Would
you really like to know what's going on? Do you think you can
handle some truth? Are you finally ready to listen?
These banks are not failing. They are being picked up by
hostile take overs from other, more powerful, banks. A hostile take over
occures when a firm is near bankruptcy and the sell out price is dirt cheap.
Bigger firms come in and offer them just enough money for them to cover their
debts. Their bills get paid and bankruptcy has been avoided. Hostile as in
"Sell us the bank or live in poverty the rest of your life"!
But who on earth could afford this kind of money? Well duh!
Who's name's have been all over my post for the last few years now? Do
these names ring a bell? Rothschild, Rockefeller, JP Morgan, Chase
Manhattan, Chertoff, Elizabeth II, Kissinger, bla, bla, bla.
And what do all of these people have in common? Oh, come on
now. Surly Ron Paul told you allll about these guys. They all either belong
to The Council on Foreign Relations or they run The Council on Foreign
Relations. You know. The NWO guys. Guess which over seas private firm is
manipulating these buy outs. Yer good ol buddies at the Federal Reserve. Ta
Daaa! What you say? You didn't know the FR was privately owned? Why not?
Didn't your good ol' politician buddies tell you about this? What about
your TV? Didn't Fox News tell you about this?
Oh! By the way. Guess how much all these Zion Jews are worth.
Ready? Ten quadrillion dollars!!! This is no typo. This is no mistake.
In fact, it's a very conservative estimate.
$10,000,000,000,000,000.00 and groooowing!
Pissed off yet?
Pol’i.ti’cian n. One addicted to, or actively
engaged in, politics as managed by parties; often one primarily interested in
political offices or the profits from them as a source of private gain.
Webster’s New Collegiate Dictionary.
Let me issue and control a Nation's currency and I care not who makes its
Laws
- Amselm Meyer Rothschild
The difference between the Jewish soul ... and the soul of all the
Gentiles ... is greater and deeper than the difference between the soul of a
man and the soul of an animal.
Rabbi Avraham Yitzhak HaCohen Kook (1865-1935)
"We are on the verge of a global transformation. All we need is the
right major crisis and the nations will accept the New World Order. "
- David Rockefeller
"Oil is much too important a commodity to be left in the hands of
the Arabs."
- Henry Kissinger
We will have a world government whether you like it or not. The only
question is whether that government will be achieved by conquest or
consent." Jewish Banker Paul Warburg, February 17, 1950, as he testified
before the U.S. Senate
"Don't worry about congress. We can take care of congress."
- David Rothschild
WaMu becomes
biggest bank to fail in US history
By
MADLEN READ, AP Business Writer 23 minutes ago
NEW
YORK - As the debate over a $700 billion bank bailout rages on in Washington,
one of the nation's largest banks — Washington Mutual Inc. — has collapsed
under the weight of its enormous bad bets on the mortgage market.
The
Federal Deposit Insurance
Corp. seized WaMu on Thursday, and then sold the thrift's
banking assets to JPMorgan
Chase & Co. for $1.9 billion.
Seattle-based
WaMu, which was founded in 1889, is the largest bank to fail by far in the
country's history. Its $307 billion in assets eclipse the $40 billion of Continental Illinois National Bank,
which failed in 1984, and the $32 billion of IndyMac, which the government
seized in July.
One
positive is that the sale of WaMu's assets to JPMorgan Chase prevents the thrift's
collapse from depleting the FDIC's insurance fund. But that detail is likely
to give only marginal solace to Americans facing tighter lending and watching
their stock portfolios plunge in the wake of the nation's most momentous
financial crisis since the Great
Depression.
Because
of WaMu's souring mortgages and other risky debt, JPMorgan plans to write down WaMu's loan
portfolio by about $31 billion — a figure that could change if the government
goes through with its bailout plan and JPMorgan decides to take advantage of
it.
"We're
in favor of what the government is doing, but we're not relying on what the
government is doing. We would've done it anyway," JPMorgan's Chief
Executive Jamie Dimon
said in a conference call Thursday night, referring to the acquisition. Dimon
said he does not know if JPMorgan will take advantage of the bailout.
WaMu
is JPMorgan Chase's second acquisition this year of a major financial institution hobbled by
losing bets on mortgages. In March, JPMorgan bought the investment bank Bear Stearns Cos.
for about $1.4 billion, plus another $900 million in stock ahead of the deal
to secure it.
JPMorgan
Chase is now the second-largest bank in the United States after Bank of America Corp.,
which recently bought Merrill
Lynch in a flurry of events that included Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.
going bankrupt and American
International Group Inc., the world's largest insurer, getting
taken over by the government.
JPMorgan
also said Thursday it plans to sell $8 billion in common stock to raise
capital.
The
downfall of WaMu has been widely anticipated for some time because of the
company's heavy mortgage-related losses. As investors grew nervous about the
bank's health, its stock price plummeted 95 percent from a 52-week high of
$36.47 to its close of $1.69 Thursday. On Wednesday, it suffered a ratings
downgrade by Standard
& Poor's that put it in danger of collapse.
WaMu
"was under severe liquidity pressure," FDIC Chairman Sheila Bair told reporters
in a conference call.
"For
all depositors and other customers of Washington Mutual Bank, this is simply a combination
of two banks," Bair said in a statement. "For bank customers, it
will be a seamless transition. There will be no interruption in services and
bank customers should expect business as usual come Friday morning."
Besides
JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo
& Co., Citigroup
Inc., HSBC,
Spain's Banco Santander
and Toronto-Dominion Bank of Canada were also reportedly possible suitors.
WaMu was believed to be talking to private equity firms as well.
The
seizure by the government means shareholders' equity in WaMu was wiped
out. The deal leaves private equity investors including the firm TPG Capital,
which led a $7 billion cash infusion in the bank this spring, on the
sidelines empty handed.
WaMu
ran into trouble after it got caught up in the once-booming subprime mortgage business.
Troubles then spread to other parts of WaMu's home loan portfolio, namely its
"option" adjustable-rate
mortgage loans. Option ARM loans offer very low
introductory payments and let borrowers defer some interest payments until
later years. The bank stopped originating those loans in June.
Problems
in WaMu's home loan
business began to surface in 2006, when the bank reported that
the division lost $48 million, compared with net income of about $1 billion in 2005.
At
the start of 2007, following the release of the company's annual financial
report, then-CEO Kerry
Killinger said the bank had prepared for a slowdown in its
housing business by sharply reducing its subprime mortgage lending and servicing
of loans. Alan H. Fishman, the former president and chief operating officer
of Sovereign Bank
and president and CEO of Independence Community Bank, replaced Killinger
earlier this month.
As
more borrowers became delinquent on their mortgages, WaMu worked to help
troubled customers refinance their loans as a way to avoid default and
foreclosure, committing $2 billion to the effort last April. But that proved
to be too little, too late.
At
the same time, fears of growing credit problems kept investors from
purchasing debt backed by those loans, drying up a source of cash flow for
banks that made subprime loans.
In
December, WaMu said it would shutter its subprime lending business and reduce
expenses with layoffs and a dividend cut.
The
bank in July reported a $3 billion second-quarter loss — the biggest in its
history — as it boosted its reserves to more than $8 billion to cover losses
on bad loans. Over the last three quarters, it added $10.9 billion to its
loan-loss provisions.
JPMorgan Chase said it was not acquiring any senior unsecured debt,
subordinated debt, and preferred stock of WaMu's banks, or any assets or
liabilities of the holding company, Washington Mutual Inc. JPMorgan also said
it will not take on the lawsuits facing the holding company.
JPMorgan
Chase said the acquisition will give it 5,400 branches in 23 states, and that
it plans to close less than 10 percent of the two companies' branches.
The
WaMu acquisition would add 50 cents per share to JPMorgan's earnings in 2009,
the bank said, adding that it expects to have pretax merger costs of
approximately $1.5 billion while achieving pretax savings of approximately
$1.5 billion by 2010.
"This
is a definite win for JPMorgan," said Sebastian Hindman, an analyst at
SNL Financial, who said JPMorgan should be able to shoulder the $31 billion
writedown to WaMu's portfolio.
KILL THE BEST
GENTILES
Tob Shebbe
Goyim Harog
James W. Von
Brunn
440 pg Down
Loadable
$10
Inquire within
|