BIS & Repo The Report

QUESTION: Marty, the BIS report just release is a joke. They blame the banks are holding treasuries and not lending. This is really a whitewash for that would explain a single event. It does not explain the ongoing liquidity crisis. Is this just propaganda by the BIS?

DK

ANSWER: The claim that the four big banks were unwilling to lend was caused, in part, by the Basel III regulations that they created. They blame hedge funds for borrowing more in repo. None of this explains the real issues behind the crisis and it certainly appears to be disinformation to hide the much greater systemic crisis behind the curtain. They are clearly hoping to restore confidence by ignoring the real crisis. They mention that the European repo market escaped the crisis, but at least warn that it has become fragmented and poses a long-term risk.

We have placed the Repo Report in the store that explains those issues, but dives into the real crisis nobody will talk about. This report will include an update next year when Phase III starts to unfold.

Latest Posts

The World’s Most Censored Democracy

?#Breaking A bishop and several worshippers have been attacked in another mass stabbing in Wakeley, Sydney Australia https://t.co/U1TMjIXqKE — Javeria Sultan (@javeria_sultan1) April 15, 2024 Australia is rapidly becoming the [...]
Read more

Banks Wage War on Gun Ownership

The government has successfully weaponized the banks against the people. Major banks are voluntarily sharing customers’ private transactions with the federal government “as part of a wildly overbroad financial surveillance [...]
Read more

Background Checks are Racist

Biden’s botched recreation of Trump’s convenience store stop has resulted in more than a failed campaign attempt. On the same day that Joe Biden shuffled through Sheetz, a privately owned [...]
Read more

The Movie – Civil War #1 at the Box Office for 2 Weeks Running

https://www.armstrongeconomics.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/What-kind-of-American-Are-You.mp4   Alex Garland’s films have vividly come across the screen. In the virus pandemic (2002’s “28 Days Later”), the stunning yet uncontrollable artificial intelligence robot (2014’s “Ex Machina”), and, [...]
Read more