Originally Posted by BigBeauford:
They will cover $250k, but only about $20B of their $170B is insured/protected. The company was scrambling to pull their money out, but $50B might be just gone.
Regardless, HOPEFULLY they didn't tank so quickly that their assets are dramatically lower than deposits. That article says they had about $209B in assets vs. $175B in deposits as of December, so presumably people won't lose their asses TOO badly once everything gets liquidated and distributed. Could be messy during that process, though. [Reply]
Regardless, HOPEFULLY they didn't tank so quickly that their assets are dramatically lower than deposits. That article says they had about $209B in assets vs. $175B in deposits as of December, so presumably people won't lose their asses TOO badly once everything gets liquidated and distributed. Could be messy during that process, though.
Ultimately, hopefully another bank can take over the assets and liabilities with minimal exposure to clients. But that does very little in terms of meeting cash flow requirements for a business [Reply]
Regardless, HOPEFULLY they didn't tank so quickly that their assets are dramatically lower than deposits. That article says they had about $209B in assets vs. $175B in deposits as of December, so presumably people won't lose their asses TOO badly once everything gets liquidated and distributed. Could be messy during that process, though.
No, talking about the friend's company. Their CFO was there at the 11th hour trying to pull all their money out. [Reply]
They had to raise 2.25 billion to shore up their balance sheet but no investor was willing to help. Banks make money off of interest rates. If interest rates are high, people don’t wanna take out loans and therefore banks don’t make money [Reply]
So 250K if the deposits would be covered. So the 97.3% is the percentage of deposits not fully insured, not 97.3% of total deposited funds are not insured.
I think.
Still fucking bad.
Jesus. I’m getting the shakes just thinking about losing the miniscual amount I have uncovered. [Reply]
Originally Posted by DaFace:
I suspect you're hearing some hyperbolic numbers here. Lockheed Martin only has ~$50B in assets, and they're not exactly a "small startup."
Christ, I've been saying Billion, it's million not billion. Sorry for the accidental hyperbole. [Reply]