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by nhaehnle
4151 days ago
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1 & 2 basically elaborates on what I said ;) And no, FDIC protection intentionally protects deposits at bad banks. This is not an accident. Trying to put the burden of evaluating what a bad bank is onto regular people is not going to end well, so you guarantee deposits at all banks, full stop. Besides: Deposit insurance for deposits at good banks is pretty pointless, don't you think? It would never be used by definition. |
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My point is just that a good bank can still have a run in the absence of the FDIC guarantee.
Let's say a bank has $100 million in deposits. They keep $10 million in liquid assets, and lend out $90 million in un-securitized loans to local businesses. There's a false market rumor of something bad happening at the bank, and all of a sudden $20 million in depositors want their money back. The bank isn't able to resell the loans quick enough on the secondary market to make up for the shortfall. This could happen.
The FDIC guarantee protects the bank because there's no longer a need to have the run - everyone will get paid.