former chief economist at the New York Federal Reserve Bank. ``It undermines a lot of the safeguards around the FDIC deposit fund. I'm astounded that the FDIC has not picked up on that and tried to shut down that loophole.''

    The loophole Promontory exploits is the FDIC rule that allows an individual to open up federally insured accounts of up to $100,000 at an unlimited number of banks.

    ...
    http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?p...d=aBaYKQD_UPcE

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: FDIC: Open Letter to Bloomberg News about FDIC Deposit Insurance Fund

      "Insurance" doesn't work when EVERYONE files a claim at once... see Ambac and MBIA...

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: FDIC: Open Letter to Bloomberg News about FDIC Deposit Insurance Fund

        Originally posted by phirang View Post
        "Insurance" doesn't work when EVERYONE files a claim at once... see Ambac and MBIA...
        yeah, kinda like banking.:rolleyes:

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: FDIC: Open Letter to Bloomberg News about FDIC Deposit Insurance Fund

          Whats $150 Billion these days? That’s piker money. Wake me when we get to $150 Trillion

          Hey anyone know whats up with gold and silver? Its not getting killed today Mega but why? anyone
          Last edited by rabot10; September 30, 2009, 03:49 PM.

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