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-   -   Planetary financial crisis next week around Oct 7? (http://projectavalon.net/forum/showthread.php?t=3959)

Merlyn 10-02-2008 04:00 PM

Planetary financial crisis next week around Oct 7?
 
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Jim Sinclair has the following posted on his website today and
I wonder if it relates to the October 7th - webot -Half Past Human.

(note: the LIBOR rate has to do with inter Bank loan rates.)

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Posted On: Thursday, October 02, 2008, 10:35:00 AM EST

A Modern Day Weimar
Author: Jim Sinclair

Dear Extend Family,

Unless the LIBOR rate drops sharply we are facing a planetary financial crisis next week.

For God's sake protect yourself.

Gold and gold related items will be the only true storehouses of wealth. The bailout bill is powerless to reverse what is now happening.

This is a modern day Weimar happening right before our eyes.

Respectfully yours,
Jim

Rocky_Shorz 10-02-2008 04:52 PM

Re: Planetary financial crisis next week around Oct 7?
 
hmmmm, the same day US Military is rumored to go to Defcon 1 for a terrorist attack...

Merlyn 10-02-2008 05:03 PM

Re: Planetary financial crisis next week around Oct 7?
 
The following message has been going around the Internet as well.
Use your own discernment.
“Reliable word that Bank of America branch managers just received a letter or memo from the USFed instructing them to perhaps be ready for a one-week universal shut-down of the banking system , including access to checking accounts, savings accounts and credit cards. Reliable word has it that BofA bank branches received a shipment of signs last week, reading “WE'RE SORRY, BUT DUE TO CIRCUMSTANCES BEYOND OUR CONTROL, WE CANNOT BE OPEN AT THIS TIME.”

Merlyn 10-02-2008 07:21 PM

Re: Planetary financial crisis next week around Oct 7?
 
Jim has also posted this today:

Posted On: Thursday, October 02, 2008, 12:09:00 PM EST
Protecting Your Financial Self - An Addition
Author: Jim Sinclair

Dear CIGAs,

I have no doubt that $1650 will come. My concern is not that it will not happen, but that I am much too conservative in my long-term price objective since 2000.

If major banks can be torn apart how can we have faith in the small local institutions that hold most of your ready cash?

When I said �This is IT,� it is not something that I take lightly. Never in 49 years in finance have I seen a set of circumstances so challenging to the man in the street.

What I am getting at is a simple question. Are you prepared? You have heard us talk repeatedly on removing financial intermediaries between you and your assets, but the time has come for us to recommend going one step further:

Hold enough cash at your household to last you a month or two. It may be largely unnecessary for the majority, but what do you have to lose? If your bank should fail this will save you a lot of grief in the short term. If they do not, you still have all your cash that can easily be deposited back into your account.

Regards,
Jim

Truther21 10-02-2008 10:38 PM

Re: Planetary financial crisis next week around Oct 7?
 
I dont know what you guys thing about this, but... yesterday I saw a license plate and it said ocv-708... Dont know what the v means but thats the date that instantly popped into my head......Hmmmm oct-708

pineal-pilot-in merkabah 10-02-2008 10:42 PM

Re: Planetary financial crisis next week around Oct 7?
 
i think global meltdown yes... terror, war , haarpiquake at the saem time.. take your pic of the 3

Merlyn 10-03-2008 06:34 PM

Re: Planetary financial crisis next week around Oct 7?
 
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Notice in the article below it talks about the LIBOR inter bank lending that Jim Sinclair mentions in the post above.

Article from: http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au...014020,00.html

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US government rescue may prove too feeble
Scott Murdoch | October 04, 2008


GLOBAL equities markets are stuck in a rut and there seems little to prompt a reversal in the savage sentiment towards stocks.

The US government rescue package is weak and instead of providing the momentum expected, it seems to be failing.

The response to the $US700 billion ($895 billion) plan shows the fragile state of the markets and that they are prone to over-reaction.

It is easy to chart the financial market's performance through equities and for most investors that is where the importance lies.

But the market carnage extends deep beyond global share markets, with the problems rooted in money and credit markets. As the second leg of the credit crunch appears to be worse than the first, which took the world by storm last year, credit markets are in disrepair.

Macquarie's senior debt is about twice as expensive as it was this time last year and across the board corporate debt has become relatively unattractive to hold.

The credit default swaps are at 697 for the senior debt and 997 for the subordinated tranche.

Before the credit crunch, the senior was priced at 200 and the sub-debt at 400, showing the rates have more than doubled.

In comparison, the major diversified financials are trading at around the 200 mark, showing many in the market are unsure how Macquarie will perform in the near term.

"The Macquarie halo has slipped," a debt trader says. "Not only is it now regarded as just another investment bank, the refusal to give a clear picture of gearing and capital means it will trade at a discount in this market," he says.

But the upshot of this ruction has flowed through to the money markets and while fear grips them, banks are choosing to hoard cash on their balance sheets. Instead of lending it out and financing corporate activity, global banks consider it safer and indeed more logical to hold the money.

This is where the real problems lie: if there is no liquidity and therefore no lending, the effects on the real economy are at risk of being worse than first thought.

At present, the corporate money-raising pipeline is virtually shut and business is being forced to return to the traditional banks for financing.

But around the world, most of those banks are struggling to gain new funding. In Australia, banks have been relatively active in ensuring their capital needs remain well funded.

This week, ANZ completed a $1.03 billion convertible preference share issue that was seized on by institutional investors.

Similarly, Westpac raised $1.48 billion in a domestic bond issue in two tranches. The first part was an $830 million piece of its September 2010 fixed and floating rate, which was bolstered with a further raising of $650 million.

The deal effectively priced both tranches 75 basis points above the swap rate.

The effect of the crunch is being emphasised in the money markets.

In Australia, the funding spread the banks rely on mostly is the difference between the 90-day bank bill rate and the Overnight Index Swap.

That stands at a spread of 65 basis points, almost triple the points it was at when the Reserve Bank of Australia met in September and reduced the official cash rate by 25 basis points.

A widening by that much surely supports the case for the RBA to cut the rate by 50 basis points when it meets on Tuesday.

In the international credit markets, the fear has proved too strong and pushed interbank lending rates up to all-time highs.

The three-month Libor rate is up to 4.21 per cent,
which has in turn pushed Libor-OIS spreads to 260 basis points and the TED Spread (the spread between Libor and 90-day Treasuries) is at 360 basis points.

These all indicate that money market rates are through the roof and even with the rescue package expected to be approved by the US House of Representatives, calm will not necessarily result.

"We are again heading into another, no doubt, historic weekend with the US Government in crisis, financial markets convulsing, and corporates gasping for finance," BNP Paribas credit analyst Brett Williams says.

"Stir in some foul US jobs data, and you set in train negative momentum that could overwhelm any government or regulatory help."

There have been some problems identified with the US emergency bailout package, the least being its sheer size.

On the surface, $US700 billion is headline grabbing because it is a big number, but compared with the $US10 trillion mortgage market, it is a mere helping hand.

There are also worries that the legislation has been made too transparent in order for it to progress through Congress. The favouring of a "reverse auction" process means a bid spread will be lodged, and when price discovery is made, the banks could be forced to write down further assets on their books.

The reaction of all asset markets indicates the bailout will not prove as effective as first thought.

There was the expectation the package was the legislative reform that would prove fundamental because, for once, it was not just an injection of cash.

But as the "announcement value" is depleted, the effect of the package is weakening.

"This is turning into a tragedy," one bank boss says.

There is no guarantee any potential relief rally will be sustainable or that the financial system's shakes will be soothed after the policy makers cast their final votes.

Merlyn 10-03-2008 06:42 PM

Re: Planetary financial crisis next week around Oct 7?
 
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Another article about what Jim Sinclair is warnig regarding the LIBOR rate


Libor Rises, Commercial Paper Slumps as Credit Freeze Deepens

By Bryan Keogh


Oct. 2 (Bloomberg) -- Interest rates on three-month dollar loans rose to a nine-month high, short-term corporate borrowing fell by the most ever and leveraged loans tumbled, exacerbating the credit freeze that's paralyzing businesses around the world.

The London interbank offered rate that banks charge each other for loans rose for a fourth day, driving a gauge of cash scarcity among banks to a record. The biggest drop in financial short-term debt outstanding since at least 2000 caused the U.S. commercial paper market to tumble 5.6 percent to a three-year low, according to the Federal Reserve.

The crisis deepened after the worst month for corporate credit on record. Leveraged loan prices plunged to all-time lows, short-term debt markets seized up and even the safest company bonds suffered the worst losses in at least two decades as investors flocked to Treasuries. Credit markets have frozen and money-market rates keep rising even after central banks pumped an unprecedented $1 trillion into the financial system.

Rest of article at: http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?p...71Y&refer=home

Merlyn 10-04-2008 01:39 PM

Re: Planetary financial crisis next week around Oct 7?
 
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Jim Sinclair has posted this at his site:


Posted On: Friday, October 03, 2008, 8:06:00 PM EST
In The News Today
Author: Jim Sinclair

Thought for the weekend:

The entire financial world hangs by the LIBOR rate. It better drop Monday morning and stay down or it has all hit the fan.


LINK: http://www.jsmineset.com/


See also this link that mentions 54,000 billion credit derivatives and Oct 6

Settlement day approaches for derivatives

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/6beabcdc-8...0779fd18c.html

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Noela 10-04-2008 03:33 PM

Re: Planetary financial crisis next week around Oct 7?
 
I have spent the morning reading "The Guardian" U.K. (4 October). Here are a few snippets -
"Gordon Brown yesterday created a new 19-strong national economic council as he effectively put the government on an econimic war footing. 'the new problems have completely changed, so it is not just what the Treasury does, but also energy, food and housing'
the prime minister said.

"EU commissioner (Peter Mandelson) returns to government as crisis rquires 'all hands to pump'.
Mandelson ....was only asked to return to the cabinet on Thusday." (Other changes to the cabinet include Hilary Benn as Minister for a "new food department")

"Amid fresh signs that the economy is on the brink of recession, the Financial Services Authority said it would increase the security on deposits from £35,000 with effect from TUESDAY (my caps)...."

Heading of article by Nils Pratley - "When the Bank is buying car loans, you know this is a crisis". He continues "We swap US student loans for cash for three months. No, this is not an offer from a Bayswater money-changer. It comes directly from the Bank of England, which is now accepting some eye-catching forms of collateral. Car loans and equipment leases also make the grade........

" (The Bank of England) last week ..provided £40bn to the banks. On TUESDAY, (my caps.) it will offer another £40bn against the wider pool of collateral. Then it will hold another six weekly auctions of undetermined size. Then there is $70bn lent in overnight, six-day and one-week operations. Add it all up and it seems that the Bank has essentially replaced the gummed-up wholesale funding market. It is the only guy in town prepared to lend.

........"There is an understandable tendency to think that the Bank, when it makes big interventions in the money markets, knows that a piece of bad news is coming down the slipway."

Noela

tandiwe 10-04-2008 08:56 PM

Re: Planetary financial crisis next week around Oct 7?
 
Just for info. Have just watched the BBC 9.40 pm news report in the elections in the US and the presenter actually mentioned an "October surprise"!!!! As something that would change the course of the election. Did anyone else see this?

xt

Powerinourhandsl 10-04-2008 11:11 PM

Re: Planetary financial crisis next week around Oct 7?
 
Oh sugar!!

Listern to the latest , seems all will hit th efan on Tuesday
http://www.projectavalon.net/forum/s...ead.php?t=4166

Jenny 10-04-2008 11:15 PM

Re: Planetary financial crisis next week around Oct 7?
 
As I understand what Deagle talked about was; The string of events will be unleashed on october 7th.
What that entailes is unclear.

Jenny

Carol 10-04-2008 11:35 PM

Re: Planetary financial crisis next week around Oct 7?
 
Urgent we need your help now with spiritual intevention...
Please listen to Bill Deagle's interview.

It is about the blood sacrifice of America.

http://projectavalon.net/bill_deagle_4_oct_2008.mp3

Rundeaf 10-05-2008 12:43 AM

Re: Planetary financial crisis next week around Oct 7?
 
Hi, I'm new to the FPA. I'm totally deaf (severe hearing losses in both ears since I was a tyke) and I would like to know what Bill Deagle was saying from the unedited audio file, if you please provide what he's saying in a summary?

Thanks. :original:

houman 10-05-2008 12:57 AM

Re: Planetary financial crisis next week around Oct 7?
 
AIG subsidiary parties in style in OC, two weeks after bailout :biggrin2:
http://taxdollars.freedomblogging.co...ef=patrick.net
http://taxdollars.freedomblogging.co...al-300x183.jpg

The giant sucking sound :biggrin2:
http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_nSTO-vZpSg...ng%20Sound.png

Merlyn 10-05-2008 03:33 AM

Re: Planetary financial crisis next week around Oct 7?
 
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I am not sure I agree with all of what Bill Deagle said in this Oct 4 phone call.
One thing he said was that the Bank problems would start in Europe and
Jim Sinclair posted the below message and note Jim states "Dear International
Friends" that suggests the problem may start overseas but Jim has also
suggested that people in USA get some cash on hand. I think Jim's advice is
good and not fear based but just practical.

Quote:

Posted On: Saturday, October 04, 2008, 2:37:00 AM EST
Thoughts For The Weekend
Author: Jim Sinclair

Dear International Friends,

Maybe you should consider a visit to your local bank for their abbreviated Saturday hours.. What do you have to lose? That all depends on how much you have deposited there...

I have no doubt that $1650 will come. My concern is not that it will not happen, but that I am much too conservative in my long-term price objective held since 2000.

If major banks can be torn apart how can we have faith in the small local institutions that hold most of your ready cash?

When I said "This is IT," it is not something that I take lightly. Never in 49 years in finance have I seen a set of circumstances so challenging to the man in the street.

What I am getting at is a simple question. Are you prepared? You have heard us talk repeatedly on removing financial intermediaries between you and your assets, but the time has come for us to recommend going one step further:

Hold enough cash at your household to last you a month or two. It may be largely unnecessary for the majority, but what do you have to lose? If your bank should fail this will save you a lot of grief in the short term. If they do not, you still have all your cash that can easily be deposited back into your account.

Regards,
Jim
From: http://www.jsmineset.com/

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Carol 10-05-2008 06:14 AM

Re: Planetary financial crisis next week around Oct 7?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Rundeaf (Post 38574)
Hi, I'm new to the FPA. I'm totally deaf (severe hearing losses in both ears since I was a tyke) and I would like to know what Bill Deagle was saying from the unedited audio file, if you please provide what he's saying in a summary?

Thanks. :original:


I think the transcription has been completed and will be uploaded by Sunday.

peaceandlove 10-05-2008 06:52 AM

Re: Planetary financial crisis next week around Oct 7?
 
Article posted October 2, 2008 at the Charlotte Observer Website:

Wachovia faced a 'silent' bank run
Fearing a loss of funding over the weekend, the FDIC forced the sale.
http://www.charlotteobserver.com/bus...ry/226799.html

Obviously there is not enough money to cover the deposits probably in any of the banks and if everyone withdraws their funds there will definitely be a crash. Oh, the dangers of counterfeiting money. endthefed.us

As the banks go down and mergers increase we are fueling the NWO with their control of the central banking system.

With Peace and Love in Mind, :wub2:



Merlyn 10-05-2008 01:17 PM

Re: Planetary financial crisis next week around Oct 7?
 
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The danger to the Banks is not just a run on them by individual depositors but
the LIBOR rate (interbank loan) that they need to keep operations going. The Banks do not trust each other and are holding money back this is why the FED and central banks are pumpimg money into the system.

Yes everyone going to get their money out might be even more problem and if
this goes into hyperinflation holding your money anywhere at bank or at home will be a bad idea.

The FDIC can only insure a small percentage of the deposits right now their fund is around $40 billion and Washington Mutual alone had $188 million in deposits. So the FDIC could not back up Washington Mutual's failure. If only 10% (maybe even less today) of a fractional reserve Bank deposits are taken that Bank will probably fail.

Jim Sinclair is not saying take all of your money out just enough to last a couple months and then you can put it back in your bank if everything is okay.

But if you start to see hyperinflation start then consider converting money
into property, gold, silver, food, etc... again do not fear or panic ... keep a calm and cool head but do your planning and prepare.

It is already happening in Iceland see thread:
http://projectavalon.net/forum/showthread.php?t=4205

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pineal-pilot-in merkabah 10-05-2008 02:00 PM

Re: Planetary financial crisis next week around Oct 7?
 
if you have been broke and homeless for a year will it make a difference.. i think we still need to prepare.. im homeless and was broke/soon to be broke again lol

Rundeaf 10-05-2008 02:56 PM

Re: Planetary financial crisis next week around Oct 7?
 
Thank you, Carol. :)

Merlyn 10-06-2008 03:01 PM

Re: Planetary financial crisis next week around Oct 7?
 
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Have you followed Jim Sinclair's advice above?

Quote:

Hold enough cash at your household to last you a month or two. It may be largely unnecessary for the majority, but what do you have to lose? If your bank should fail this will save you a lot of grief in the short term. If they do not, you still have all your cash that can easily be deposited back into your account.

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tommy38 10-06-2008 03:16 PM

Re: Planetary financial crisis next week around Oct 7?
 
From todays (Oct 6, 2008) London Telegraph
Quote – We face extreme danger…we risk a disintegration of global finance within days.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/c...the-abyss.html

Well, well…….

Merlyn 10-06-2008 03:29 PM

Re: Planetary financial crisis next week around Oct 7?
 
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Europeans and everyone is trying to shore up their Banks.

If depositors start to get nervous they may pull some. most. or all of their
money. FRactional reserve Banks only required to have 10% to cover so if more than that is withdrawn the Bank is gone. The FDIC cannot cover more than 40-50 billion at this time. The FED could step in and probably will.

That is why t be good Jim Sinclair's advice above might be good take some money but not all of it so you have some cash for a month or two.

Europe governments strive to avoid bank meltdown
http://biz.yahoo.com/ap/081006/eu_europe_meltdown.html

Treasury and Fed pledge rapid response to crisis
http://biz.yahoo.com/ap/081006/meltd...istration.html

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Merlyn 10-06-2008 04:40 PM

Re: Planetary financial crisis next week around Oct 7?
 
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Notice how they are all rushing to convince people to keep money in the Banks by "guarantees all savings" recall in the $700 billion bailout that now appears to be failing they boosted FDIC to $250,000.

Look at Jim Sinclair's advice above.

Quote:

Global markets in meltdown as shares in London AND New York plunge to four-year low
By Nicola Boden
Last updated at 4:50 PM on 06th October 2008

* FTSE dips by staggering 8% as Dow plunges
* Utter confusion after Germany guarantees all savings
* Austria, Denmark and Sweden decide to follow suit

* Iceland forced to suspend trading for six major banks
* Economic 'war cabinet' meets to discuss crisis
More at link: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/arti...-year-low.html

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Merlyn 10-06-2008 04:47 PM

Re: Planetary financial crisis next week around Oct 7?
 
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This extract from: http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/new...cle4888292.ece

Quote:

Even after the bailout announcement, there was renewed speculation that National City, one of the biggest mortgage lenders in Ohio [a key swing state], may be next. Fifteen banks in America have gone bust since the beginning of the year, rapidly depleting the federal insurance fund, which has just $45 billion assets but insures more than $1 trillion worth of deposits.
More and more people are learning about just how much the FDIC has and that it is not enough. The "silent run" on banks right now is by those who know. Do not fear or panic but Protect yourself.

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zorgon 10-06-2008 05:02 PM

Re: Planetary financial crisis next week around Oct 7?
 
Sooo If we all head over to the bank right now and pull our money...

Will that not GUARANTEE that tomorrow they close?

:mfr_omg:

Wamu went through the transition to new owners with not even a 'hiccup' to service.

But keeping some cash on hand, if you can afford to... is never a bad idea.

While Gold and Silver may be of use if you have a lot of cash on hand, it is really useless for the average person.. what are you going to do... carry a file, a scale and your gold in your pouch? How much gold for a loaf of bread?

Can you even buy gold now? I hear the dealers are out... they are giving you paper instead... so if all collapses... how will you convert that paper into gold?

Hehe Go buy some gemstones instead... not as heavy, just as valuable.


Has everyone seen this film yet? There are so many threads its hard to get them all:biggrin2:

http://www.brasschecktv.com/page/135.html

Merlyn 10-06-2008 05:08 PM

Re: Planetary financial crisis next week around Oct 7?
 
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Jim Sinclairs's advice (quoted below) was NOT to pull all of your money out of the Bank but enough cash for 1 -2 months. It probably would be good idea to buy a few things food etc... Do not fear or panic just think what makes good sense to do.

Quote:

Hold enough cash at your household to last you a month or two. It may be largely unnecessary for the majority, but what do you have to lose? If your bank should fail this will save you a lot of grief in the short term. If they do not, you still have all your cash that can easily be deposited back into your account.
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zorgon 10-06-2008 05:17 PM

Re: Planetary financial crisis next week around Oct 7?
 
Well no worries here... I have no problem going 'medieval' for a few months... :biggrin2:

Merlyn 10-06-2008 08:07 PM

Re: Planetary financial crisis next week around Oct 7?
 
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The Fed keeps on wasting time while the mother of all bank runs is underway
Nouriel Roubini | Oct 6, 2008


Quote:

Last Friday I pointed out in my “Financial and Corporate System is in Cardiac Arrest: The Risk of the Mother of All Bank Runs” that we were at the point of a risk of a systemic financial meltdown with the beginning of the mother of all bank runs: stock markets gave a vote of no confidence to the Senate passage of the TARP legislation (equities down 4% on Thursday) and to the House passage of the legislation on Friday (equities down 3% after the passage of the bill in the House). At the same time last week money markets, interbank markets, credit markets were all imploding with all interbank spread at new all time highs, credit spreads going up through the roof and the roll-off of the financing – via commercial paper – of the corporate system. As I put it last week we were facing:

- a silent run on the huge mass of uninsured deposits of the banking system and even a run on some insured deposits are small depositors are scared;

- a run on most of the shadow banking system: over 300 non bank mortgage lenders are now bust; the SIVs and conduits are now all bust; the five major brokers dealers are now bust (Bear and Lehman) or still under severe stress even after they have been converted into banks (Merrill, Morgan, Goldman); a run on money market funds restrained only by a blanket government guarantee; a serious run on hedge funds; a looming refinancing crisis for private equity firms and LBOs);

- a run on the short term liabilities of the corporate sector as the commercial paper market has totally frozen (and experiencing a roll-off) while access to medium terms and long term financings for corporations is frozen at a time when hundreds of billions of dollars of maturing debts need to be rolled over;

- a total seizure of the interbank and money markets.

This is indeed a cardiac arrest for the shadow and non-shadow banking system and for the system of financing of the corporate sector. The shutdown of financing for the corporate system is particularly scary: solvent but illiquid corporations that cannot roll over their maturing debt may now face massive defaults due to this illiquidity. And if the financing of the corporate sectors shuts down and remains shut down the risk of an economic collapse similar to the Great Depression becomes highly likely.

Indeed by last week a mother of all bank and non-bank runs was underway and even a well designed and well implemented TARP (let alone the poorly designed one passed by Congress) could not address the problem of a short term liquidity panic and run.

And with the liquidity and credit and banking crisis hitting European financial institutions this severe crisis was becoming global last week. I then suggested that only radical and urgent action could stop this mother of all runs such as the following ones:

LINK:
http://www.rgemonitor.com/roubini-mo...ns_is_underway



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Merlyn 10-07-2008 12:02 AM

Re: Planetary financial crisis next week around Oct 7?
 
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Quote:

Fed Boosts Cash Auctions to $900 Billion, May Do More (Update4)

By Scott Lanman and Craig Torres

Oct. 6 (Bloomberg) -- The Federal Reserve will double its auctions of cash to banks to as much as $900 billion and is considering further steps to unfreeze short-term lending markets as the credit crunch deepens.

``The Federal Reserve stands ready to take additional measures as necessary to foster liquid money-market conditions,'' the central bank said in a statement released in Washington today. The Fed and Treasury are ``consulting with market participants on ways to provide additional support for term unsecured funding markets,'' including short-term corporate financing called commercial paper, the statement said.

Today's steps follow a hoarding of cash by banks that sent the premium on the three-month London interbank offered rate over the Fed's benchmark interest rate to a record. Industrial companies are also finding it harder to raise cash after the market for commercial paper shrank to a three-year low as investors flee even borrowers with few links to mortgages.
Rest of story at: http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?p...fkxao&refer=us

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Rocky_Shorz 10-07-2008 01:59 AM

Re: Planetary financial crisis next week around Oct 7?
 
The Libor-OIS spread hit its seventh consecutive record at 2.94 percentage points Monday before retreating slightly to 2.87 points, after climbing from 2.86 points Friday...

What did you say the breaking point will be?

How low should it be for things to start rolling again?

Merlyn 10-07-2008 02:24 PM

Re: Planetary financial crisis next week around Oct 7?
 
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Originally Posted by Rocky_Shorz (Post 41469)
The Libor-OIS spread hit its seventh consecutive record at 2.94 percentage points Monday before retreating slightly to 2.87 points, after climbing from 2.86 points Friday...

What did you say the breaking point will be?

How low should it be for things to start rolling again?


Rocky_Shorz,

I did not say a breaking point and it was Jim Sinclair warning about the LIBOR rate (he did not state what you are asking for). You may want to check his website at http://www.jsmineset.com and today Jim has this posted this morning.

Quote:

Posted On: Tuesday, October 07, 2008, 9:54:00 AM EST
Fed Enters Off Balance Sheet Credit Default Market
Author: Jim Sinclair

Dear CIGAs,

Today the Fed entered the off balance sheet credit default market and plans to buy unsecured debt instruments in order to cure the problems caused by off balance sheet credit default derivative buying in the form of non-performing failed counterparty credit default derivatives. This appropriately named toxic paper will be purchased to an infinite degree.

The Fed does the same to cure the same.

The Fed actions today declare the bailout bill a non-functioning pile of pork. This infinite production of paper dollars will kill the dollar

Gold will trade at or above $1650.

The Dow is thumbing its nose at the infinite amount of money being dropped by rising 150 points and coming back to even.

Modern day Weimar here we come!

Jim

Weimar refers to thew Germany monetary collapse which was apparently caused by printing and printing money. Thus if the FED continues to pump out money then we might be in a Weimar "hyperinflationary" situation like Zimbawe is in.

So when we look back this action today by the FED might be seen as a big domino falling. Wait and see.


Second Source:
Fed to buy massive amounts of short-term debt
Tuesday October 7, 9:51 am ET
http://biz.yahoo.com/ap/081007/financial_meltdown.html

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Merlyn 10-07-2008 03:05 PM

Re: Planetary financial crisis next week around Oct 7?
 
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More signs they are very worried about keeping people
from a Run on the Banks. People may lose faith in money (really debt)
and realize the value "could" go to zero. Do not fear or panic
but take common sense precautions to protect yourself.

Since Gold and Silver are getting very hard to buy then
consider other things of value -IF- the inflation goes hyperinflationary.

Quote:

EU raises banking guarantee to euro50,000
Tuesday October 7, 9:28 am ET
EU sets guidelines on how governments can save failing banks

LUXEMBOURG (AP) -- The European Union said Tuesday it will raise its minimum bank deposit guarantee to euro50,000 (US$68,160) as they agreed on guidelines to deal with banks in danger of collapse amid the global financial crisis.
Rest of story at: http://biz.yahoo.com/ap/081007/eu_eu_meltdown.html

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Merlyn 10-07-2008 04:43 PM

Re: Planetary financial crisis next week around Oct 7?
 
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Rocky_Shorz and everyone,

I looked around about the LIBOR rate that Jim Sinclair warned about and found the following:

Quote:

LIBOR OIS Spread Signals Credit Crisis Earthquake

The Money Morning team has continued to watch this important risk indicator, and has regularly reported our findings to you. Each time, we've preached caution, even though the pundits were telling the masses that the bailout plan was a panacea for what's actually a financial mess whose fallout continues to spread.

So what is LIBOR telling us now?

Unfortunately, the worst is still yet to come. That's it. No sugar coating. No rose-colored glasses.

Yesterday (Monday), the spread between Overnight Indexed Swaps (OIS) and the three-month LIBOR rose to an all time high of 2.94%. The LIBOR/OIS spread measures the amount of cash available for interbank lending and is used by banks to determine interest rates. The wider the spread, the less cash there is to go around. This is telling us that banks, despite billions of central-bank support in recent months, are still cash-strapped and are disinclined to lend money either to each other or to consumers.

Then there's LIBOR itself, the rate that banks charge each other for overnight dollar loans, which rose to 2.37% yesterday, the British Bankers' Association said. The three-month LIBOR rate has retreated only slightly from a nine-month high of 4.33%, set last January.

LIBOR actually is a set of rates, and is calculated for several currencies based on periods ranging from overnight to 12 months. That, in turn, determines prices for financial contracts valued at $393 trillion as of Dec. 31, or $60,000 for every person in the world, and helps set consumer interest rates on everything from home loans to credit cards, Bloomberg News reported. The BBA compiles the dollar rate every day from data submitted by 16 banks, including Deutsche Bank AG ( DB ) and Royal Bank of Scotland Group PLC (ADR: RBS ). There are also rates for the euro, Japanese yen, British pound, Swiss franc, and Australian and Canadian dollars.

During the past week, as U.S. lawmakers tussled over a bailout plan and governments in Europe were forced to intercede to rescue five banks , the cost of one-month bank loans in euros and overnight dollar loans soared to records. That basically means banks are hoarding cash, a reality that raises borrowing costs and causes economies worldwide to slow. Yesterday's three-month LIBOR for loans in dollars jumped to 4.33%, Bloomberg reported.
Meanwhile the so-called TED spread or the difference between three-month LIBOR and what the U.S. Treasury pays for a three-month loan hit an all-time high of 3.93%, before pulling back slightly. The TED spread provides a gauge of how likely banks are to lend to each other, rather than to the Federal Government.
LINK: http://www.marketoracle.co.uk/Article6666.html

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Merlyn 10-07-2008 05:03 PM

Re: Planetary financial crisis next week around Oct 7?
 
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Another article that helps understand the problem and the LIBOR rate the
following is just an extract see rest of it at link below.

Quote:

Blocked pipes
Oct 2nd 2008 | LONDON AND NEW YORK
From The Economist print edition
When banks find it hard to borrow, so do the rest of us

First, the problem. It is widely assumed that central banks set the level of interest rates in their domestic markets. But the rate they announce is the one at which they will lend to the banking system. When banks borrow from anyone else (including other banks), they pay more. Every day, this rate is calculated through a poll of participating banks and published as Libor (London interbank offered rate) or Euribor (Euro interbank offered rate).

Normally, these are only a fraction of a percentage point above the official interest rates. But that has changed dramatically in recent weeks (see chart 1). Take the cost of borrowing dollars. On October 1st banks had to pay 4.15% for three-month money, more than two percentage points above the fed funds target rate. In theory, three-month rates could be that high because markets are expecting a sharp rise in official rates. But that is hardly likely, given the depth of the crisis.
SEE THE WHOLE ARTICLE AT:
http://www.economist.com/displaystor...ry_id=12342237

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Carol 10-07-2008 06:37 PM

Re: Planetary financial crisis next week around Oct 7?
 
This is from CoasttoCoast last night.

Economic Meltdown
In the first hour, financial advisors Don McAlvany, and Catherine Austin Fitts commented on the economic meltdown. McAlvany, who appeared first, said the problem is much bigger than anyone realizes, with the falling apart of an $800 trillion derivatives pyramid. Fitts noted that some financiers are currently making money by "cannibalizing" the downside of the market.

Don is talking about an inflationary depression where the dollar will collapse. Wall Street made 100 of billions of profit with no regulation. The bail out won't even touch what is owed. As a result there is a global financial meltdown.

Link to his site is: http://www.mcalvany.com/

Link to Fitts site: http://solari.com/

Federal registry yesterday folks: http://edocket.access.gpo.gov/2008/E8-23547.htm (see www.urbansurvival.com for more)

Merlyn 10-07-2008 06:57 PM

Re: Planetary financial crisis next week around Oct 7?
 
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Note that Jim Sinclair has posted (see below) where he states: "If the Fed hadn't taken the rather strange action they took today by becoming OTC derivative dealers themselves this would have been the day the USA banking system imploded."


Quote:

Posted On: Tuesday, October 07, 2008, 2:02:00 PM EST
The Federal OTC Derivative Dealers
Author: Jim Sinclair

Dear Friends,

Please understand that the Fed reacts to circumstances rather than acting before potential problems happen.

If the Fed hadn't taken the rather strange action they took today by becoming OTC derivative dealers themselves this would have been the day the USA banking system imploded.

Watch Libor rates to signal the point of detonation.

Circumstances appear as if there were many problem Angels dancing on top of a pin that is being balanced on the nose of just those people who created the problem in the first place.

An implosion of the banking system is coming, which means a bank holiday will occur.

You now must have enough cash in hand to last a month or two.

If you have not distanced yourself from financial agents then you have a financial death wish.

If you have NOT made absolutely sure that your custodian account is a real custodial- ship you are probably in for a surprise.

I took a call yesterday from a mature lady who told me she feels her money market fund that is only in Treasuries will not pay her out. They did tell her they intend to in seven days. I asked her to call me back in eight days. How does she know that this money market fund is not in OTC derivatives based on the movement of Treasuries?

I do not want you to make that call to me.

If you can retire from your retirement program at some reasonable discount do it NOW.

This is it and it is NOW. Gold is going to $1200 and $1650. The US dollar rally has NO fundamental legs.

Why are so many of you sitting there like a deer caught in the headlights? Protect yourself and do it TODAY!

Respectfully,
Jim
LINK: http://www.jsmineset.com/



Note: keep vigilant and protect yourself.


SEE CAROL"S POST JUST ABOVE TO SEE WHY JIM SINCLAIR SAID
If the Fed hadn't taken the rather strange action they took today by becoming OTC derivative dealers themselves this would have been the day the USA banking system imploded.



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Dominic 10-07-2008 07:27 PM

Re: Planetary financial crisis next week around Oct 7?
 
http://www.rense.com/1.imagesH/bail_dees.jpg

Bank of America today

down 22.32% as of this post


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