Saturday, April 23, 2016

What Happens If Everybody Pulls Their Money Out Of The Bank Today? - Mike Maloney


For every dollar that you have in the bank there is actually 0.00061 dollars available...in other words, there's 6 cents for every $100 dollars of deposits that you have at the bank. Got Gold? Got silver?






0:00
and that means that for every dollar that you have in the bank
0:05
there is actually 0.000011% thats other words there's six cents for every $100
0:20
of deposits that you have at the bank they can actually pay out six cents
0:26
worth of cash on $100
0:31
hi this is Mike Maloney and this is a follow-up to a video I made a couple of
0:38
weeks ago when I end up with was showing how much currency is available if
0:45
everybody was to go to the bank today and withdraw all of their funds the
0:49
thing is that banking is very very convoluted and so I wanted to dig a
0:55
little bit deeper into that for everybody and show you just how
1:00
convoluted this gets this is based money and I have talked about or base currency
1:06
is the proper term they call it the monetary base but its base currency it's
1:11
not money but this goes all the way back to 1918 so this is when the Federal
1:19
Reserve started publishing or started collecting all their data and I can zoom
1:25
in on this never left it the long view of it because I like to see the
1:30
recession bars and how regular that recessions are and point out that we're
1:34
due for a recession but this base money is the currency that's in circulation
1:41
out in the public
1:43
plus the reserves that banks carry they either carry those reserves as want cash
1:48
or they carry it as deposits at the federal reserve so the commercial banks
1:54
all have accounts at the Federal Reserve and so I want to take a look at the
1:58
reserves so of base currency when you deduct this is 3.9 trillion and you
2:05
deduct the currency that's in circulation basically two point six
2:08
trillion is held as reserves the total reserves at depository institutions is
2:16
2.5 to basically trillion that's at banks there's some reserves held
2:22
elsewhere I don't know where but the difference between this figure and this
2:27
figure is that this figure is a measurement of just what's in the banks
2:32
or in the bank's accounts at the Federal Reserve
2:36
now one thing that's it that's really interesting if you look at the total
2:40
reserves of depository institutions that I just threw their this in here because
2:45
I stumbled across this these are reserves that are non borrowed so
2:51
they're not owed back to they were they weren't whipped up a note back and the
2:56
only difference here is you see that it goes negative during that crisis of 2008
3:00
so all of this was borrowed the banks have to have a certain percentage of
3:06
these reserves are reserves that are against loans they used those in
3:12
fractional reserve banking they have to have a certain amount of dollars in the
3:17
vaults or on deposit with the Fed in order to create loans off of those
3:21
dollars that they have in reserve so the banks were basically bankrupt during the
3:29
crisis of 2008 and this shows it that they didn't have the reserves the
3:35
deposits to be able to pay this out and they had to borrow that from the Fed all
3:41
of this stuff that we're the banks went negative their banks were upside down
3:46
during the crisis of 2008 but to get back to this these are their required
3:52
reserve balances and of that 2.52 trillion only ninety billion is
4:05
currently ninety two point seven billion is currently required for the banks to
4:11
have that backing up the loans that they have created on top of this these the
4:18
required reserves that they have to have
4:20
have and then so if you deduct the required reserves from the reserves you
4:27
end up with excess reserves of depository institution so these are the
4:32
excess reserves that the banks have that they can actually pay out and this is is
4:38
2.3 6 2.37 trillion and I took this you know divided it by instead of using
4:49
to did last time m2 is the current broadest measure of the currency supply
4:55
but they used to publish before March of 2006 they published m3 and that was the
5:02
broadest measure of the currency supply and there's a couple of people that
5:07
calculate and three one of them is John Williams of shadow government statistics
5:12
i subscribe to his wit his services and right now he says that m3 stands at 17
5:20
trillion two hundred and forty billion so damn to that I was when I did these
5:27
calculations and the video a couple of weeks ago I was using m2 m2 is at 12
5:33
points something trillion I don't remember exactly what it was two weeks
5:37
ago but it was at 12 something trillion so this is taking the entire currency
5:43
supply the broadest measure is everybody went to all of the banks and brokerage
5:48
houses and asked for their currency and they wanted it in hundred dollar bills
5:54
how much could you get well if you take the excess reserves and if you take that
6:01
and divided by m3 there's actually about 13 cents it's closer to 14 13.7 cents
6:09
for every dollar that we have deposited that we could get back but you couldn't
6:15
get this back like tomorrow you couldn't go in there tomorrow or today and ask
6:20
for your currency and get that back because most of this is just digits that
6:26
are floating around in the computers of the Federal Reserve
6:29
these are most of this excess reserves is held in the commercial banks accounts
6:37
at the federal reserve so what I showed last time was vote cash in when I showed
6:43
it a couple of weeks ago it was 73 billion now in sixty 9.8 billion dollars
6:49
and that's because of this seasonality thing it peaks in January and then
6:56
starts to fall in these numbers are as of March we don't have the april numbers
7:01
yet because a this is a monthly chart in April isn't data is in the last time
7:07
that I compiled this it was as January in the last video so we're at sixty 9.8
7:14
except some of these this some of the dollars that are in the vaults are also
7:21
pledged against loans they were used to create fictitious dollars that didn't
7:27
exist when somebody signs their name to a mortgage or an auto loan or credit
7:32
card or any time that a bank is going to create currency through fare fractional
7:37
reserve lending some of the time they have to have dollars in the bank to back
7:44
up this loan that they are creating I say some of the time the reserve ratios
7:49
believe are 10 percent for the first three million that a bank loans and then
7:54
it drops to 3 percent for the next 73 million or something like that and then
7:59
after that there's no reserve they just get to create unlimited dollars and you
8:04
can find out the actual figures it's on the Fed's website here you just have to
8:08
poke around a bit but because some of this is pledged against loans it means
8:14
that in the end that is brought cash used to satisfy required reserves so the
8:23
69.8% three is pledged against loans that have been
8:32
made so it's used to satisfy these required reserves so if they wanted to
8:38
pay out any of these dollars what that means is that the bank that's paying it
8:43
out
8:44
would have to sell off the loans that are related to this cash used to satisfy
8:51
required reserves to another bank or they would have to call in the loan
8:56
which contracts the currency supply this deflationary that is what was happening
9:01
during the great depression banks were paying out cash and they had to do so
9:06
they had to contract their phones their loan book so what's left over
9:12
shares vault cash surplus these are the dollars in the vaults of the banks that
9:18
they can pay out two day against people coming in closing their accounts or
9:25
asking for some of their actual cash in $100 bills and such and so there's
9:30
actually only ten billion five hundred million that the banks can pay out
9:36
against 17.24 trillion m3 and that means that if you don't want to wait for the
9:45
Federal Reserve I mean you can wait for these excess reserves right here they've
9:53
got these reserves in deposits at the Federal Reserve Banks and the banks can
10:00
withdraw this and pay that out in $100 bills but how long is it gonna take the
10:06
Bureau of Engraving to print 2.3 67 trillion dollars worth of $100 bills its
10:14
thats I don't know if that measures in months or years of running the printing
10:19
press but what they actually have to pay out today or tomorrow is just the 10.5
10:27
15 billion and that means that for every dollar that you have in the bank
10:35
there is actually
10:41
dollars so that's other words there's six cents for every $100 of deposits
10:51
that you have at the bank they can actually pay out six cents worth of cash
10:57
on $100 and so has my friend Dennis Miller says the Federal Reserve Bank the
11:04
only reserve they've got is they reserve the right to print because that's what
11:09
they're going to have to do if you actually want some of your cash but what
11:14
they would do before that is they would probably try to make cash illegal so
11:20
that's it for this video if you felt that you got something out of this the
11:24
education and so on please like this video and share it with anybody that you
11:30
can thank you very much we'll see you next time



The Financial Armageddon Economic Collapse Blog tracks trends and forecasts , futurists , visionaries , free investigative journalists , researchers , Whistelblowers , truthers and many more

No comments:

Post a Comment