In a nutshell, what actually happened in Cyprus was that the banks - TopicsExpress



          

In a nutshell, what actually happened in Cyprus was that the banks were overleveraged and the size of the liabilities of the banks exceeded the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) of the entire country of Cyprus. Given the fact that the "bail outs" of the large banks in 2008 were so politically unpopular, the European "troika" imposed a "bail in", where customers with savings accounts were to have some of their savings seized (read: stolen) in order to stabilize the banks. The losses to some accounts were as high as 60%. The banks were closed for 12 days, so people had no access to their money and once the banks reopened, they had only limited access to their money in order to protect the banks. Was this plan by the "troika", just a one-time event or was this something more? It turns out that this eventuality had actually been planned in advance in 2012 at the G20 Financial Stability Board in Basel Switzerland where the US FDIC and the Bank of England created a joint paper outlining a confiscation scheme. Under the FDIC/BOE joint paper, accounts of $250,000 or less could be seized by the failing bank and converted to stock equity as part of a "bail in" scheme. The stock would of course be essentially worthless because the bank has already failed. There is also a plan to confiscate savings in New Zealand if necessary to save the banks. Canada also has a confiscation plan in the wings should their banks falter. The European Union has just reached an agreement where shareholders and depositors will be tapped to "bail in" any bank in trouble. opednews/articles/How-Many-Warnings-Do-You-N-by-Rudy-Avizius-130630-489.html?show=votes#allcomments
Posted on: Mon, 01 Jul 2013 07:41:18 +0000

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