NO NEED TO GO TO A BARBER FOR A HAIRCUT
JUST BANK AT DEUTSCHE SKATBANK
Reminds me of Woody Guthrie's song about Pretty Boy Floyd
Pretty Boy FloydWords and Music by Woody Guthrie
If you'll gather 'round me, children,
A story I will
tell
'Bout Pretty Boy Floyd, an outlaw,
Oklahoma knew him well.
It
was in the town of Shawnee,
A Saturday afternoon,
His wife beside him in
his wagon
As into town they rode.
There a deputy sheriff approached him
In a manner rather
rude,
Vulgar words of anger,
An' his wife she overheard.
Pretty Boy grabbed a log chain,
And the deputy grabbed his
gun;
In the fight that followed
He laid that deputy down.
Then he took to the trees and timber
Along the river
shore,
Hiding on the river bottom
And he never come back no more.
Yes, he took to the trees and timber
To live a life of
shame;
Every crime in Oklahoma
Was added to his name.
But a many a starvin' farmer
The same old story
told
How the outlaw paid their mortgage
And saved their little homes.
Others tell you 'bout a stranger
That come to beg a
meal,
Underneath his napkin
Left a thousand-dollar bill.
It was in Oklahoma City,
It was on a Christmas
Day,
There was a whole car load of groceries
Come with a note to say:
"Well, you say that I'm an outlaw,
You say that I'm a
thief.
Here's a Christmas dinner
For the families on relief."
Yes, as through this world I've wandered
I've seen lots of
funny men;
Some will rob you with a six-gun,
And some with a fountain pen.
And as through your life you travel,
Yes, as through your
life you roam,
You won't never see an outlaw
Drive a family from their
home.
© Copyright 1958 (renewed) by Woody Guthrie Publications, Inc.
The Wrath of Draghi: First German Bank Hits Savers with Negative Interest Rate
Deutsche Skatbank, a
division of VR-Bank Altenburger Land, which was founded in 1859, is not the
biggest bank in Germany, but it’s the first bank to confirm what German savers
have been dreading for a while: the wrath of Draghi.
Retail and business
customers with over €500,000 on deposit as of November 1 will earn a “negative
interest rate” of 0.25%. In less euphemistic terms, they have to pay0.25% per
annum to the bank for the privilege of handing the bank their hard-earned money
or their business cash.
Inflation has had a similar
effect in the zero-interest-rate environment that the ECB and other central
banks have inflicted on savers, but this time it’s official, it’s open, it
can’t be hidden. Instead of lending your moolah to the bank so that the bank
can lend it out to businesses and retail customers for all sorts of
economically beneficial purposes, you’re financially better off hiding it in
the basement. Grudging respect is due the ECB and other central banks: through
the perverse regime of ZIRP, they have succeeded in transmogrifying “cash in
bank” from an income-producing asset to a costly liability.
“Punishment Interest” is
what Germans lovingly call this. It’s the latest and most blatant step of the
central-bank strategy to confiscate in bits and pieces and over time the wealth
that prudent people and businesses have accumulated, and that should have
re-entered the economy via the intermediation of the banks.
Last summer, the ECB
imposed negative deposit rates on member banks. At first, it was 0.1%, which
has now doubled to 0.2%. The reason? The ECB dragged out its “mandate,” which
is, as it said, “to ensure” that “price stability” is “below but close to 2%
inflation,” which in turn is “a necessary condition for sustainable growth in
the euro area.” Whatever. There is no scintilla of evidence that inflation is
required for economic growth; however, there is plenty of evidence that
economic growth can stir up inflation. The good folks at the ECB know this.
It’s just the official pretext for using inflation to eat up debt – along with
savers.
“There will be no direct
impact on your savings,” the ECB announced five months ago. “Only banks that deposit money
in certain accounts at the ECB have to pay.” But it added ominously,
“Commercial banks may of course choose to lower interest rates for savers.”
And that would be good for
savers:
The ECB’s interest rate
decisions will in fact benefit savers in the end because they support growth
and thus create a climate in which interest rates can gradually return to
higher levels.
Thank you hallelujah, ECB,
for helping out the savers!
This is in line with its
policy, as it says, to “punish savers and reward borrowers.” No kidding. To
bring some perspective to it all, it adds, “This behavior is not specific to
the ECB; it applies to all central banks.”
Now the wrath of Draghi is
hitting German savers and businesses. The first bank is already trying it out.
Other banks haven’t yet jumped in line. They’re taking a wait-and-see stance
but refuse to exclude the possibility.
“There is no planning in
that direction,” Direktbank ING Diba told the Welt.
“We believe that negative
interest rates on deposit accounts – whether for private or business customers
– are a dangerous signal…” said a spokesman of the German Savings Banks and
Giro Association (DSGV). But he did not rule out either that some member banks
might not follow the same example in the future.
“The banks will try to
avoid negative deposit rates,” explained the Federal Association of German
Cooperative Banks, but in this zero-interest-rate environment imposed by the
ECB, negative rates on large deposits “cannot be excluded.”
“At the moment, we are not
imposing negative interest rates on retail customers,” said the second largest
bank in Germany, Commerzbank. At the moment….
“We cannot earnestly rule
out punishment interest in the future,” said Frank Kohler, CEO at the
Sparda-Bank Berlin, the largest cooperative bank in Germany in terms of
membership. He pointed out that the banks that are the most susceptible to
punishment interest are those whose business model relies on pure banking with
individuals and businesses, and whose earnings cannot be improved by investment
banking, risk-taking, gambling, market-rigging, and other big-bank activities
that “have triggered the financial crisis in 2007.”
“So precisely those banks
suffer the most that have never put the financial system at risk,” he said.
“This is unfortunately not free of bitter irony….”
The door to punishment
interest has been cracked open. It starts with large deposits and small rates.
Then step by step, deposit amounts get smaller and punishment interest rates
get larger until everyone gets smacked with it, and no money is save. It’s all
part of the time-honored central-bank strategy to flog savers until their mood
improves.
Germans don’t get to do this, but the lucky Swiss get to: they get to go to the
polls and tell their central bank what to do about gold. A yes-vote will send
shock waves through the gold market and other central banks. Read… What the Swiss Gold Referendum Means for Central Banks
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