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  • WaMu and More: Uninsured Depositors Begging for Trouble [View article]
    Wez, that might be the most inane thing I have ever heard.

    This country doesn’t need anymore bank runs.
    The economy doesn’t need more bank failures.

    This country doesn’t need to see millions and millions of depositors waiting in massive lines because they are afraid to leave their funds in banks.

    The truth is- if depositors don’t flee (run) then the banks won’t go under.
    If depositors run on any bank en masse then that bank will fail.

    No bank is immune to a run- and to purposefully call for (or cause) a bank run is at a very minimum instigating chaos- and it is also perhaps illegal.
    Enter your comment here
    Jul 25 17:38 pm |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
  • WaMu and More: Uninsured Depositors Begging for Trouble [View article]
    If you work for a corporation that has its payroll or large corporate account (above the FDIC limit) at WaMu and you want to get paid, you better get this message to corporate headquarters right away: WaMu Slumps as Gimme Credit Cites Liquidity Concern.
    --^^^^___

    He isn’t just telling retail depositors to withdraw WM funds-
    He is ordering all workers to tell their bosses that they should Immediately change from WM into another bank for payroll!

    He is flat out trying to scare corporations and workers that use WAMU for payroll purposes into leaving WAMU for fear that they won't get paid!

    He is stating as fact: that if you use WM for payroll you won’t get paid!

    This goes beyond the pale- it is entirely unacceptable.
    Seeking Alpha needs to pull this piece of trash.
    Jul 25 17:21 pm |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
  • WaMu and More: Uninsured Depositors Begging for Trouble [View article]
    if he is short WM or any of the other banks he NEEDS to disclose that fact.

    I have reported this blog to WM, to the SEC, and to the FDIC.
    i suggest everyone else do the same.
    Jul 25 14:30 pm |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
  • WaMu and More: Uninsured Depositors Begging for Trouble [View article]
    Are you short any of these Banks?
    i want you to read this from the FDIC:

    FDIC learns it ignores bloggers at its peril
    San Francisco Business Times - by Mark Calvey
    Wednesday, July 23, 2008 - 1:13 PM PDT

    The federal agency insuring bank deposits learned that it can't afford to ignore the blogs following its seizure this month of IndyMac Bank, the largest bank failure since the 1980s.

    "The blogs were a bit out of control," Sheila Bair, chairman of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., told the San Francisco Business Times after a speech in San Francisco this week.

    That's putting it mildly. Following the FDIC's takeover of IndyMac on July 11, widely followed blogs were speculating on bank runs on some of California's largest banks based on nothing more than people waiting for their branch to open or large deposits moving between financial institutions.

    The FDIC plans to pay closer attention to the blogosphere in the future.

    "We're very mindful of the media coverage and blogs in controlling misinformation. All I can say is were going to continue to stay on top of it," Bair said. "The misinformation that came out over the weekend fed a lot of depositors' fears."

    The FDIC also plans to begin airing public service announcements as part of a public education campaign on the nation's deposit insurance program.

    Although Bair declined to disclose financial institutions on the agency's troubled-bank list, she said most institutions on the list will survive. Some, though, may decide to team up with healthier institutions. Historically, only 13 percent on the troubled banks list actually fail, she said, adding that disclosing who is on the troubled list would likely boost the failure rate from 13 percent to 100 percent as customers pulled deposits.

    Many are watching how some of the nation's largest banks will cope with their mortgage-lending woes, including Washington Mutual (NYSE: WM), Wachovia (NYSE: WB) and Cleveland-based National City (NYSE: NCC).

    "These are challenging times for a number of institutions large and small," Bair said. "We've worked with them as their primary regulator. They've raised a lot capital, they're getting their loan loss reserves up. They're doing everything they can and should do."

    "The capital is there to absorb the losses," she added. "Some will have some bad quarters, but still overall they're quite solvent, healthy institutions, and they'll get through this."


    sanfrancisco.bizjourna...


    Jul 25 14:13 pm |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
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