Monday, May 01, 2023

As I see it: Banking failure of First Republic

  

 

An admission: Economics is not my strong suit. With that out of the way I still think I and everyone else too can have an opinion even on things in which they are not expert. The latest Vesuvian eruption to send out the messenger of fear into the body politic is today's announcement of the First Republic Bank's collapse. This bank was rated one of America's best banks months before. If we measure bank failures by the 1929 Great Depression yardstick it catapults us into a depressive state of fear and anxiety. Nothing so far has reached the devastating depressive effect of 1929. Still, it does not mean that when the economic waves of insecurity strike in the form of bank failures that we should not worry at all. The failure of First Republic Bank still wreaks havoc with some of the ships at sea. After all, it was not that long ago that the 2008 economic collapse concerned me and many others too. Banks were overextended then, to say the least, in handing out a plethora of bad mortgages which the buyers could not repay.

Why is this happening? Why can we never be 100% secure that the banks are monitored to within an inch of their life so that they will never overextend themselves again to ensure we will no longer get a surprise that banks were slovenly over extended and that First Republic Bank's slipshod bookkeeping could not be at fault because the Federal government took care of that in 2008 so that this nation never again would have faulty unbalanced ledger sheets. Think again.
The great ideological divide is that conservatives are loath to government intervention of, well, nearly everything especially things financial but progressives since FDR think in certain very threatening occurrences the government should and must come to the rescue. I believe there is a place for government when self monitoring fails.

Coupled with Republican intransigence of raising the debt ceiling that could catapult the US into the thicket of economic ruin the times are worrisome. Jaime Diamond, the CEO of J.P Morgan Trust, bought out First Republic. He said the nation's banking system is solid. Should we take his word for it? As I see it, I think not.

NOT ANYMORE

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