Guys!!!
We buy metal with the proceeds. We don't keep it in the bank.
We buy metal with the proceeds. We don't keep it in the bank.
There is precedence for Australian bail in.
https://www.adamseconomics.com/articles/the-imf-wants-apra-to-steal-your-bank-deposit
Certainly not slavaja, but the bank's have been doing it for no good reason of late. I read of where the bank's want to downside their rural risk, thus find the loans they can call in for no reason, even when the loan is being serviced and force the farmer to repay. Many can service but not repay early, thus the bank forecloses, receiver sells them up. Just Google rural loan foreclosures.
My concerns for bail in have led me to think about stacking. John Adams and Martin North have a very interesting video on the subject.Just wondering if anyone is aware of bail in laws in Australia? Apparently if a bank is going under the bank is allowed to take a percentage of deposits to bail out the bank. Can someone clarity that?
You said it right alor. No reason to worry if you dont use it.
Really all they would have to do is send the IRS to audit anyone who wanted their money and most of the sheeple would bend over and take it like scared little bunnies. They already do that now!
Then they could impose the "bail in tax" on any money you did receive, like a capitol gains.
Freedom used to cost blood but nowadays it just costs money. Lots and lots of money. Dont you feel free?
A great new BBC/HBO show is worth a look. Bail-in and financial collapse consequences in a fictional future UK covered in a very smart way.
Saw this news just today - https://www.foxbusiness.com/luxury/irs-auction-gold-silver-coins-seized-tax-evader
A Financial Crisis Is Unlikely (Here's Why) | Joseph Wang & Steven Kelly
What is a true financial crisis, how does it differ from the mere popping of a speculative bubble or a vanilla recession, and what are the current risks of a financial crisis right now? Steven Kelly, an expert on financial crises and Senior Research Associate at the Yale Program on Financial Stability, joins Jack Farley and Joseph Wang (“Fed Guy”) to discuss these questions. Wang, a former senior trader for the New York Federal Reserve, shares his insight on why, despite the Fed’s quantitative tightening (QT) and rapid rate hikes, liquidity remains high. Kelly and Wang agree that the risk of a true financial crisis such as the one in 2008 is unlikely to occur, because as Kelly argues, banks have much more capital to endure losses.
At the end of the day, it's all opinions, and we know what they say about those
Always good to take note from all views and make our personal decisions based on what we perceive to be legitimate, non biased and coincides with statistics and also what's playing out in the real world I guess.