ECON [FINANCE] 2023 Banking Crisis DEATHBURGER Thread 2023.2.0 will UBS actually eat Credit Suisse before the Open???

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The Hammer

Has No Life - Lives on TB
If Trump is arrested watch what the left hand is doing while both the left and the right are glued to the TV for the spectacle. Great time for another bank failure or two to be announced on the crawler at the bottom of the screen.
They don't really need a distraction from the bank failures, if they can claim it's contained and everything is fine. Might not even need to give it much air time.

It's how they cover everything now - downplay or don't report at all if it's problematic.
 

SmithJ

Veteran Member
First Republic Bank now down 48%


First Republic BankFRC:NYSE​

EXPORT
download chart

WATCHLIST+
LIVE Watch live logo CLOSING BELL
RT Quote | Last NYSE Arca, VOL From CTA | USD
Last | 3:36 PM EDT
11.91
quote price arrow down
-11.12 (-48.28%)
A month ago it was $122.00 a share. Now its less than $12.00

Some people have lost a LOT of money
 

Blacknarwhal

Let's Go Brandon!
Meanwhile Warren Buffett wants to buy a bank.

Fair use cited so on and so forth.


Ally Financial gains amid vague Buffett takeover speculation​


Mar. 20, 2023 10:21 AM ETAlly Financial Inc. (ALLY)BRK.A, BRK.BBy: Joshua Fineman, SA News Editor43 Comments

Ally Financial (NYSE:ALLY) rose 8.4% amid some vague takeover speculation that Warren Buffett would make a logical buyer.


Ally Financial (ALLY) could be a potential target for billionaire Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.B), Gordon Haskett said in passing in a note on Monday after a report that Buffett could come to the rescue in the current regional banking crisis.


The analyst comments come after Bloomberg reported on Saturday that Buffett has been in contact with senior officials in the Biden administration in recent days regarding the regional banking crisis. The talks concern Buffett potentially investing in the U.S. regional banking sector, though the billionaire has also given some of his views about the current tumult in the sector.


Gordon Haskett speculated that if Buffett were to do a deal in the banking sector he would likely stick to a name that he already owns. Berkshire Hathaway owned 29.8 million shares, or a 9.9% stake in Ally Financial (ALLY), as of the end of December, and is the second largest holder.


Ally Financial (ALLY) short interest is 5.9%.


Ally Financial (ALLY) shares skyrocketed 20% on Jan. 20 after 2024 guidance exceeded consensus.
 

RememberGoliad

Veteran Member
Why doesn't the House Republicans start impeachment proceedings against Biden? There's plenty of evidence.

Because almost everyone up there on the Potomac is politically and philosophically related. It's just one big inbred, incestuous swamp. And you do NOT go beating up on your cousins, even the weird ones, in public. Ya never know what that cousin's in-laws might have on you.

...you DO, however, gang up on the outsiders, and run 'em out...
 

psychgirl

Has No Life - Lives on TB
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">*US STUDIES WAYS TO GUARANTEE ALL BANK DEPOSITS IF CRISIS GROWS</p>&mdash; zerohedge (@zerohedge) <a href=" View: https://twitter.com/zerohedge/status/1637973255574224901?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw
">March 21, 2023</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
As if they don’t already HAVE ways.
And know allll about them!
Lol
 

TFergeson

Non Solum Simul Stare
I guess now we know the plan. From the Trump arrest thread:


Trump Supporters Plan Bank Run to Protest His Arrest​

Newsweek Story by Katherine Fung

  • Supporters of former President Donald Trump are calling for nonviolent forms of protest in anticipation of his arrest, suggesting a national bank run instead of a traditional demonstration.

  • Trump has already called on his supporters to "PROTEST, PROTEST PROTEST" if he's arrested Tuesday morning.

  • The George Washington Institute told Newsweek that searches for a pro-Trump bank run nearly quadrupled between Friday and Saturday, with queries rising again on Monday.
Some supporters of former President Donald Trump are calling for nonviolent forms of protest in anticipation of a Trump arrest in Manhattan this week, suggesting that his base participates in a national bank run instead of demonstrating on the streets.

"Driven by false flag paranoia," Trump supporters have increasingly advocated for a bank run in recent days as a "nonviolent form of social disobedience" against a Trump arrest, according to the George Washinton Institute (GWI), an organization dedicated to combating disinformation.


What is a Bank Run?​

Suggestions for a bank run in protest of a Trump arrest seem to capitalize on how devastating bank runs have proven to be to the financial system.

When a large number of depositors rush to withdraw their funds from the bank simultaneously, its impact could lead to a full-blown banking crisis. The calls also appear to reflect how increased polarization in politics has led some to attempt to bring political views into the world of finance.

"Be a shame if Trump supporters led a nationwide bank run," Jack Posobiec, an alt-right activist known for his support of Trump, tweeted on Saturday. Vincent Sativa, another Trump supporter, called Posobiec's strategy a "brilliant" and "genius" way to show the nation just how many Americans continue to support the former president.

Calls for others to join in and pull their money out of the banking system come after Trump announced that he expects to be arrested on Tuesday morning in the New York case related to the hush money payments he allegedly made to adult film actress Stormy Daniels. Over the weekend, Trump urged his supporters to "PROTEST, PROTEST PROTEST!!!!" his imminent indictment. He did not specify what form these protests should take.

Daniels claims that she had an affair with Trump, which he has denied. Last week, Trump's former personal lawyer, Michael Cohen, testified to the grand jury that the former President directed him to make those payments to Daniels and that the Trump Organization reimbursed him later on.


Growing Chatter​

In a Monday statement, GWI told Newsweek it has detected "growing chatter around the topic", but "the chatter is growing at a logarithmic rate which will hamper the narratives' ability to spread, marginalizing any impact that may occur." GWI's graphs show that the volume of searches for a potential bank run nearly quadrupled between Friday and Saturday, with queries rising again on Monday.

Calls for a pro-Trump bank run also come on the heels of the Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) collapse that sent shockwaves across the U.S. financial system last week. The regional bank imploded after customers started withdrawing their funds in masses, effectively setting off a bank run that forced regulators to shut down the bank. In its aftermath, New York-based Signature Bank was also shuttered while the nation's largest banks rushed to offer midsize lender First Republic Bank a $30 billion rescue package.

Given that the system is already on shaky ground, some point out that, "It won't take much right now to crash the entire monetary system."

"If Trump gets arrested, they are planning to pull their money out of the banking system. You will see a bank run of mass proportions," Twitter user @CryptoPolka wrote on Sunday. "It won't take much right now to crash the entire monetary system."

"With the panic in the markets around SVB - this could get interesting," another user @OopsGuess added. "We all want MAGA..."

This wouldn't be the first time that everyday Americans have attempted to manipulate markets and companies to make a political point, or to make money for themselves.

Two years ago, small investors upended Wall Street after organizing a short squeeze over Reddit that sent the price of GameStop stock soaring and forced hedge fund traders to back out. In response, brokerages like Robinhood had to halt the trading of GameStop stock—a decision that was later met with criticisms from prominent politicians and class-action lawsuits that alleged the app of market abuse.

Organizing a bank run is not illegal by itself, although there are laws that prohibit the spreading of misinformation about a bank's financial conditions, former federal prosecutor and President of West Coast Trial Lawyers Neama Rahmani told Newsweek. Prosecutors would likely have to apply a more general federal law, like wire fraud or stock market manipulation, to go after this type of scheme.


A Call For Peace​

Despite Trump's calls for protest, other high-ranking Republicans have pushed back, cautioning against any type of violence in response to an arrest.

On Sunday, House Speaker Kevin McCarthy said that while an indictment would be "an outrageous abuse of power," he didn't think people should be protesting it. "We want calmness out there," he told reporters in Orlando, Florida. "I do not believe there should be any violence to this."

Trump ally Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene also tweeted on Saturday, "We don't need to protest."

Those remarks have been echoed by Trump supporters who are mulling a bank run. Some have cautioned that protesting will lead authorities to bring martial law into effect and possibly detain or charge demonstrators.

"Participate in a bankrun instead," Aaron Day, a longshot candidate for the 2024 Republican nomination, tweeted. "It will be highly effective and non-violent (it also solves our corrupt banking and Ukraine situation at the same time)."

Truth Social users also said fans of the former president should participate in nonviolent forms of protest to avoid giving Trump critics "what they think will happen, violence or riots."

"Trump supporters are law abiding!" one Truth Social user wrote. "We can protest without damaging or breaking the law. I can pull my money from the bank. I can do a lot to crash this economy."

Some Twitter users criticized the plans, casting doubt over whether Trump's supporters would be able to withdraw enough money to constitute a bank run.

"MAGA supporters couldn't possible generate a bank run," user @stmdc wrote. "They vave not deposits to withdraw. What little money they have has been spent on Trump picture books, various 'own the libs' t-shirts and 20 cases of freeze dried vegetable stew sitting in the garage."

"I think it's funny that they think their bank accounts could trigger anything," another user @ThePhillyNick said.

Trump Supporters Plan Bank Run to Protest His Arrest
 

alpha

Veteran Member
"If you don't hold it, you don't own it" comes to mind as an added benefit to showing your MAGA support in this fashion. With the endangered banking system supporting only the big players, folks may be doing themselves a favor drawing out their assets.
 

jward

passin' thru

Morning Bid: Signs of confidence re-emerge after bank storm​


3 minute readMarch 21, 20232:10 AM CDTLast Updated 6 hours ago

3–4 minutes




[1/2] Logos of Swiss banks UBS and Credit Suisse are seen in Zurich, Switzerland March 20, 2023. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse
A look at the day ahead in European and global markets from Anshuman Daga
Market gyrations are common but the scale of recent moves across asset classes due to a slew of bank takeovers has shocked even the most experienced traders and investors.
Safe-havens such as gold and Treasuries are in high demand along with more speculative instruments, such as tech stocks and bitcoin, as worries over the banking crisis are boosting disparate assets.

While UBS shares were hammered in early trading on Monday after its shotgun marriage with troubled Credit Suisse following an intervention by Swiss authorities, the bank's shares pared most of the losses towards the close.
The biggest pain seems to have been inflicted on holders of Credit Suisse's risky debt, leading lawyers from Switzerland, the U.S. and Britain to talk to many Additional Tier 1 (AT1) bond holders about possible legal action, a law firm said.
On Tuesday, Asian equities staged a tentative recovery as the buyout of Credit Suisse eased immediate worries of a knock-on effect to other banks, while the U.S. dollar was stuck near a five-week low.
European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde said the market turmoil might do some of the ECB's work for it in dampening demand and inflation.

Markets have been on high alert for central banks to raise interest rates sharply to cope with high inflation.
However, there could be some surprises now.
ECB policymaker Robert Holzmann watered down his recent call for three more rate increases of 50 basis points in quick succession.
Holzmann, who heads the Austrian National Bank, told German business daily Handelsblatt two weeks ago the ECB should raise rates by 50 basis points at each of its next four meetings.
The ECB made one such increase at its meeting last week.
Meanwhile, just hours after the state-backed takeover by UBS of troubled Credit Suisse was announced, memorabilia bearing the 167-year-old bank's name and logo was being put up for sale in Switzerland, marking the end of an era for Credit Suisse.

Market cap of US regional banks included in the S&P 500 regional bank index
Key developments that could influence markets on Tuesday:
Meetings: Chinese President Xi Jinping and Russian President Vladimir Putin are set to engage in formal talks regarding Beijing's proposals for a war resolution
Meetings: Britain's finance minister speaks to the Economic Affairs Committee
Central bank meetings: The Federal Reserve convenes for its two-day monetary policy meeting. Policy decision is on Wednesday
 

psychgirl

Has No Life - Lives on TB
I guess now we know the plan. From the Trump arrest thread:


Trump Supporters Plan Bank Run to Protest His Arrest​

Newsweek Story by Katherine Fung

  • Supporters of former President Donald Trump are calling for nonviolent forms of protest in anticipation of his arrest, suggesting a national bank run instead of a traditional demonstration.

  • Trump has already called on his supporters to "PROTEST, PROTEST PROTEST" if he's arrested Tuesday morning.

  • The George Washington Institute told Newsweek that searches for a pro-Trump bank run nearly quadrupled between Friday and Saturday, with queries rising again on Monday.
Some supporters of former President Donald Trump are calling for nonviolent forms of protest in anticipation of a Trump arrest in Manhattan this week, suggesting that his base participates in a national bank run instead of demonstrating on the streets.

"Driven by false flag paranoia," Trump supporters have increasingly advocated for a bank run in recent days as a "nonviolent form of social disobedience" against a Trump arrest, according to the George Washinton Institute (GWI), an organization dedicated to combating disinformation.


What is a Bank Run?​

Suggestions for a bank run in protest of a Trump arrest seem to capitalize on how devastating bank runs have proven to be to the financial system.

When a large number of depositors rush to withdraw their funds from the bank simultaneously, its impact could lead to a full-blown banking crisis. The calls also appear to reflect how increased polarization in politics has led some to attempt to bring political views into the world of finance.

"Be a shame if Trump supporters led a nationwide bank run," Jack Posobiec, an alt-right activist known for his support of Trump, tweeted on Saturday. Vincent Sativa, another Trump supporter, called Posobiec's strategy a "brilliant" and "genius" way to show the nation just how many Americans continue to support the former president.

Calls for others to join in and pull their money out of the banking system come after Trump announced that he expects to be arrested on Tuesday morning in the New York case related to the hush money payments he allegedly made to adult film actress Stormy Daniels. Over the weekend, Trump urged his supporters to "PROTEST, PROTEST PROTEST!!!!" his imminent indictment. He did not specify what form these protests should take.

Daniels claims that she had an affair with Trump, which he has denied. Last week, Trump's former personal lawyer, Michael Cohen, testified to the grand jury that the former President directed him to make those payments to Daniels and that the Trump Organization reimbursed him later on.


Growing Chatter​

In a Monday statement, GWI told Newsweek it has detected "growing chatter around the topic", but "the chatter is growing at a logarithmic rate which will hamper the narratives' ability to spread, marginalizing any impact that may occur." GWI's graphs show that the volume of searches for a potential bank run nearly quadrupled between Friday and Saturday, with queries rising again on Monday.

Calls for a pro-Trump bank run also come on the heels of the Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) collapse that sent shockwaves across the U.S. financial system last week. The regional bank imploded after customers started withdrawing their funds in masses, effectively setting off a bank run that forced regulators to shut down the bank. In its aftermath, New York-based Signature Bank was also shuttered while the nation's largest banks rushed to offer midsize lender First Republic Bank a $30 billion rescue package.

Given that the system is already on shaky ground, some point out that, "It won't take much right now to crash the entire monetary system."

"If Trump gets arrested, they are planning to pull their money out of the banking system. You will see a bank run of mass proportions," Twitter user @CryptoPolka wrote on Sunday. "It won't take much right now to crash the entire monetary system."

"With the panic in the markets around SVB - this could get interesting," another user @OopsGuess added. "We all want MAGA..."

This wouldn't be the first time that everyday Americans have attempted to manipulate markets and companies to make a political point, or to make money for themselves.

Two years ago, small investors upended Wall Street after organizing a short squeeze over Reddit that sent the price of GameStop stock soaring and forced hedge fund traders to back out. In response, brokerages like Robinhood had to halt the trading of GameStop stock—a decision that was later met with criticisms from prominent politicians and class-action lawsuits that alleged the app of market abuse.

Organizing a bank run is not illegal by itself, although there are laws that prohibit the spreading of misinformation about a bank's financial conditions, former federal prosecutor and President of West Coast Trial Lawyers Neama Rahmani told Newsweek. Prosecutors would likely have to apply a more general federal law, like wire fraud or stock market manipulation, to go after this type of scheme.


A Call For Peace​

Despite Trump's calls for protest, other high-ranking Republicans have pushed back, cautioning against any type of violence in response to an arrest.

On Sunday, House Speaker Kevin McCarthy said that while an indictment would be "an outrageous abuse of power," he didn't think people should be protesting it. "We want calmness out there," he told reporters in Orlando, Florida. "I do not believe there should be any violence to this."

Trump ally Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene also tweeted on Saturday, "We don't need to protest."

Those remarks have been echoed by Trump supporters who are mulling a bank run. Some have cautioned that protesting will lead authorities to bring martial law into effect and possibly detain or charge demonstrators.

"Participate in a bankrun instead," Aaron Day, a longshot candidate for the 2024 Republican nomination, tweeted. "It will be highly effective and non-violent (it also solves our corrupt banking and Ukraine situation at the same time)."

Truth Social users also said fans of the former president should participate in nonviolent forms of protest to avoid giving Trump critics "what they think will happen, violence or riots."

"Trump supporters are law abiding!" one Truth Social user wrote. "We can protest without damaging or breaking the law. I can pull my money from the bank. I can do a lot to crash this economy."

Some Twitter users criticized the plans, casting doubt over whether Trump's supporters would be able to withdraw enough money to constitute a bank run.

"MAGA supporters couldn't possible generate a bank run," user @stmdc wrote. "They vave not deposits to withdraw. What little money they have has been spent on Trump picture books, various 'own the libs' t-shirts and 20 cases of freeze dried vegetable stew sitting in the garage."

"I think it's funny that they think their bank accounts could trigger anything," another user @ThePhillyNick said.

Trump Supporters Plan Bank Run to Protest His Arrest
How
Do THEY know what money we have?!
Or don’t have?…Lol
 

WalknTrot

Veteran Member
I guess now we know the plan. From the Trump arrest thread:


Trump Supporters Plan Bank Run to Protest His Arrest​

Newsweek Story by Katherine Fung

  • Supporters of former President Donald Trump are calling for nonviolent forms of protest in anticipation of his arrest, suggesting a national bank run instead of a traditional demonstration.

  • Trump has already called on his supporters to "PROTEST, PROTEST PROTEST" if he's arrested Tuesday morning.

  • The George Washington Institute told Newsweek that searches for a pro-Trump bank run nearly quadrupled between Friday and Saturday, with queries rising again on Monday.
Some supporters of former President Donald Trump are calling for nonviolent forms of protest in anticipation of a Trump arrest in Manhattan this week, suggesting that his base participates in a national bank run instead of demonstrating on the streets.

"Driven by false flag paranoia," Trump supporters have increasingly advocated for a bank run in recent days as a "nonviolent form of social disobedience" against a Trump arrest, according to the George Washinton Institute (GWI), an organization dedicated to combating disinformation.


What is a Bank Run?​

Suggestions for a bank run in protest of a Trump arrest seem to capitalize on how devastating bank runs have proven to be to the financial system.

When a large number of depositors rush to withdraw their funds from the bank simultaneously, its impact could lead to a full-blown banking crisis. The calls also appear to reflect how increased polarization in politics has led some to attempt to bring political views into the world of finance.

"Be a shame if Trump supporters led a nationwide bank run," Jack Posobiec, an alt-right activist known for his support of Trump, tweeted on Saturday. Vincent Sativa, another Trump supporter, called Posobiec's strategy a "brilliant" and "genius" way to show the nation just how many Americans continue to support the former president.

Calls for others to join in and pull their money out of the banking system come after Trump announced that he expects to be arrested on Tuesday morning in the New York case related to the hush money payments he allegedly made to adult film actress Stormy Daniels. Over the weekend, Trump urged his supporters to "PROTEST, PROTEST PROTEST!!!!" his imminent indictment. He did not specify what form these protests should take.

Daniels claims that she had an affair with Trump, which he has denied. Last week, Trump's former personal lawyer, Michael Cohen, testified to the grand jury that the former President directed him to make those payments to Daniels and that the Trump Organization reimbursed him later on.


Growing Chatter​

In a Monday statement, GWI told Newsweek it has detected "growing chatter around the topic", but "the chatter is growing at a logarithmic rate which will hamper the narratives' ability to spread, marginalizing any impact that may occur." GWI's graphs show that the volume of searches for a potential bank run nearly quadrupled between Friday and Saturday, with queries rising again on Monday.

Calls for a pro-Trump bank run also come on the heels of the Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) collapse that sent shockwaves across the U.S. financial system last week. The regional bank imploded after customers started withdrawing their funds in masses, effectively setting off a bank run that forced regulators to shut down the bank. In its aftermath, New York-based Signature Bank was also shuttered while the nation's largest banks rushed to offer midsize lender First Republic Bank a $30 billion rescue package.

Given that the system is already on shaky ground, some point out that, "It won't take much right now to crash the entire monetary system."

"If Trump gets arrested, they are planning to pull their money out of the banking system. You will see a bank run of mass proportions," Twitter user @CryptoPolka wrote on Sunday. "It won't take much right now to crash the entire monetary system."

"With the panic in the markets around SVB - this could get interesting," another user @OopsGuess added. "We all want MAGA..."

This wouldn't be the first time that everyday Americans have attempted to manipulate markets and companies to make a political point, or to make money for themselves.

Two years ago, small investors upended Wall Street after organizing a short squeeze over Reddit that sent the price of GameStop stock soaring and forced hedge fund traders to back out. In response, brokerages like Robinhood had to halt the trading of GameStop stock—a decision that was later met with criticisms from prominent politicians and class-action lawsuits that alleged the app of market abuse.

Organizing a bank run is not illegal by itself, although there are laws that prohibit the spreading of misinformation about a bank's financial conditions, former federal prosecutor and President of West Coast Trial Lawyers Neama Rahmani told Newsweek. Prosecutors would likely have to apply a more general federal law, like wire fraud or stock market manipulation, to go after this type of scheme.


A Call For Peace​

Despite Trump's calls for protest, other high-ranking Republicans have pushed back, cautioning against any type of violence in response to an arrest.

On Sunday, House Speaker Kevin McCarthy said that while an indictment would be "an outrageous abuse of power," he didn't think people should be protesting it. "We want calmness out there," he told reporters in Orlando, Florida. "I do not believe there should be any violence to this."

Trump ally Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene also tweeted on Saturday, "We don't need to protest."

Those remarks have been echoed by Trump supporters who are mulling a bank run. Some have cautioned that protesting will lead authorities to bring martial law into effect and possibly detain or charge demonstrators.

"Participate in a bankrun instead," Aaron Day, a longshot candidate for the 2024 Republican nomination, tweeted. "It will be highly effective and non-violent (it also solves our corrupt banking and Ukraine situation at the same time)."

Truth Social users also said fans of the former president should participate in nonviolent forms of protest to avoid giving Trump critics "what they think will happen, violence or riots."

"Trump supporters are law abiding!" one Truth Social user wrote. "We can protest without damaging or breaking the law. I can pull my money from the bank. I can do a lot to crash this economy."

Some Twitter users criticized the plans, casting doubt over whether Trump's supporters would be able to withdraw enough money to constitute a bank run.

"MAGA supporters couldn't possible generate a bank run," user @stmdc wrote. "They vave not deposits to withdraw. What little money they have has been spent on Trump picture books, various 'own the libs' t-shirts and 20 cases of freeze dried vegetable stew sitting in the garage."

"I think it's funny that they think their bank accounts could trigger anything," another user @ThePhillyNick said.

Trump Supporters Plan Bank Run to Protest His Arrest
First I heard of it. Considering the source, (Newsweek/MSN) I'll consider it targeted incitement, not grass-roots.
 

ChicagoMan74

ULTRA MAGA
I guess now we know the plan. From the Trump arrest thread:


Trump Supporters Plan Bank Run to Protest His Arrest​

Newsweek Story by Katherine Fung

  • Supporters of former President Donald Trump are calling for nonviolent forms of protest in anticipation of his arrest, suggesting a national bank run instead of a traditional demonstration.

  • Trump has already called on his supporters to "PROTEST, PROTEST PROTEST" if he's arrested Tuesday morning.

  • The George Washington Institute told Newsweek that searches for a pro-Trump bank run nearly quadrupled between Friday and Saturday, with queries rising again on Monday.
Some supporters of former President Donald Trump are calling for nonviolent forms of protest in anticipation of a Trump arrest in Manhattan this week, suggesting that his base participates in a national bank run instead of demonstrating on the streets.

"Driven by false flag paranoia," Trump supporters have increasingly advocated for a bank run in recent days as a "nonviolent form of social disobedience" against a Trump arrest, according to the George Washinton Institute (GWI), an organization dedicated to combating disinformation.


What is a Bank Run?​

Suggestions for a bank run in protest of a Trump arrest seem to capitalize on how devastating bank runs have proven to be to the financial system.

When a large number of depositors rush to withdraw their funds from the bank simultaneously, its impact could lead to a full-blown banking crisis. The calls also appear to reflect how increased polarization in politics has led some to attempt to bring political views into the world of finance.

"Be a shame if Trump supporters led a nationwide bank run," Jack Posobiec, an alt-right activist known for his support of Trump, tweeted on Saturday. Vincent Sativa, another Trump supporter, called Posobiec's strategy a "brilliant" and "genius" way to show the nation just how many Americans continue to support the former president.

Calls for others to join in and pull their money out of the banking system come after Trump announced that he expects to be arrested on Tuesday morning in the New York case related to the hush money payments he allegedly made to adult film actress Stormy Daniels. Over the weekend, Trump urged his supporters to "PROTEST, PROTEST PROTEST!!!!" his imminent indictment. He did not specify what form these protests should take.

Daniels claims that she had an affair with Trump, which he has denied. Last week, Trump's former personal lawyer, Michael Cohen, testified to the grand jury that the former President directed him to make those payments to Daniels and that the Trump Organization reimbursed him later on.


Growing Chatter​

In a Monday statement, GWI told Newsweek it has detected "growing chatter around the topic", but "the chatter is growing at a logarithmic rate which will hamper the narratives' ability to spread, marginalizing any impact that may occur." GWI's graphs show that the volume of searches for a potential bank run nearly quadrupled between Friday and Saturday, with queries rising again on Monday.

Calls for a pro-Trump bank run also come on the heels of the Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) collapse that sent shockwaves across the U.S. financial system last week. The regional bank imploded after customers started withdrawing their funds in masses, effectively setting off a bank run that forced regulators to shut down the bank. In its aftermath, New York-based Signature Bank was also shuttered while the nation's largest banks rushed to offer midsize lender First Republic Bank a $30 billion rescue package.

Given that the system is already on shaky ground, some point out that, "It won't take much right now to crash the entire monetary system."

"If Trump gets arrested, they are planning to pull their money out of the banking system. You will see a bank run of mass proportions," Twitter user @CryptoPolka wrote on Sunday. "It won't take much right now to crash the entire monetary system."

"With the panic in the markets around SVB - this could get interesting," another user @OopsGuess added. "We all want MAGA..."

This wouldn't be the first time that everyday Americans have attempted to manipulate markets and companies to make a political point, or to make money for themselves.

Two years ago, small investors upended Wall Street after organizing a short squeeze over Reddit that sent the price of GameStop stock soaring and forced hedge fund traders to back out. In response, brokerages like Robinhood had to halt the trading of GameStop stock—a decision that was later met with criticisms from prominent politicians and class-action lawsuits that alleged the app of market abuse.

Organizing a bank run is not illegal by itself, although there are laws that prohibit the spreading of misinformation about a bank's financial conditions, former federal prosecutor and President of West Coast Trial Lawyers Neama Rahmani told Newsweek. Prosecutors would likely have to apply a more general federal law, like wire fraud or stock market manipulation, to go after this type of scheme.


A Call For Peace​

Despite Trump's calls for protest, other high-ranking Republicans have pushed back, cautioning against any type of violence in response to an arrest.

On Sunday, House Speaker Kevin McCarthy said that while an indictment would be "an outrageous abuse of power," he didn't think people should be protesting it. "We want calmness out there," he told reporters in Orlando, Florida. "I do not believe there should be any violence to this."

Trump ally Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene also tweeted on Saturday, "We don't need to protest."

Those remarks have been echoed by Trump supporters who are mulling a bank run. Some have cautioned that protesting will lead authorities to bring martial law into effect and possibly detain or charge demonstrators.

"Participate in a bankrun instead," Aaron Day, a longshot candidate for the 2024 Republican nomination, tweeted. "It will be highly effective and non-violent (it also solves our corrupt banking and Ukraine situation at the same time)."

Truth Social users also said fans of the former president should participate in nonviolent forms of protest to avoid giving Trump critics "what they think will happen, violence or riots."

"Trump supporters are law abiding!" one Truth Social user wrote. "We can protest without damaging or breaking the law. I can pull my money from the bank. I can do a lot to crash this economy."

Some Twitter users criticized the plans, casting doubt over whether Trump's supporters would be able to withdraw enough money to constitute a bank run.

"MAGA supporters couldn't possible generate a bank run," user @stmdc wrote. "They vave not deposits to withdraw. What little money they have has been spent on Trump picture books, various 'own the libs' t-shirts and 20 cases of freeze dried vegetable stew sitting in the garage."

"I think it's funny that they think their bank accounts could trigger anything," another user @ThePhillyNick said.

Trump Supporters Plan Bank Run to Protest His Arrest
Um...yeah OK.

Now its getting stupid.

This deathburger has left me wanting...next time extra mayo and grilled onions please.
 

Bubble Head

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Or, if there are bank runs due to instability of the economic situation, guess who gets the blame!
Trump or MAGA it won’t matter. It is what your holding that will count. That same rat commie bastard that mocked you for some preps will come after it to eat when the truckers don’t or can’t roll. So it’s like I said DD it comes down to what you are holding not what they think.
Good morning Brother.
 

jward

passin' thru
Richard
@ricwe123
Mar 20

Janet Yellen confirmed to Congress that she and other government officials determine which banks are systemic, and which are not. Below are the entities that paid her over $7 million in "speaking fees" before her time at the Treasury. The US has become a Banana Republic.
1679405015510.png
 
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