Ricard, I think I've answered your question of "bank fails then what" question before. I see that you're not convinced. ;>
Bank fails. Deposit is saved. Commercial banking part remains public if possible. Investment banking part is taken over by gov and then sold to private partners ASAP. We go back to the old Wall Street model that had worked quite well for about two centuries. Counterparty risk chain reaction is unlikely as demonstrated by the non-event of Lehman CDS settlement.
My point is, too big to fail means it's too big, therefore needs to be broken down. Instead, the gov (not just US gov) is making them even bigger.
Five Ways This Bubble May End [View article]
Bank fails. Deposit is saved. Commercial banking part remains public if possible. Investment banking part is taken over by gov and then sold to private partners ASAP. We go back to the old Wall Street model that had worked quite well for about two centuries. Counterparty risk chain reaction is unlikely as demonstrated by the non-event of Lehman CDS settlement.
My point is, too big to fail means it's too big, therefore needs to be broken down. Instead, the gov (not just US gov) is making them even bigger.