How to Not Stop a Bank Run

In the US, when a bank fails the FDIC swoops in to take control.  Often arriving on a Friday, a bank that cannot meet its obligations is often completely re-organized and recapitalized over the weekend and opens for business on Monday as if nothing happened.  The executives are pushed out to the street and new management is found, often another bank that can take over as soon as possible.  They’ve done this 30 times so far this year. It’s all paid for by insurance premiums paid over categories of risk at all banks across the US.

In Europe, they don’t have such a mechanism.  They have something called “Emergency Liquidity Assisitance” (ELA) which is run through the central banks of the member nations.  No one knows which banks are getting this money, and the executives to run them as usual.  The exact amount has been buried in the balance sheets of the European Central Bank (ECB) as “other claims”, so we don’t even know how much it is.  But as money flees Greece and some other nations there’s a whole lot more “other” floating through Europe.  And the secrecy shows just what’s wrong with a banking system set up by and for bankers.

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The Reset Button

What will it take to solve the Euro crisis?  It’s an important question because no one professes to have the actual answer for the long term.  Injecting €100B or so into Spanish banks does nothing more than buy time – the real problem is that they cannot service the debt they have now or in the foreseeable future.  Ditto for Greece, which would prefer to grow its way out of the problem but does not have an economy that is capable of doing this.

So what is the solution?  There may not be one in Europe or anywhere else.  In other words, collapse may be inevitable.  It’s worth looking at this worst-case scenario not just to prepare for it somehow, but because it suggests that eventually we’re going to have to push a big, red button labeled RESET.

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Bad News is Good News

Bad news is good news, at least in stock markets around the world.  If that doesn’t make any sense, you’re far from alone.  But you are on the wrong side of the most important trend around the world right now, which is the fine art of printing (and eventually incinerating) money.

In the last 4 years, central banks in 4 of the 6 largest currency zones (Euro, US, Japan, and UK) have literally printed about $6 trillion, or 5 weeks worth of total production in those places.  Markets are excited by the fact that things look so weak that they are about to print even more.

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What is Google?

What is google?  If the first thing that comes to mind is “search engine”, you’re not alone – nor far from the mark.  96% of their $38B in revenue last year came from web searches.  Years of fairly intense competition from Bing, Yahoo, and a lot of others hasn’t really dented their position at all.

If you take a closer look at where google gets its money, it’s nothing more than placing ads in those searches.  After all the hype about the online world the business model for google – and facebook – is not significantly different than the one developed about 150 years ago for newspapers and duplicated as broadcast technologies were developed.  The only difference is that google is in the business of curation, or using other people’s content rather than developing their own.

My hunch is that William Randolph Hearst would be impressed, but should anyone else?  Not given the threat by mobile devices spurred in part by google itself.  Google’s biz – curation for profit – has one really big enemy to deal with, and that is google.

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The Big Parade

At the end of a sticky day in June the excitement will bubble over and fill the halls of Expo Elementary.  It’s the last day of school and the kids are ready to burst through the concrete walls and into the summer.  But first, there is a great ritual that has to take place – all the sixth graders line up and march in one long parade through the school, high-fiving and smiling through the shouts of those who will be back.

My son George, my youngest, is in that parade today.  After 11 years of greeting my kids at the end of every day as I came to pick them up, my time as an Expo parent is coming to an end.  I will miss the place because it taught me a lot, too.

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