They are even fudging their "ICU" list to make things look good.
FDIC: 903 banks in trouble. What to do ...
FDIC: 903 banks in trouble. What to do
Martin D. Weiss Ph.D. | Monday, November 22, 2010 at 7:30 am
Martin D. Weiss, Ph.D.
Martin here with an urgent update on the next phase of the banking crisis.
Just this past Friday, the government released new data showing that the FDICs list of problem banks now includes 903 institutions.
Thats ten times the number of bad banks on the FDICs list just two years ago.
The banks on the list have $419.6 billion in assets, or SIXTEEN times the amount of two years ago.
And yet, these bad banks are
Just the Tip of the Iceberg!
How do we know?
Because the FDIC has consistently neglected to include the most endangered species on its list of problem institutions the nations megabanks that are among the shakiest of all.
The FDIC doesnt reveal the names of the banks on its list just the number of institutions and the sum total of their assets.
Still, I can prove, without a shadow of doubt, that the FDICs list of problem banks is grossly understated and inadequate.
Consider what happened on September 25, 2008, for example.
Thats the day Washington Mutual filed for bankruptcy with total assets of $328 billion.
But just 30 days earlier, according to the FDICs own press release, the aggregate assets held by the 117 banks on its problem list were only $78 billion.
In other words
Washington Mutual alone had over FOUR times the sum of ALL the assets of ALL the banks on the FDICs list of problem banks!
Obviously, Washington Mutual was not on the FDICs list.
Obviously, the FDIC missed it. Completely.
Also not on the FDICs list: Citicorp and Bank of America, saved from bankruptcy with $95 billion in bailout funds from Congress. Just these two banks alone had over FORTY-SEVEN times more assets than all of those the FDIC had identified as problem banks.
Some people in the banking industry seem to think the FDIC can be excused for missing the nations largest bank failures for the same reason that blind men groping in the dark cant be blamed for missing an elephant in the room.
But the fact is that the FDIC even missed the failure of a relatively smaller bank: IndyMac Bank.
When IndyMac failed in July 2008, the 90 banks on FDICs problem list had aggregate assets of $26.3 billion. But IndyMac alone had $32 billion in assets. Evidently, even IndyMac was not on the FDICs radar screen.
This is
Easily One of the Greatest
Financial Scandals of Our Time
The FDICs problem list is supposed to guide banking authorities in their efforts to protect the public from bank failures. If the FDIC is missing all the big failures, where does that leave you and me?
Heck its bad enough that they refuse to disclose the names of endangered banks. Whats worse is that theyre hiding the truth from their own eyes.
And with so many misses so evident, youd think they would have changed their ways by now.
Not so.
Even as I write these words to you this morning, banking authorities are AGAIN failing to recognize, analyze, scrutinize, or tell the public about the real impact of the most intractable disaster of this era:
Major U.S. Banks Still Extremely
Vulnerable to the Foreclosure Crisis
Here are the facts
Fact #1. JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo Bank, and Bank of America each have more than $20 billion in single-family mortgages that are currently foreclosed or in the process of foreclosure.
Fact #2. Each bank has at least DOUBLE that amount in a pipeline of foreclosures in the making $43 billion to $55 billion in delinquent mortgages (past due by 30 days or more).
Naturally, not all of the past-due loans will ultimately go into foreclosure. But these figures tell us that the biggest players are not only in deep, but could sink even deeper into the mortgage mayhem.
Fact #3. Combining the foreclosures and delinquent mortgages into a single category bad mortgages the sheer volume still on their books is staggering:
* JPMorgan Chase (OH) has $65 billion in bad mortgages
* Wells Fargo Bank (SD) has $68.6 billion, and
* Bank of America (NC) has $74.9 billion.
Fact #4. The potential impact of these bad mortgages on the banks earnings, capital AND SOLVENCY is dramatic. Compared to their Tier 1″ capital
* SunTrust (GA) has 57.6 percent in bad mortgages
* Bank of America has 66 percent in bad mortgages
* JPMorgan Chase has 66.8 percent, and
* Wells Fargo has 75.4 percent.
Tier 1 capital does not include their loan loss reserves. But even if you included them, the exposure is still huge.
Moreover, this data is based on the banks midyear reports. Since then, we believe the situation has gotten worse.
And these numbers reflect strictly bad home mortgages! It does not include bad commercial mortgages, credit cards, construction loans, business loans, and more.
Heres the key: Based on their size alone, we KNOW that none of these giant institutions are on the FDICs list of problem banks.
Yet they are all definitely WEAK, according to our Weiss Ratings subsidiary, the source of this analysis on bad mortgages.
Moreover, weak means VULNERABLE, according to the analysis of the Weiss ratings provided by the U.S. Government Accountability Office.