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The Day I Got Fired

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energyandcapital.com

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Tue, Feb 11, 2020 07:13 PM

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Banks are a protected class in this country. Any laws written to restrain them are quietly softened

Banks are a protected class in this country. Any laws written to restrain them are quietly softened and overturned after the crisis has passed. It is the only industry outside of health care and higher education that hasn’t been hit by the hard, face slap of creative destruction. But change is happening fast… Banks are a protected class in this country. Any laws written to restrain them are quietly softened and overturned after the crisis has passed. It is the only industry outside of health care and higher education that hasn’t been hit by the hard, face slap of creative destruction. But change is happening fast… [Energy and Capital logo] The Day I Got Fired [Christian DeHaemer Photo] By [Christian DeHaemer]( Written Feb. 11, 2020 I was happy the day I got fired from Caldor. A few months later, I was even more stoked when the manager at Price Chopper stuck out her pudgy mitt and demanded my name badge. After all, I had a giant FU card in my pocket. As a high schooler, I could always go home and eat mama's cooking and sit on the same couch I did the year before. I didn't need that job. Heck, the point of investing is to gain back that FU card you might have had as a teenager, tell your boss where to stick it, and go do what you want. But this story is only tangentially related to investing, or cooking for that matter. No. It's about theft. After the inglorious start to my career, I landed a third job as a greenskeeper at the Edison Club in upstate New York. It turns out I was much better at raking leaves, planting flowers, and manicuring greens than I ever was at dealing with the public. [“Hands down, this is the fastest way to make money I’ve ever seen!”]( [What’s behind this fence]( topped with barbed wire and crawling with security could be the biggest, most lucrative call Nick Hodge has EVER made. But you need to hurry: once the news breaks on this, Nick says it could accelerate fast. To get all of the details on how you could make a fast 2300% gain, [go here now.]( Cinderella Story In fact, I flourished. When the boss was spying from the bushes to see if we were doing our jobs, I was. Soon, I got a raise from $3.35 to $4 an hour and a new job driving the massive tractors that mowed the fairways. Times were good. I opened a bank account and started depositing some of my paycheck after blowing the rest on beater cars, girls, and rock concerts at the SPAC. Then one day, I had my eye on a killer Sony two-deck boombox. The $150 saved at the bank through hard work and thriftiness would be just enough. Except, when I went to the mall to retrieve my hard-earned cash, the bank said I didn’t have the $150. Despite the fact that it was carefully tabulated in my check ledger, there was only $135 left. It seems that my account was below the bank's threshold, and it had charged me $15, a day's labor, for the crime of trusting them. I was pissed. Righteous indignation burst forth like the fires from hell. This was outright theft, highway robbery, in America no less... Squaring my shoulders and fronting a stern bearing, I demanded the rest of the money that instant. And the teller smirked slightly and said, “No, you can’t have your money as your account hasn’t been open for more than six months.” What? The lesson I learned that day is that if you put money in banks, they will steal it. And they do. In 2016, Wells Fargo (NYSE: WFG) stole the most money in history by opening two million fake accounts. According to USA Today, Wells Fargo: - Opened millions of unauthorized accounts and enrolled customers into online banking services without their knowledge or consent. - Improperly referred customers for enrollment in third-party renters and life insurance policies. - Improperly charged auto loan customers for force-placed and unnecessary collateral protection insurance. - Failed to ensure that customers received refunds of unearned premiums on some optional auto finance products. - Incorrectly charged customers for mortgage rate lock extension fees. And no one went to jail. Not one person. In fact, quite the opposite — Wells Fargo CEO John Stumpf walked away with a $130 million golden parachute. Tar and Feathers Lets face it; banks are a protected class in this country. Any laws written to restrain them are quietly softened and overturned after the crisis has passed. It is the only industry outside of health care and higher education that hasn’t been hit by the hard, face slap of creative destruction. Artificial Intelligence Comes to Your Local Power Plant If you install this system on any power generator, you will boost your electrical production by as much as 10%. If you installed it in China’s Three Gorges Dam, the energy production boost could power Philadelphia. The company that owns this technology along with all the patents is just now starting to roll its amazing innovation out to consumers through commercial partnerships. Nobody knows its name yet, but soon, its tech could be in every single electric car, hydroelectric plant, and high-speed train produced. Don’t wait for this to wind up on the cover of the Wall Street Journal. [Click here to get in on the ground floor...]( For those who don’t know, in economics, creative destruction is the idea that long-standing practices will be swept away in order to clear the path for innovation. Sometimes called Schumpeter’s Gale, it was first coined by Austrian economist Joseph Schumpeter in 1942. Classic examples are the automobile industry destroying the buggy whip manufacturers. A more recent example is Netflix eviscerating Blockbuster. However, due to its protected class and “rent seeker” regulations, the banking industry has managed to hold onto its “screw the customer” ethos for the entire internet age. That said, change is happening fast. Banks are stuck in their balance sheet mindset of mortgages, loans, and credit cards, thinking that customers need them more than they do. But real people care about other things like getting paid, buying lunch, an easy payment experience, and not getting screwed on a daily basis. That’s why the growth in fintech is huge. Companies like Monzo, Revolut, and N26 are booming. One digital bank startup called Chime quadrupled in valuation to $5.8 billion in less than a year as it has taken on the megabanks. Just last month, Visa agreed to buy Plaid, a fintech company that connects users’ bank accounts to apps and services, for $5.3 billion. $5.3 billion! That's for some basic software written by a pair of 20-somethings. That’s the type of value we are seeing in [these fintech companies](. Fintech is the next big growth sector. It is what I am buying personally, and it is what I am telling my readers to buy. [Click here to get the free report](. [Christian DeHaemer Signature] Christian DeHaemer [[follow basic]@TheDailyHammer on Twitter]( Since 1995, Christian DeHaemer has specialized in frontier market opportunities. He has traveled extensively and invested in places as varied as Cuba, Mongolia, and Kenya. Chris believes the best way to make money is to get there first with the most. Christian is the founder of [Bull and Bust Report]( and an editor at [Energy and Capital](. For more on Christian, see his editor's [page](. Enjoy reading this article? [Click here]( to like it and receive similar articles to read! Browse Our Archives [How Leaky Is Your Bucket?]( [The Contactless Payment System Revolution]( [Playing the Long Game With Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA)]( [Is It Time to Buy Oil?]( [Too Big to Grow]( --------------------------------------------------------------- This email was sent to {EMAIL}. It is not our intention to send email to anyone who doesn't want it. If you're not sure why you've received this e-letter, or no longer wish to receive it, you may [unsubscribe here](, and view our privacy policy and information on how to manage your subscription. To ensure that you receive future issues of Energy and Capital, please add newsletter@energyandcapital.com to your address book or whitelist within your spam settings. For customer service questions or issues, please contact us for assistance. [Energy and Capital](, Copyright © 2020, [Angel Publishing LLC](. All rights reserved. 111 Market Place #720 Baltimore, MD 21202. The content of this site may not be redistributed without the express written consent of Angel Publishing. Individual editorials, articles and essays appearing on this site may be republished, but only with full attribution of both the author and Energy and Capital as well as a link to www.energyandcapital.com. Your privacy is important to us -- we will never rent or sell your e-mail or personal information. Please read our [Privacy Policy](. No statement or expression of opinion, or any other matter herein, directly or indirectly, is an offer or the solicitation of an offer to buy or sell the securities or financial instruments mentioned. While we believe the sources of information to be reliable, we in no way represent or guarantee the accuracy of the statements made herein. [Energy and Capital]( does not provide individual investment counseling, act as an investment advisor, or individually advocate the purchase or sale of any security or investment. The publisher, editors and consultants of Angel Publishing may actively trade in the investments discussed in this publication. They may have substantial positions in the securities recommended and may increase or decrease such positions without notice. Neither the publisher nor the editors are registered investment advisors. Subscribers should not view this publication as offering personalized legal or investment counseling. Investments recommended in this publication should be made only after consulting with your investment advisor and only after reviewing the prospectus or financial statements of the company in question.

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