It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
benrl
Wrabbit2000
Why do I get the feeling we're headed to the Barber's Shop for a little haircut? I believe they call it the Cyprus style?
I never cared for it, myself. I like my hair (and bank account) just like it is. Even if I have far more of the former than I have anything to put in the latter at the moment. Principle of the thing, eh?
I think I hear the 'shwing shwing' of the barber sharpening his tools somewhere as we speak.
Well, they have to find it to get it right..
Hard goods, metals, Cash on hand... all im saying, in that order.
How long have you been a mod, Wrabbit?
www.thedailyheadlinenews.com...
CookieMonster09
Some of this may be because of some recent announcements from the Federal Reserve concerning the Basel III rules.
Yes, you are dead on correct.
If you look at what Chase and other large banks are doing with their deposit accounts, they are requiring minimum balances for their clients on all deposit accounts. The goal is to garner as much capital reserves as they can to meet the rather stiff Basel III capital requirements. So stiff that small and regional banks are lobbying and raising a holy uproar to have these capital reserves lessened.
Bottom line - We will have a global bank, a global currency, a world religion, and a global army all in due time. The old "systems" - and that includes are outdated banking system - needs to collapse before the "new" architecture can be implemented.
The big banks will eventually merge into a super bank - Merge BOA, Chase, Wells, and CITI, and you are pretty much there already in the U.S. Basically, you'll be left with a single banking institution - either nationalized and run by the government, or in private, centralized hands.
Centralization will continue to occur in every sphere.
reply to post by violet
Sure, but what happens when this cash is no longer of any use? The cashless society is coming or is already here phasing in. Cash is good for some stuff but in general it's not. For one, you can't buy gas or other things at night with cash. At least not where I live, due to crime. No cash kept on premises. Is this just the USA or other countries like Canada ?
EarthCitizen07
It makes sense in a way. Some people know the economy is about to crash, probably sometime next year, and they want to keep as much money in the states as they can. It has nothing to do with cyprus or haircuts lol.
Not that I dont already know the whole economy is a rigged freak show with private central banking like the federal reserve plundering the wealth of average americans, but as long as the private and for profit federal reserve is calling the shots, then more of this is what is to be expected.
$50k is a reasonably high number, it could have been only $10k withdrawals allowed. I think they want to prevent the rich from sending their money to some tax haven nation that would be untaxed and gone forever.
TheMistro81
reply to post by FFS4000
Wouldn't stopping international wires be a good thing? It keeps our money here, and in my mind, I'm thinking it would stop people from stuffing their off-shore bank accts?
Maybe I just don't know what I'm talking about though... quite possible.
But indeed, this as a whole, does not look good. More and more we are being told what we can and cannot do.
cdevidal
I could find nothing on HSBC limiting international transfers. Link please?