Thereâs a 10% chance this happensâbut you NEED to be prepared. [RiskHedge Report] [Stephen McBride]
The nightmare banking scenario you must prepare for By Stephen McBride - RiskHedge Silicon Valley Bank was just the beginning⦠$620 billion in âunrealizedâ losses⦠The US governmentâs dangerous new precedent⦠Trade your dollars for these two assetsâ¦Â If your bank fails, youâll be bailed out. BUT⦠Todayâs essay isnât about a new disruptor. Or artificial intelligence upending Americaâs most broken industries. Itâs about something much more urgent. As Iâll show you... Thereâs a small but real chance dozens of US banks go belly-up in the coming weeks. And what follows would destroy the value of your hard-earned savings unlike anything weâve seen over the past few decades. Iâll lay out the facts and let you be the judge. Iâll also show you the two best investments you can make to guard against this risk. - There are more âSilicon Valley Banksâ lurking in the shadows. In 2022, the US Federal Reserve hiked interest rates at its fastest pace ever, clobbering bond prices. This led to the downfall of Silicon Valley Bank (SVB)âAmericaâs 16th-largest bankâearlier this month. SVB loaded up on US Treasurys when interest rates were at historic lows. But when rates surged, its bond portfolio took a beating. Unfortunately, SVB isnât alone. Americaâs banks are sitting on $620 billion in âunrealizedâ losses. In other words, if they sold these bonds today, theyâd be more than half a trillion dollars in the red. SVB racked up $17 billion in unrealized losses. This wasnât a problem until customers started pulling their cash. As soon as they did, SVB was forced to sell bonds to ârealizeâ these losses, sending it into a death spiral. Today, dozens more US banks are nursing huge losses and hoping depositors donât come calling for their money. A Fed report from September 2022 shows 333 community banks may be short on cash to pay back depositors. Thatâs a massive jump from the four troubled banks it identified a year earlier. - This warning sign is flashing âDANGERâ for US banks. Ever hear of the Fedâs âdiscount window?â Itâs a system which allows banks to borrow money straight from the US central bank. Banks only use the discount window when theyâre really strapped for cash. Thatâs because itâs expensive. The Fed currently charges 4.5% to borrow from its discount window. Last week, banks borrowed $152 billion through the discount window. Thatâs an all-time record. In fact, itâs more money than the Fed lent to banks during the 2008 financial crisis: Source: Bloomberg This doesnât mean US banks are insolvent. It tells us theyâre tapping the Fed for record amounts of cash to make sure theyâre not the next SVB. - Stephen, are you telling me weâre headed for another financial crisis? I doubt weâre headed for another â2008.â But my research suggests thereâs a roughly 10% chance dozens of smaller, regional banks go bust over the coming weeks. Those seem like low odds, and they are. But the consequences are severe enough that you must be prepared. - The US government has backed itself into a corner. It guaranteed all Silicon Valley Bank deposits, which set a dangerous new precedent. FDIC insurance, which was capped to $250K per account, is now essentially unlimited. This is not codified into law (yet). But in rescuing SVB, the government saved many Silicon Valley millionaires from losing their deposits. I assure you it will do the same if, say, the Farmerâs Bank of Kansas implodes. Co-founder of RiskHedge: "This is the surest, easiest-to-follow, and quickest-to-get-started way to beat the market with your core portfolio Iâve found. And it works particularly well in highly uncertain markets like weâre seeing today." [Click to discover more about the strategy and how this little-known way of investing produced 302% returns in the worst markets of our lifetimes.]( (Monthly subscriptions available.) A new line in the sand has been drawn. Uncle Sam will backstop every deposit from every bank in every state. Donât worry about losing your money in a good old-fashioned bank run anymore. Hereâs the real risk⦠The US government prints so much money bailing out banks it torches the value of your hard-earned savings. In other words, youâre guaranteed to get your money back. But those dollars will be worth a lot less than before. This sounds radical. But itâs simply pouring gasoline on an already blazing fire. The Fedâs own numbers show the mighty dollar lost roughly one-third of its value since bailing out Wall Street in 2008: The Fed already printed $540 billion in the last two weeks to save a handful of banks. And as I showed you, more dominos might fall. I wouldnât be surprised if the âtabâ exceeds $1 trillion. - Itâs time to get out of US dollars. To be clear, I hope my scenario is wrong. I hope no more US banks go belly-up. And odds are, this crisis will pass without exploding into a full-blown banking meltdown that rapidly devalues the US dollar. But the chances of this happening are higher now than at any point since 2008. So I recommend making two âasymmetricâ investmentsâsmall bets that can pay off big if we spiral into a nightmare banking crisis. Itâs time to buy some bitcoin (or Ethereum) and gold. Why? They both exist outside of the banking system. Youâre not relying on some Wall Street bank to keep your gold or crypto safe. You can buy physical gold and hold bitcoin in your own private âhardwareâ wallet. If the banking system goes bust, those assets will still be in your possession. Most important, the Fed canât decide to print more gold or bitcoin, like it can with US dollars. Bitcoin surged roughly 40% since SVB went bust on March 10. Gold has jumped roughly 7%. It briefly crossed $2,000/ounce this week, and is a hair from all-time highs. Regardless of what happens with banks, my research suggests crypto and gold are poised to outperform this year. Stephen McBride
Chief Analyst, RiskHedge P.S. What other methods are you using to protect your portfolio right now? Let me know at stephen@riskhedge.com. In the mailbag⦠Readers are still talking about our RiskHedge Report on [ChatGPT and the death of college](. Hereâs what a few of your fellow subscribers had to say: Thank you for the wonderful, insightful post on the disruption of university education, Stephen. As a former educatorâI taught one of the practical subjects: chemical engineeringâI had finally had enough when I realized the universityâs edict was to âretainâ as many students as possible, even though many were not very prepared for university courses, didnât want to study engineering, or did not want to put in the time and effort to learn it. Education should be available to everyone who is willing to work hard and learn, not just those who are willing to sign loan papers. I beg your readers to be very selective when choosing a university with their kids. Be sure to ask: âWhere are the BOTTOM 50% of this yearâs graduating class working right now. What are their job titles? What was their average starting salary, and how does this compare to the national average for college graduates earning the same degree?â If the department representatives cannot answer these questions or give a vague answer, that tells you the university does not truly value job placement. I sincerely hope ChatGPT can take the place of and outperform traditional university teaching someday, as it can give opportunity to those who want it. âMarina John said: I think in-person teaching will need to continue for professions which involve injury risk, specifically medical and engineering. There are things that can only be learned by doing, and most traditional engineering/medical falls into that category. Can the memorization courses be automated? Yes. It is interesting, as Iâm thinking about a MS in electrical engineering, which is remote and is very inexpensive from a top 10 university. Much cheaper than moving to a city, trying to find a job, and having to commute to campus each day. âJohn And hereâs Chrisâs take [on the collapse of SVB](: I could not agree more about the Silicon Valley mess before us. I always wondered how these start-ups could get funding when they never made any money... and were not GOING to make any money in the near future. I started and operated three successful businesses during my life and the only way I received loans was with collateral... and usually one to two times the value of the loan I wanted. I hope [thereâs a] real lesson learned for the hoodie generation that "profit" is an essential element in running a successful business... and not at the expense of some hard-working individualsâ pension money. âChris Suggested Reading... [Savvy Income
or High Yield Trap:
Mailbag Edition](
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