The FDIC Anesthesia Is Wearing Off
November 20, 2009
By Robert Prechter
The following article is an excerpt from Robert Prechter's Elliott Wave Theorist. For more information
from Robert Prechter on bank safety, download his free report, Discover
the Top 100 Safest U.S. Banks.
Perhaps the single greatest reason for the unbridled expansion of credit over the past 50 years is the existence
of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, another government-sponsored enterprise created by Congress. The coming
rush of bank failures is an outcome made inevitable the very day that Congress created the FDIC. The reason is that
the creation of the FDIC allowed savers to believe that their deposits at banks are “insured” against
loss.
But the FDIC is not really an insurance company. No enterprise, absent fraud, could
possibly insure all the banking deposits in a nation. Nor does the FDIC do so, despite its claims. The FDIC is like
AIG, the company that sold too many credit-default swaps. It contracted for more insurance than it could pay upon.
Because depositors believe the sticker on the door of the bank, they have abdicated their responsibility to make
sure that their banks’ officers handle their deposits prudently. This abdication allowed banks to lend with
impunity for decades until they became saturated with unpayable debts.
Today, most banks are insolvent, and the FDIC is broke. This condition is deflationary for three reasons: (1) Banks
are coming to realize that the FDIC cannot bail them out in a systemic crisis, so they have become highly conservative
in their lending policies, as described above. (2) The main way that the FDIC gets its money is to dun marginally
healthy banks for more “premiums” (meaning transfer payments) to bail out their disastrously run competitors.
The more money the FDIC sucks out of marginally healthy banks, the less money those banks have on hand to lend, which
is deflationary. (3) The banks that have to cough up all this money will become more impoverished at the margin,
so banks that otherwise might have survived a credit crunch will be thrown even closer to the brink of failure. This
is another deflationary risk.
A friend of mine whose family owns a bank told me that the FDIC recently raised its 6-month assessment from $17,000
to $600,000. In the FDIC’s latest announcement, it is considering requiring banks to pre-pay three years’ worth
of “premiums,” i.e. triple the normal annual fee in a single year. It will be a miracle if the money
lasts through 2010. When these funds are gone, the FDIC will have two more options: to issue its own bonds and pressure
banks to buy them; and to tap its “credit line” of up to half a trillion dollars with the U.S. Treasury.
It’s the same old solution: take on more new debt to back up failing old debt. More debt will not cure the
debt crisis.
Meanwhile, the FDIC is contributing to the deflationary trend. It has “tightened rules on required capital
levels,” which forces banks’ loan ratios to fall; and it has “extended its extra monitoring of
new banks from the first three years of operation to seven years” (AJC, 11/19), meaning that banks will now
have to wait four additional years before they can go crazy with loans.
For more information from Robert Prechter on bank safety, download his free report, Discover
the Top 100 Safest U.S. Banks. You'll learn how to find a safe bank, the critical difference between lending
and banking, tips on international banking, and more.
Robert Prechter, Chartered Market Technician, is the world's
foremost expert on and proponent of the deflationary scenario. Prechter is the
founder and CEO of Elliott Wave International, author of Wall Street best-sellers
Conquer the Crash and Elliott Wave Principle and editor of The Elliott Wave Theorist
monthly market letter since 1979.