Cooking the Books: U.S. Banks are Giant Casinos

by x Monday, Jan. 08, 2007 at 11:04 PM

This is not good news.

http://worldvisionportal.org/WVPforum/viewtopic.php?t=160

Cooking the Books: U.S. Banks are Giant Casinos

by Michael Edward



While media financial reporters keep the current focus of the public eye on

Martha Stewart, the insolvency of U.S. banks due to their derivative

holdings is being swept under the carpet.

Because banks have not been making a profit from traditional lending,

derivatives became a fantastic way for them to net huge gains by trying to

guess (gamble on) future prices of commodities or stocks. They were able to

take these gambling risks because the Fed is supposed to back them from

losses that would make them insolvent (more liabilities than assets). The

worst part is that derivative transactions stay off the books and away from

the prying eyes of investors and analysts.

U.S. interest rates being kept low by the Federal Reserve System (which is

neither Federal nor does it have any intrinsic reserves) is to simply hide

the hundreds of $Billions (0 Billion U.S. Dollars = 0,000,000,000) of

derivative losses and the true insolvency of U.S. banks. The moment interest

rates start to run up, U.S. banks will be left holding little paper value

assets to offset their vast derivative gambling losses.

U.S. stock markets are being manipulated to show overall value gains and

"profits" is to keep U.S. banks "paper solvent". In reality, the public is

being conned into thinking that U.S. banks are still solvent because they

show "gains" in their stock "paper" value. If the U.S. markets were not

manipulated, U.S. banks would collapse overnight along with the entire U.S.

economy.

U.S. banks are merging with each other to hide their derivative losses with

"paper asset" bookeeping that incorrectly shows they are solvent with enough

"assets" to overcome their losses. In reality, this is smoke and mirror

accounting, a scam worth $Trillions.

U.S. banks _ with the privately owned Federal Reserve System at the helm _

have turned into giant casinos by running a Casino Economy that is

splintering into vast piles of insolvent firewood. The kindling was lit in

the early 1990's, but now a bonfire is raging with great plumes of red_ink

smoke. Can the Fed and the Fed_controlled media keep the public from seeing

that red smoke with their manipulative mirrors? If the public would just

open their eyes and wake up, they would see what's really going on, so

here's something to focus your eyes on:



The top 25 U.S. banks with the largest derivatives holdings (estimate based

on OCC Q3_2003 report and updated from news releases since 10/03). Remember,

Billion U.S. Dollars = ,000,000,000.

RANK _ BANK NAME _ DERIVATIVES (in $US BILLIONS)

1 _ JPMORGAN CHASE BANK _ 33,700 ( Trillion, 700 Billion)

2 _ BANK OF AMERICA _ 13,800

3 _ CITIGROUP _ 11,000

4 _ WACHOVIA CORPORATION _ 2,457

5 _ BANK ONE CORPORATION _ 1,133

6 _ HSBC _ 1,043

7 _ WELLS FARGO BANK NA _ 911 (1 Billion)

8 _ FLEET BOSTON _ 494

9 _ BANK OF NEW YORK _ 496

10 _ COUNTRY WIDE FINANCIAL _ 410

11 _ STATE STREET _ 320

12 _ TAUNUS _ 307

13 _ NATIONAL CITY _ 203

14 _ ABN AMRO _ 188

15 _ MELLON _ 153

16 _ KEYCORP _ 98 ( Billion)

17 _ SUNTRUST _ 82

18 _ FIRST TENNESSEE BANK NA _ 58

19 _ U S BAN CORP _ 54

20 _ PNC BANK NATIONAL ASSN _ 45

21 _ DORAL _ 31

22 _ NORTHERN TRUST _ 25

23 _ CIBC DELAWARE _ 25

24 _ METLIFE _ 22

25 _ UTRECHT_AMERICA _ 20



If you want to get a hint at how much red ink your U.S. bank casino is

swimming in, look at their latest financial report and keep an eye out for

an entry such as, "adjustment of derivative financial instruments" or

"adjustment of non_interest instruments". If they list such an "adjustment"

(most do not), this means they have written off the losses incurred from

their derivative gambling.

If you bank with one of the 25 banks listed above, you can expect worse than

the 1986_1990 Savings & Loan bank collapses when people were unable to

remove all or most of their money from their accounts until years later.

This time, you can expect to loose whatever they claim to "hold" for you

because the FDIC and the "Fed" have no means to replace the losses with any

intrinsic value.

If you choose to keep accounts with these U.S. banks, you have just become a

high_stakes gambler, and the odds are stacked against you.

Original: Cooking the Books: U.S. Banks are Giant Casinos