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Page added on July 4, 2015

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$75T in Shadow Banking Collapsing

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Keep an eye on the shadow banking system – it is about to be shaken to the core.  According to the Financial Stability Board, the size of the global shadow banking system has reached an astounding 75 trillion dollars.  It has approximately tripled in size since 2002.  In the U.S. alone, the size of the shadow banking system is approximately 24 trillion dollars.  At this point, shadow banking assets in the United States are even greater than those of conventional banks.  These shadow banks are largely unregulated, but governments around the world have been extremely hesitant to crack down on them because these nonbank lenders have helped fuel economic growth.  But in the end, we will all likely pay a very great price for allowing these exceedingly reckless financial institutions to run wild.

If you are not familiar with the “shadow banking system”, the following is a pretty good definition from investing answers.com

The shadow banking system (or shadow financial system) is a network of financial institutions comprised of non-depository banks — e.g., investment banks, structured investment vehicles (SIVs), conduits, hedge funds, non-bank financial institutions and money market funds.

How it works/Example:

Shadow banking institutions generally serve as intermediaries between investors and borrowers, providing credit and capital for investors, institutional investors, and corporations, and profiting from fees and/or from the arbitrage in interest rates.

Because shadow banking institutions don’t receive traditional deposits like a depository bank, they have escaped most regulatory limits and laws imposed on the traditional banking system. Members are able to operate without being subject to regulatory oversight for unregulated activities. An example of an unregulated activity is a credit default swap (CDS).

These institutions are extremely dangerous because they are highly leveraged and they are behaving very recklessly.  They played a major role during the financial crisis of 2008, and even the New York Fed admits that shadow banking has “increased the fragility of the entire financial system”…

The current financial crisis has highlighted the growing importance of the “shadow banking system,” which grew out of the securitization of assets and the integration of banking with capital market developments. This trend has been most pronounced in the United States, but it has had a profound influence on the global financial system. In a market-based financial system, banking and capital market developments are inseparable: Funding conditions are closely tied to fluctuations in the leverage of market-based financial intermediaries. Growth in the balance sheets of these intermediaries provides a sense of the availability of credit, while contractions of their balance sheets have tended to precede the onset of financial crises. Securitization was intended as a way to transfer credit risk to those better able to absorb losses, but instead it increased the fragility of the entire financial system by allowing banks and other intermediaries to “leverage up” by buying one another’s securities.

Over the past decade, shadow banking has become a truly worldwide phenomenon, and thus it is a major threat to the entire global financial system.  In China, shadow banking has been growing by leaps and bounds, but this has the authorities deeply concerned.  In fact, according to Bloomberg one top Chinese regulator has referred to shadow banking as a “Ponzi scheme”…

Their growth had caused the man who is now China’s top securities regulator to label the off-balance-sheet products a “Ponzi scheme,” because banks have to sell more each month to pay off those that are maturing.

And what happens to all Ponzi schemes eventually?

In the end, they always collapse.

And when this 75 trillion dollar Ponzi scheme collapses, the global devastation that it will cause will be absolutely unprecedented.

Bond expert Bill Gross, who is intimately familiar with the shadow banking system, has just come out with a major warning about the lack of liquidity in the shadow banking system…

Mutual funds, hedge funds, and ETFs, are part of the “shadow banking system” where these modern “banks” are not required to maintain reserves or even emergency levels of cash. Since they in effect now are the market, a rush for liquidity on the part of the investing public, whether they be individuals in 401Ks or institutional pension funds and insurance companies, would find the “market” selling to itself with the Federal Reserve severely limited in its ability to provide assistance.

As far as shadow banking is concerned, everything is just fine as long as markets just keep going up and up and up.

But once they start falling, the whole system can start falling apart very rapidly.  Here is more from Bill Gross on what might cause a “run on the shadow banks” in the near future…

Long used to the inevitability of capital gains, investors and markets have not been tested during a stretch of time when prices go down and policymakers’ hands are tied to perform their historical function of buyer of last resort. It’s then that liquidity will be tested.

And what might precipitate such a “run on the shadow banks”?

1) A central bank mistake leading to lower bond prices and a stronger dollar.

2) Greece, and if so, the inevitable aftermath of default/restructuring leading to additional concerns for Eurozone peripherals.

3) China – “a riddle wrapped in a mystery, inside an enigma”. It is the “mystery meat” of economic sandwiches – you never know what’s in there. Credit has expanded more rapidly in recent years than any major economy in history, a sure warning sign.

4) Emerging market crisis – dollar denominated debt/overinvestment/commodity orientation – take your pick of potential culprits.

5) Geopolitical risks – too numerous to mention and too sensitive to print.

6) A butterfly’s wing – chaos theory suggests that a small change in “non-linear systems” could result in large changes elsewhere. Call this kooky, but in a levered financial system, small changes can upset the status quo. Keep that butterfly net handy.

Should that moment occur, a cold rather than a hot shower may be an investor’s reward and the view will be something less than “gorgeous”. So what to do? Hold an appropriate amount of cash so that panic selling for you is off the table.

In order to avoid a shadow banking crisis, what we need is for global financial markets to stabilize and to resume their upward trends.

If stocks and bonds start crashing, which is precisely what I have projected will happen during the last half of 2015, the shadow banking system is going to come under an extreme amount of stress.  If the coming global financial crisis is even half as bad as I believe it is going to be, there is no way that the shadow banking system is going to hold up.

So let’s hope that the financial devastation that we have seen so far this week is not a preview of things to come.  The global financial system has been transformed into a delicately balanced pyramid of glass that is not designed to handle turbulent times.  We should have never allowed the shadow banks to run wild like this, but we did, and now in just a short while we are going to get to witness a financial implosion unlike anything the world has ever seen before.

The Economic Collapse



7 Comments on "$75T in Shadow Banking Collapsing"

  1. Makati1 on Sat, 4th Jul 2015 6:58 am 

    “… in just a short while we are going to get to witness a financial implosion unlike anything the world has ever seen before.”

    Bring it on!

  2. Pops on Sat, 4th Jul 2015 9:00 am 

    http://peakoil.com/forums/cash-is-king-t71068.html

  3. penury on Sat, 4th Jul 2015 9:30 am 

    If you are not a “tin foil hat” person, I recommend that you read the “Automatic Earth” and this article to contemplate the predicament which we will face in the economic sunomi which is upon us.

  4. ghung on Sat, 4th Jul 2015 10:10 am 

    “In order to avoid a shadow banking crisis, what we need is for global financial markets to stabilize and to resume their upward trends.”

    Growth based on imaginary capital? Good luck with that. World markets (consumers) haven’t been able to absorb significant growth in their favorite real capital; oil – production increases which have been largely fuelled by the same shadow banking system utterly dependent on growth for its existence. When it becomes apparent that consumption can’t keep pace with artificially inflated production of the world’s most important commodity, all the King’s horses and all the King’s men, will never put Humpty back together again…. Limits to growth is all-inclusive.

  5. joe on Sat, 4th Jul 2015 10:45 am 

    Looking at the trends in history, the post soviet world has practically reset itself to the consistent trend of growth/recession that existed in pre-ww1 time’s. It continued in the west untill Hitler came along with mussolini and world banking almost vanished except between UK and US along with the rump of the rest.
    So far new world order banking is seen as a new age,they think they have learned from previous mistakes, that if they keep doubling down then the cash flow wont stop andcall will be well. New debts payed for old with interest, that is the purest form of usury.
    It is considered evil because the debts evebtually/traditionally made slaves out of debtors. The new workd order bankers and their friends in politic think that banking is a form of ‘soft power’ which can be used to change target societies, but the truth is that this noble effort can only lead to greed anda repeat of history. In an oil driven high tech services economy its harder to see the effect because of the distractions all around. The modern system does not want to enslave your physical body for work as the old did, they have machines and factories. The new system wants to get you to voluntarily give upyour concept of reality and enslave your mind.
    Even Bill Gates billions are nothing but an accounting fiction dreamed up by the fed. Every dollar he has was created by the fiat currency system, its only us that place our faith it in. Would you refuse a million bucks because you know all that money was invented by a bank with stroke of a keyboard key?

  6. zoidberg on Sat, 4th Jul 2015 1:44 pm 

    This guy is always saying it’s about to collapse. Maybe he’s right but maybe he’s wrong but if he is it’ll be a pure coincidence.

    Also private equity is about to become valuable once everyone realizes public bonds arent worth anywhere close to face value. Once the bonds get sold where will money park???? Be wary of ppl touting stock market crashes. Disinformation at its best….

  7. Northwest Resident on Sat, 4th Jul 2015 1:45 pm 

    Shadow banking was a critical component in the plan to extend and pretend. That it is a Ponzi scheme and destined to implode in spectacular fashion doesn’t matter. The entire international economy is also a Ponzi scheme itself, needing to constantly grow in order to remain viable. But the substance that enables that growth — oil — is getting very hard to come by. Letting shadow banking run amok merely served to stretch out the inevitable collapse a little further. It won’t be long now — dramatic events are already unfolding, but nothing like what we’ll see in the approaching months, I’m sure.

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