Winner Takes All: The Super Priority Status of Derivatives [View all]
Winner Takes All: The Super Priority Status of Derivatives
Posted on Apr 10, 2013
By Ellen Brown, Web of Debt
This article first appeared at Web of Debt.
Cyprus-style confiscation of depositor funds has been called the new normal. Bail-in policies are appearing in multiple countries directing failing TBTF banks to convert the funds of unsecured creditors into capital; and those creditors, it turns out, include ordinary depositors. Even secured creditors, including state and local governments, may be at risk. Derivatives have super-priority status in bankruptcy, and Dodd Frank precludes further taxpayer bailouts. In a big derivatives bust, there may be no collateral left for the creditors who are next in line.
Shock waves went around the world when the IMF, the EU, and the ECB not only approved but mandated the confiscation of depositor funds to bail in two bankrupt banks in Cyprus. A bail in is a quantum leap beyond a bail out. When governments are no longer willing to use taxpayer money to bail out banks that have gambled away their capital, the banks are now being instructed to recapitalize themselves by confiscating the funds of their creditors, turning debt into equity, or stock; and the creditors include the depositors who put their money in the bank thinking it was a secure place to store their savings.
The Cyprus bail-in was not a one-off emergency measure but was consistent with similar policies already in the works for the US, UK, EU, Canada, New Zealand, and Australia, as detailed in my earlier articles (hyperlinks at link below). Too big to fail now trumps all. Rather than banks being put into bankruptcy to salvage the deposits of their customers, the customers will now be put into bankruptcy to save the banks.
Why Derivatives Threaten Your Bank Account
The big risk behind all this is the massive $230 trillion derivatives boondoggle managed by US banks. Derivatives are sold as a kind of insurance for managing profits and risk; but as Satyajit Das points out in
Extreme Money, they actually increase risk to the system as a whole. ......................(more)
The complete piece is at:
http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/winner_takes_all_the_super_priority_status_of_derivatives_20130410/