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September 29, 2009 at 5:58 AM #16412September 29, 2009 at 8:50 AM #462093bsrsharmaParticipant
This is the flag that you should probably move your funds out of bank deposits and put them in credit unions. NCUA seems to be more solvent.
September 29, 2009 at 8:50 AM #462436bsrsharmaParticipantThis is the flag that you should probably move your funds out of bank deposits and put them in credit unions. NCUA seems to be more solvent.
September 29, 2009 at 8:50 AM #462508bsrsharmaParticipantThis is the flag that you should probably move your funds out of bank deposits and put them in credit unions. NCUA seems to be more solvent.
September 29, 2009 at 8:50 AM #462715bsrsharmaParticipantThis is the flag that you should probably move your funds out of bank deposits and put them in credit unions. NCUA seems to be more solvent.
September 29, 2009 at 8:50 AM #461896bsrsharmaParticipantThis is the flag that you should probably move your funds out of bank deposits and put them in credit unions. NCUA seems to be more solvent.
September 29, 2009 at 9:38 AM #462740daveljParticipant[quote=bsrsharma]This is the flag that you should probably move your funds out of bank deposits and put them in credit unions. NCUA seems to be more solvent.[/quote]
Don’t kid yourself. The NCUA is not more solvent than the FDIC, it’s merely much smaller and thus under the radar. The NCUA’s insurance fund is almost down to zero which is why it recently charged a premium on all retail credit union share accounts (re: deposit accounts) to recapitalize the share insurance fund.
September 29, 2009 at 9:38 AM #462118daveljParticipant[quote=bsrsharma]This is the flag that you should probably move your funds out of bank deposits and put them in credit unions. NCUA seems to be more solvent.[/quote]
Don’t kid yourself. The NCUA is not more solvent than the FDIC, it’s merely much smaller and thus under the radar. The NCUA’s insurance fund is almost down to zero which is why it recently charged a premium on all retail credit union share accounts (re: deposit accounts) to recapitalize the share insurance fund.
September 29, 2009 at 9:38 AM #462533daveljParticipant[quote=bsrsharma]This is the flag that you should probably move your funds out of bank deposits and put them in credit unions. NCUA seems to be more solvent.[/quote]
Don’t kid yourself. The NCUA is not more solvent than the FDIC, it’s merely much smaller and thus under the radar. The NCUA’s insurance fund is almost down to zero which is why it recently charged a premium on all retail credit union share accounts (re: deposit accounts) to recapitalize the share insurance fund.
September 29, 2009 at 9:38 AM #461921daveljParticipant[quote=bsrsharma]This is the flag that you should probably move your funds out of bank deposits and put them in credit unions. NCUA seems to be more solvent.[/quote]
Don’t kid yourself. The NCUA is not more solvent than the FDIC, it’s merely much smaller and thus under the radar. The NCUA’s insurance fund is almost down to zero which is why it recently charged a premium on all retail credit union share accounts (re: deposit accounts) to recapitalize the share insurance fund.
September 29, 2009 at 9:38 AM #462461daveljParticipant[quote=bsrsharma]This is the flag that you should probably move your funds out of bank deposits and put them in credit unions. NCUA seems to be more solvent.[/quote]
Don’t kid yourself. The NCUA is not more solvent than the FDIC, it’s merely much smaller and thus under the radar. The NCUA’s insurance fund is almost down to zero which is why it recently charged a premium on all retail credit union share accounts (re: deposit accounts) to recapitalize the share insurance fund.
September 29, 2009 at 9:43 AM #462750daveljParticipant[quote=4plexowner]
FDIC is going to do anything possible to pretend that they aren’t broke[/quote]The FDIC knows it’s broke. The FDIC knows that everyone else knows it’s broke as well. This is not a secret. The issue is one of recapitalization and cash flow; that is, where do we best get the cash we need? I think having the banks prepay their insurance premiums is a good idea, so long as the FDIC doesn’t think that this gets them completely out of the woods – it’s just a stop gap measure. And the banks would capitalize the one-time prepayment over three years so that it wouldn’t represent and undue hit to capital all at once. Doesn’t it make sense that the banks should have to recapitalize the FDIC insurance fund with their own money, as opposed to going begging to the Treasury (that is, We the People)? This makes all kinds of sense to me. The only people who aren’t going to like this plan are the banks that are on the ropes, who deserve little sympathy.
September 29, 2009 at 9:43 AM #461931daveljParticipant[quote=4plexowner]
FDIC is going to do anything possible to pretend that they aren’t broke[/quote]The FDIC knows it’s broke. The FDIC knows that everyone else knows it’s broke as well. This is not a secret. The issue is one of recapitalization and cash flow; that is, where do we best get the cash we need? I think having the banks prepay their insurance premiums is a good idea, so long as the FDIC doesn’t think that this gets them completely out of the woods – it’s just a stop gap measure. And the banks would capitalize the one-time prepayment over three years so that it wouldn’t represent and undue hit to capital all at once. Doesn’t it make sense that the banks should have to recapitalize the FDIC insurance fund with their own money, as opposed to going begging to the Treasury (that is, We the People)? This makes all kinds of sense to me. The only people who aren’t going to like this plan are the banks that are on the ropes, who deserve little sympathy.
September 29, 2009 at 9:43 AM #462543daveljParticipant[quote=4plexowner]
FDIC is going to do anything possible to pretend that they aren’t broke[/quote]The FDIC knows it’s broke. The FDIC knows that everyone else knows it’s broke as well. This is not a secret. The issue is one of recapitalization and cash flow; that is, where do we best get the cash we need? I think having the banks prepay their insurance premiums is a good idea, so long as the FDIC doesn’t think that this gets them completely out of the woods – it’s just a stop gap measure. And the banks would capitalize the one-time prepayment over three years so that it wouldn’t represent and undue hit to capital all at once. Doesn’t it make sense that the banks should have to recapitalize the FDIC insurance fund with their own money, as opposed to going begging to the Treasury (that is, We the People)? This makes all kinds of sense to me. The only people who aren’t going to like this plan are the banks that are on the ropes, who deserve little sympathy.
September 29, 2009 at 9:43 AM #462127daveljParticipant[quote=4plexowner]
FDIC is going to do anything possible to pretend that they aren’t broke[/quote]The FDIC knows it’s broke. The FDIC knows that everyone else knows it’s broke as well. This is not a secret. The issue is one of recapitalization and cash flow; that is, where do we best get the cash we need? I think having the banks prepay their insurance premiums is a good idea, so long as the FDIC doesn’t think that this gets them completely out of the woods – it’s just a stop gap measure. And the banks would capitalize the one-time prepayment over three years so that it wouldn’t represent and undue hit to capital all at once. Doesn’t it make sense that the banks should have to recapitalize the FDIC insurance fund with their own money, as opposed to going begging to the Treasury (that is, We the People)? This makes all kinds of sense to me. The only people who aren’t going to like this plan are the banks that are on the ropes, who deserve little sympathy.
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