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Red Alert: Major Meltdown Imminent!
Your Escape ...
by
Martin D. Weiss, Ph.D.
Dear Subscriber,
The nation's largest banks are so close to collapse
and the world economy is coming unglued so rapidly,
a major Wall Street meltdown is now imminent.
Specifically, it's now increasingly likely that
virtually all of our forecasts of recent months
could come to pass in a very short period of time,
including ...
-
Stock market crash:
A swift
plunge in stocks to about 5000 on the Dow, 500
on the S&P 500 and 900 on the Nasdaq ... or
lower. (For our reasons, see "Stocks
to fall AT LEAST another 40%!")
-
Corporate bankruptcies:
A chain
reaction of Chapter 11 filings or federal
takeovers, including not only General Motors and
Chrysler, but also Ann Taylor, Best Buy, Jet
Blue, Macy's, Saks Fifth Avenue, Sears, Toys "R"
Us, U.S. Airways and even giants like Ford or
General Electric.
-
Megabank failures:
Bankruptcies
or nationalization not only of Citigroup and
Bank of America, but also JPMorgan Chase and
HSBC. (See my January issue, "Megabanks
Could Fail Despite Federal Aid.")
-
Nationwide epidemic of small and medium-sized
bank failures:
Outright FDIC takeovers, with little prospect of
nationalization. (I'll give you a link to our
free guide with a more extensive list in a
moment.)
-
Insurance failures:
State
takeovers of companies like Ambac Assurance,
Bankers Life and Casualty, Conseco, FGIC,
Medical Liability Mutual, Mortgage Guaranty
Insurance, Nuclear Electric Insurance, PMI
Mortgage, Standard Life of Indiana and many
others. (Our free guide also contains a more
extensive list of insurers.)
-
Cities and states:
An epidemic
of defaults by thousands of cities, states and
other issuers of tax-exempt municipal bonds.
-
Stock market shutdowns:
Trading halts
on major, big-cap stocks ... plus on-again,
off-again exchange shutdowns, making it
increasingly difficult for investors to
liquidate their holdings at any price.
-
Credit market deep freeze:
A virtual
shutdown in all debt markets except U.S.
Treasuries. An avalanche of selling — and
virtually no buyers — for corporate bonds,
commercial paper, asset-backed securities,
municipal bonds and all forms of bank loans.
-
Government bond collapse:
A steep
decline in the price of medium-and long-term
government securities, as the U.S. Treasury bids
aggressively for scarce funds to finance a
ballooning budget deficit.
Shocking? Perhaps. Avoidable? No.
Nor am I alone in anticipating this rapid unraveling
of the economy and financial markets. This past
Friday, at a Columbia University dinner
reported by Reuters ...
-
George Soros said the financial system has
effectively disintegrated, with the turbulence
more severe than during the Great Depression and
with the decline comparable to the fall of the
Soviet Union, while ...
-
Paul Volcker said he could not remember any
time, even in the Great Depression, when things
went down so fast and quite so uniformly around
the world.
Both recognize that we're in a new era of chaos.
What's the landmark event that separates us from the
past era of relative stability?
According to Soros, it's precisely the same event we
forecast in 2007 and the same event we have
repeatedly highlighted here in
Money and Markets: The
bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers. (See "Dangerously
Close to a Money Panic," December 3, 2007 and "Closer
to a Financial Meltdown," March 17, 2008.)
That was the final straw that punctured the already
imploding bubble. And it was the first major domino
that set off the chain reaction of events now
careening out of control: The collapse of consumer
credit markets ... surging unemployment ... and now,
a new set of even larger financial failures looming.
The Raging Debate Right Now Is How To Prevent
A Banking
Collapse: To Nationalize Or Not To
Nationalize. But It's A Moot Point.
Based on the analysis we presented here in August
2008 ("The
Next Big Failures") ...
Based on the frank recognition of the catastrophe by
Soros and Volcker on Friday ...
And based on the trillions in government bailout
funds already spent, lent or guaranteed ("The
Obama Stimulus: Truth and Consequences") ...
The fact is that
the banking collapse has already occurred!
So the relevant question is not "How can we prevent
it?" Instead, it's "How can you protect yourself
from the inevitable fallout?"
Washington and Wall Street, however, are either too
cowered or too confused to give you the answers you
need.
They won't tell you which banks are the most likely
to fail or which ones are the most likely to
survive.
They won't offer you alternative safe havens for
your money.
They won't even guide you to publicly available
information provided by the U.S. Treasury Department
itself.
In August of last year, Mike Larson and I took steps
to fill that gap. As a public service, we invited
readers to attend our 1-hour video, the "X List,"
later making the recording widely available on the
Web and attracting over 100,000 viewers.
In the video, we shocked the financial community by
forecasting the failure of Citrigroup, Wachovia,
Washington Mutual and others; and unfortunately,
today, less than seven months later, most of those
forecasts have come true.
More importantly, we gave you specific instructions
in the video on exactly where to find true financial
safety, how and why. If you didn't attend, or you
didn't act on our recommendations, you're fortunate
in that you still have the opportunity to do so now.
But With The Latest Dramatic Events,
You're Clearly Running Out Of Time! So
Here's What I Suggest You Do Immediately ...
First,
whether you've seen it before or not, invest a short
hour of your time to
watch our "X List" video. Given the urgency
of this crisis, we have put it back online; and
despite the dramatic changes that have taken place
since, the advice remains 100% valid today.
Second,
refer to the edited transcript of the first half of
the program, which I'm providing below with my
latest comments.
Third,
download our
free survival booklet, which we've just
updated — my gift to you, conveying both my
gratitude for your sincere interest and my concern
for your financial safety.
In it, you'll find step-by-step instructions on how
to buy Treasury bills, what to do with your 401k,
how to get rid of risky stocks, how to find a strong
bank, how risky is your insurance company, plus
more.
Fourth,
in the guide, be sure to check our handy lists
covering the weakest and strongest banks and
thrifts, the weakest and strongest insurers, plus
select U.S. brokers.
Fifth,
join us online THIS WEEK for our next landmark video
event. Here are the facts:
Time:
Thursday, February 26, 12 noon Eastern Time
Subject:
11 Laws for
Bear Market Success
For more information:
Click here
For free registration:
Click here (Unless you sign up ahead of
time, it will be impossible to attend.)
Now, here's the annotated transcript of the first
half of the "X List" ...
The "X List": The Next Big Failures
Original Edited
Transcript of
First Half of August 2008 Program
[With My
Current Comments in Red Type]
Martin Weiss:
Big banks and brokers have announced massive losses,
with much more to come.
But government regulators generally make it
difficult for average citizens to figure out which
banks or brokers are the weakest and which are the
strongest ...
-
The FDIC maintains a watch list of troubled
banks that are likely to be among the next to
fail, but it's strictly confidential.
-
The SEC keeps tabs on the nation's privately
held brokerage firms, but makes it difficult for
you to get the critical data you need to
evaluate their finances.
Today, we're going to tell you what Washington
won't, unveil our own "X List" of institutions and
name the banks we feel are the most or least
vulnerable to financial difficulties. Then, we're
going to answer your questions, live.
It's the first time these lists are being released.
And it's the first time we are taking live questions
from viewers online. But the seriousness of the
situation warrants these special steps. Every dollar
you earn, save or invest could now be at stake.
Just look at what's happening all around you. The
recession is still in its early phase. But already,
we have one of largest bank failures in history,
IndyMac Bank, and the largest brokerage firm failure
in history, Bear Stearns. What will happen as the
recession deepens? What will happen now that the
mortgage crisis is spreading beyond subprime
mortgages to the far larger market for prime
mortgages?
My friends,
this crisis is
not over, not by a long shot.
All this raises urgent questions for you — as a
saver, as an investor, and if you run a business:
How safe is your bank? How safe is your broker? What
would happen to your money and your investments if
your bank or broker failed?
No one has
all
the answers, but we do have the data to provide most
of the important answers.
And joining me today is Mike Larson, one of the few
analysts who warned us ahead of time about the
disaster that was — and still is — at the heart of
this crisis: The real estate and mortgage crisis. It
was thanks to Mike's research that our
Safe Money Report
laid out, many months ahead of time, the precise
events that are unfolding today, step by step, play
by play.
Mike, let's get straight to the heart of the matter.
You, me and the Weiss Research team have been hard
at work assembling our "X List," starting with the
U.S. banks that, based on our research, are the most
likely to run into financial difficulties.
Mike Larson:
Correct. Here it is ...

[My current comment:
Citibank has been
downgraded to D+ by TheStreet.com. Plus, I have
added Bank of America and JPMorgan Chase to the
list. Meanwhile, most of the above institutions have
now failed, been bought out or bailed out. All have
suffered massive declines in their share price or
the shares of their parent companies. And all should
be avoided by both investors and savers.]
These banks are listed with the largest at the top.
Column B
is TheStreet.com's Financial Strength Rating, which
covers capital, asset quality, liquidity, earnings
and more. This is a key input in helping us form our
opinion, but not the only input.
Beyond their rating, we are also looking at the
credit risk the largest banks are taking with their
derivatives, according to the Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency — big bets on top of big
bets. That's in
Column C.
Plus, I've drilled down into their mortgage exposure
(not shown in the table).
But before we jump into this, I have two important
caveats:
First,
don't assume that everything you hear or read is
true — whether good or bad. Specifically, do not
lower your guard just because officials tell you
"everything's fine and dandy." And, by the same
token, do not rush to act based on rumor.
[This is
especially true today in early 2009. The U.S.
Treasury Secretary would have you believe that the
government can prevent a collapse with the newest,
still-to-be-revealed bank bailout plan. Others say
that the crisis will be resolved by nationalizing
the largest banks. But at best, all that Washington
can do is postpone the inevitable, which, in the
final analysis, will deliver massive losses to
millions of citizens who take no protective action.]
Second,
no one can predict with certainty the failure or
survival of a particular company. Everything we say
here today is about the relative probability
of a failure or survival, based on diligent
research.
Martin:
Most people think that "big" means "safe." So the
first shock to most people reviewing this list is
going to be the simple fact that some of the
nation's very largest banks and thrifts could be
vulnerable to financial difficulties: Citibank,
Wachovia, Washington Mutual, HSBC.
Mike:
Citigroup is on the list because of three factors:
Its main banking unit has a C- financial strength
rating. It has large exposure to the credit risk of
derivatives. Plus, it has a big exposure to
mortgages — $198 billion.
Wachovia is in a similar situation: It made the
fatal mistake of buying the nation's largest and
most aggressive mortgage lender — Great Western
Financial — at the worst possible time. And it's
also got some serious exposure to derivatives.
Washington Mutual, the nation's largest thrift, has
a D+ rating and is loaded with mortgage exposure.
HSBC has a D+ rating. Plus, it has an exceptionally
large 721% of its capital exposed to the credit risk
of derivatives. In other words, for every single
dollar in capital, HSBC is taking a credit risk of
$7.21 with trading partners in derivatives,
according to the U.S. Comptroller of the Currency.
This bank also made a big blunder, similar to
Wachovia's, with its purchase of Household Finance,
which is loaded with household and consumer loans
that are going bad.
Martin:
Mike, we're getting questions pouring in from all
sides — via instant messenger on my computer and
from our Customer Care representatives who are
feeding us live questions from customers. Here's a
question which summarizes what many readers think
about the idea of big banks failing:
Q. Everyone I speak to says that big banks like a
Citigroup could never fail. The government would
never, NEVER let it happen. What is your response to
that?
Martin:
Our mission here is not to speculate about what the
government may or may not do. Our mission is to
present the facts and evaluate each bank on its own
merits.
Mike:
We had a similar question that came in earlier from
a
Safe Money
subscriber who has money in Wachovia. He asks:
Q. As long as the government is going to keep my
bank alive, why should I care? What difference is it
going to make to me?
Martin:
When a bank goes under, the government steps in,
finds a merger partner or takes it over. This can be
a quick process. But sometimes it may not be. We see
three possible situations:
Situation #1. You're an insured depositor.
You've got savings or checking accounts with the
bank and they are under the FDIC
insurance limit. Run through that situation first.
Mike:
You will get your money back. If the FDIC runs out
of money, it has the authority to borrow up to $30
billion more from the U.S. Treasury, plus another
$40 billion beyond that from the Federal Financing
Bank. And even if it maxes out that credit line,
Congress would probably approve more.
Martin:
But before things get that far, we would have to
revisit this question and make a rational decision
at that time, whether or not you
should rely on FDIC insurance.
Mike:
Right. For now, suffice it to say that at
this time, the reliability of FDIC
insurance is not an issue.
[Today,
less than seven months later, FDIC insurance is
still functional. However, as the federal deficit
balloons toward $2 trillion, as larger financial
institutions collapse, and as government resources
are stretched beyond any reasonable limit, the
viability of depositor insurance is bound to come
into serious question.]
Martin:
Situation #2. You're a shareholder.
You own stock in a failing bank. In this
case, it doesn't matter much what
the government does. If the FDIC takes over the
bank, like it did with IndyMac Bank recently,
shareholders are wiped out. If the Federal Reserve
steps in to keep the bank open, shareholders are
probably still wiped out.
Mike:
Either way, if you own shares in a weak bank, our
recommendation is to get the heck out. One word of
caution: When a bank's stock is falling, it's not a
good sign. But remember — just because a bank is
losing money and its stock is going down doesn't
mean the bank is failing and your
deposits are in jeopardy. What you do with your
stocks and what you do with your deposits are two
separate decisions.
[This is
still true. But crashing share prices have emerged
as an important factor in a financial institution's
demise. Last week's plunge in the shares of
Citigroup, Bank of America and General Electric, for
example, are telltale warning signs that must not be
ignored.]
Situation #3. You're an uninsured depositor.
You have deposits with a bank that are over and
beyond the FDIC insurance limits, or you've bought
bank bonds or bank debentures. In most bank
failures, you will suffer losses.
And even with the so-called "too big to fail" banks,
you could suffer losses as well.
Martin:
Correct. We don't really know how
government rescues will pan out. They may decide to
cover certain groups of creditors but not others.
Mike:
Exactly. So our recommendation is very simple:
Do not count on the government to cover uninsured
deposits or bonds.
Martin:
Let me sum up, then: Avoid bank stocks. Keep your
deposits under the FDIC insurance
limit. And beyond the FDIC insurance, don't count on
the government to protect you no matter how
big the bank may be.
We'll take more questions in a moment. Let's move on
now to the other banks on this list.
Mike:
SunTrust Bank — a super-regional, concentrated in
the Southeast, also with a marginal rating. It has
large exposure to construction loans and commercial
mortgages in a region that's likely to get hit very
hard by the real estate crisis.
Plus, here are two Ohio banks that we feel are also
in danger: National City Bank and Huntington Bank.
Weak ratings. Large mortgage exposure.
And here are three more: First Tennessee Bank,
Sovereign Bank in Pennsylvania, and E*Trade Bank in
Virginia. All bad ratings. All with huge mortgage
exposure.
Martin:
Once we get down into this middle tier — large
regional banks that are not
necessarily critical for the national financial
system — then the question arises: Would the Fed
also try to keep these banks afloat? We don't have a
firm answer to that question, do we?
Mike:
No, we don't. The fact is, no one knows. But it
seems less likely that the government would pull out
all the stops to save these middle-tier banks.
Martin:
Here's another question we got earlier via email.
Leon asks:
Q. I have two 6-month CDs with Horizon Bank in
Austin, Texas, rated B-, with five months to go, and
I'm over the FDIC limit. Should I withdraw early and
pay the penalties? Or should I stick it out?
Martin:
Leon, before I answer your question, for everyone's
benefit, let me review for you the ratings scale:
A
= Excellent
B = Good
C = Fair
D = Weak
E = Very weak
+ = the upper third of each
grade range
- = the lower third of each
grade range
And based on these ratings, here are the guidelines
we think you should follow. If your bank is rated
...
-
B- or higher,
you should be OK where you are, in most
circumstances.
-
D+ or lower,
that's a red flag. Seriously consider moving
your money elsewhere.
-
C+, C or C-,
consider it a yellow flag. When
we have the data, especially with large banks,
we check for other dangers as we did with
Citigroup, Wachovia and HSBC. If you can't do
that, monitor the rating periodically to make
sure it has not been downgraded to the D range.
And if you're shopping for a new bank or thrift,
favor those with a rating of
B+ or better.
Now, let me answer your question more directly: Your
bank was a B-, right? OK. So that means there should
be no rush to abandon your bank.
But
you're over the FDIC limit. So to be on the safe
side, I'd reduce your bank balance to
below
the FDIC limit. That gives you the double protection
I think you need.
Mike:
We've had a lot of questions that go like this:
Q. I have a CD for only $50,000, which is fully
insured by the FDIC. So why should I care about the
bank's safety rating? As long as my money is
insured, what difference does it make? Even if the
bank has a lousy rating, so what?
Martin:
Let me describe a real situation and then you can
form your own opinion ...
Several months ago, a bank in California submitted
its financial report to the banking regulators.
Based on that report, it merited a safety rating of
E-
— the lowest possible rating and a clear warning of
failure. So customers of that bank could have also
asked the same question you have: "Why should I
care?"
I'll tell why: Because the name of that bank was
IndyMac, and it failed. You should care because you
don't want the inconvenience of waiting on line for
your money, even for a single day. You should care
because, no matter how orderly the process may be,
you don't want to have to hassle with bank officials
telling you to "please be patient."
Plus, here's another important reason you should
care: The FDIC's responsibility is strictly to get
you your money back. The FDIC has no obligation to
honor the special deals or the special features on
your checking account. It has no obligation to honor
credit lines or anything else you may have liked
about your bank.
Mike:
These pictures are depressing. Can we talk about the
positive side now? The fact is that there are still
many strong banks all over the country, and they're
not hard to find. Consider this list, for example
...
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