|
|
|
|
|
by vkou
1200 days ago
|
|
> But the real question is, of those $1 trillion in assets, how much did people actually lose, and how much did either the FDIC or a taking-over bank cover? Anybody have that number? Zero. Since the FDIC was founded, no depositor has lost a dollar of deposits in an FDIC-insured institution. There are some non-deposit things that, if you squinted, looked a bit like deposits, and people have lost out on those. |
|
It is correct that no depositor has ever lost a penny of FDIC-insured deposits. This is excellent for the average person, as the average normally-employed person isn’t the one worrying about losing large piles of money.
Uninsured deposits is an entirely different ball of wax. In the case of IndyMac for example, of the ~$19B in deposits, roughly ~$1B was uninsured. This was out of ~$32B AUM. I’m not sure what haircut was taken on uninsured deposits, nor other instruments. FDIC’s Sheila Behr has spoken about the receivership of IndyMac in the past and has said that the FDIC’s reserve took about a $9B hit to deal with IndyMac.