Credit Suisse: What is happening to the Swiss banking giant? - BBC News

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  • Опубликовано: 28 сен 2024
  • Shares in Credit Suisse have plunged to a record low, in the wake of last week's collapse of Silicon Valley Bank in the US.
    The Swiss bank - which has been beset by problems - saw its share price fall by as much as 30% at one point.
    Credit Suisse insists its financial position is not a concern.
    Investors are concerned about the state of the troubled banking giant and have already been spooked by US bank failures.
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    #CreditSuisse #Banking #BBCNews

Комментарии • 1,5 тыс.

  • @barttfisher
    @barttfisher 4 месяца назад +778

    I wonder if people that experienced the 2008 economic crash had it easier because this market conditions are driving me to insanity, my portfolio has lost over $27k this month. alone my profits are tanking and I'm don't see my retirement turning out well when I can't even grow my stagnant reserve.

    • @JosephineKenney
      @JosephineKenney 4 месяца назад

      Even with this whirlwind, there are chances to be had, thus an increase in volatility is not always a bad thing. You have an opportunity to rebalance thanks to volatility. In order to help you diversify your portfolio, you must hire a professional

    • @PennyBergeron-os4ch
      @PennyBergeron-os4ch 4 месяца назад

      I agree, which is why I choose to delegate my daily investment decisions to a coach. They specialized knowledge, research, and risk management skills make it challenging for them to underperform. They focus on utilizing risk for its asymmetrical potential while mitigating downsides. I've been with my investment coach for over two years and have earned over a quarter-million dollars.

    • @HildaBennet
      @HildaBennet 4 месяца назад

      Do you mind dropping info on the adviser who assisted you? I'm 49 now and would love to grow my stock portfolio and plan my retirement

    • @PennyBergeron-os4ch
      @PennyBergeron-os4ch 4 месяца назад

      Google Sonya Lee Mitchell and do your own research. She has portfolio management down to a science

    • @HildaBennet
      @HildaBennet 4 месяца назад

      Thanks for the lead. I searched her up, and I have sent her an email. I hope she gets back to me soon.

  • @Nernst96
    @Nernst96 Год назад +739

    Some economists have projected that both the U.S. and parts of Europe could slip into a recession for a portion of 2023. A global recession, defined as a contraction in annual global per capita income, is more rare because China and emerging markets often grow faster than more developed economies. Essentially the world economy is considered to be in recession if economic growth falls behind population growth.

    • @ron04
      @ron04 Год назад +1

      My main concern now is how can we generate more revenue during quantitative times? I can't afford to see my savings crumble to dust.

    • @trane85
      @trane85 Год назад +1

      Very true! I've been able to scale from $50K to $189k in this red season because my Financial Advisor figured out Defensive strategies which help portfolios be less vulnerable to market downturns

    • @mcintyre1
      @mcintyre1 Год назад +1

      @@trane85 How can I reach this adviser of yours? because I'm seeking for a more effective investment approach on my savings?

    • @trane85
      @trane85 Год назад +1

      .credits to Colleen Rose Mccaffery, one of the best portfolio manager;s out there. she;s well known, you should look her up

    • @mcintyre1
      @mcintyre1 Год назад +1

      @@trane85 Oh found her! Looked up her full name and she was my top search. Thank you for this! Really appreciate.

  • @darnellcapriccioso
    @darnellcapriccioso Год назад +1633

    Well Credit Suisse is on the verge of collapse, looking to borrow more than $53 Billion to stay afloat, with investors ripping up their forecasts for further rises in interest rates and dumping bank stocks around the world. I'm at a crossroads deciding if to liquidate my dipping 200k stock portfolio, what’s the best way to take advantage of this bear market?

    • @tatianastarcic
      @tatianastarcic Год назад +1

      These bank collapses are making stock market investors ask whether Jerome Powell and the Federal Reserve can keep raising interest rates as fast as they have been in order to fight inflation.

    • @maiadazz
      @maiadazz Год назад

      Working with a reputable investing coach is now the greatest market approach. Since a while ago, I've been in contact with a coach, mostly because I don't have the breadth of knowledge or mental fortitude to handle these recurrent market conditions. I made almost $700k during this downturn, demonstrating that the market is more complex than most people realize.

    • @richardhudson1243
      @richardhudson1243 Год назад

      @@maiadazz Mind if I ask you to recommend how to reach this particular coach you using their service? Seems you've figured it all out unlike the rest of us.

    • @maiadazz
      @maiadazz Год назад

      @@richardhudson1243 I have stayed away from all of the issues that the erratic market presents. Today, reading, research, patience, and seeking guidance when necessary are the greatest ways to break into the market. I merely copy Nicole Joi Anderson, a CFA, whose actions I witnessed on Bloomberg Business News because I am unable to handle my portfolio owing to the nature of my profession. Ever since, everything has been easy.I recommend researching her credentials further.

    • @ManuelSteiner
      @ManuelSteiner Год назад

      Did you not hear the news from last Sunday? Many people are angry bc the federal council did not ask parliament and decided that UBS should buy Credit Suisse. This is bad for Switzerland

  • @andreasleonard0
    @andreasleonard0 Год назад +533

    We are currently in the jaws of the worst bear markets I have seen, the average stock has been cut in half, and the only way to make money this year has been to either short or to trade long in very short time frames. I'm still at a crossroads deciding if to liquidate my dipping $117k stock portfolio, what’s the best way to take advantage of this bear market?

    • @ardeand
      @ardeand Год назад

      Government policy has thrown the future under the bus for decades. The day of judgment is near. I predict an 80% drop in the stock market. Investors will abandon stocks in favor of real estate. There will be no money in banks... You must devise a strategy for survival

    • @kevsmills
      @kevsmills Год назад

      @@ardeand These are the conditions in which life-changing money is made by those who remain calm, patient, and take controlled risks. Volatility goes both ways. The bigger the red candles, the bigger the green ones

    • @Isaacmeide
      @Isaacmeide Год назад

      @@kevsmills It's a good time to buy and basically I've just got cash sitting duck in the bank and I'd really love to put it to good use seeing how inflation is at an all time-high, who is this coach that guides you, mind I look them up

    • @kevsmills
      @kevsmills Год назад

      @@Isaacmeide Isabel Linda Dueri” is my portfolio-coach, I found her on Bloomberg where she was featured, I looked up her name on the internet. Fortunately I came across her site and reached out to her, you can verify her yourself.

    • @vivianecardoso0
      @vivianecardoso0 Год назад

      @@kevsmills I've heard of ISABEL LINDA DUERI , was referred to her not too long ago and I'm happy to say her teaching and process is transparent enough.

  • @deborahschumann8286
    @deborahschumann8286 Год назад +680

    All countries need to prosecute the top exec of these banks. You can be sure that this risky behavior would stop in a hurry if the decision makers in these banks would face real jail time for their choices.

    • @JohnofthefamilySmith
      @JohnofthefamilySmith Год назад +1

      The whole system is based on fraud.

    • @bradc32
      @bradc32 Год назад +23

      agree..everyone was warned rates were going up

    • @krishnak5855
      @krishnak5855 Год назад +42

      Gambling with other people's money 💵

    • @liam1992__
      @liam1992__ Год назад +4

      @@bradc32 “I don’t know how derivative contracts work”

    • @kvadratnixachapuri9745
      @kvadratnixachapuri9745 Год назад +9

      Ain't gonna happen.

  • @Charlescarbajal971
    @Charlescarbajal971 Год назад +986

    With inflation running at a four-decade high, the Recession is now the ‘most likely outcome for the economy and I cannot imagine being a victim of circumstances. My portfolio suffered a big hit, holding it further won’t be any good. I've heard of people netting hundreds of thousands this red season. How can I ensure this?

    • @gabrielmm3515
      @gabrielmm3515 Год назад

      I agree with you. I overheard someone talking about how a couple made $200k during this red season but it’s risky except you’re being guided by a pro.

    • @Deanswain19
      @Deanswain19 Год назад

      True, the idea of a portfolio-coach used to sound generic, but a new study by investopedia actually found that demand for portfolio-coaches sky-rocketed by over 41.8% since the pandemic and based on firsthand encounters, I can say for certain their skillsets are topnotch, I've raised over $700k from an initially stagnant reserve of $150K all within 14months.

    • @Nicholehover
      @Nicholehover Год назад

      Very true! I've been able to scale from $350K to $650K this red season because my FA figured out Defensive strategies to protect my portfolio and profit from this roller coaster market.

    • @EileenToups
      @EileenToups Год назад

      @@Nicholehover .I will be retiring in two years and I have a goal of doing that with $1M. How can I reach out to your guide?

    • @Yasminsantos011
      @Yasminsantos011 Год назад

      @@Nicholehover Thank you for this tip. it was easy to find your coach. Did my due diligence on her before scheduling a phone call with her. She seems proficient considering her résumé.

  • @Nick-xc4fy
    @Nick-xc4fy Год назад +367

    This better not lead to a bailout at tax payers expense. Banks consistently operate with a government bailout safety net in the back of their minds.

    • @er2206
      @er2206 Год назад +9

      So true,I wish that we all could be so lucky

    • @joe.oneill
      @joe.oneill Год назад +20

      It will. It already has here in the States. All they have to do is call them "too big to fail".

    • @emzywillrich7243
      @emzywillrich7243 Год назад +2

      Bankruptcy is always an option.

    • @aaronsvoboda5897
      @aaronsvoboda5897 Год назад +12

      Too late. Swiss National bank to provide assistance to Credit Suisse "iF NeEdEd"

    • @CDWCAULDRON
      @CDWCAULDRON Год назад

      They need to fail its how the system makes the fix ..Time for these bad banks to FAIL!!

  • @FortitudineVincimus
    @FortitudineVincimus Год назад +232

    The repercussions of insatiable greed.

    • @shazanali692
      @shazanali692 Год назад +5

      All those workers 23.000 workers who amount for 20 million tons of self serving greed on wheels

    • @judykinsman3258
      @judykinsman3258 Год назад

      @@shazanali692 holy sh*t, who are you?

    • @veramae4098
      @veramae4098 Год назад

      This might actually be a good time to buy stocks in Credit Suisse.

    • @dada210
      @dada210 Год назад +2

      In the 100% Accurate and True words of Malcolm X - "Show me a Capitalist and I'll show you a Bloodsucker"
      "Capitalism’s concept of competitive man who seeks only to maximize wealth and power, who subjects himself to market relationships, to exploitation and external authority, is anti-human and intolerable in the deepest sense" - Noam Chomsky
      "The superior man does what is right; the inferior one, what is profitable" - Confucius

    • @phpn99
      @phpn99 Год назад

      @@dada210 You have the IQ of a potted plant

  • @dianewalker9154
    @dianewalker9154 Год назад +230

    Governments, banks, credit companies - they all operate on the belief that no matter what, they will get bailed out and not be allowed to fail. Instead, they need to operate on sound financial principles, with smart investments, less borrowing, and assume no backstops or bailouts.

    • @fewik8567
      @fewik8567 Год назад +2

      It's either that or everybody pays £20 a month for their services, banks simply cannot go with the safe option when it comes to investing, they have to invest as much as they can to start making returns, and governments will bail them out, money causes so much chaos no nation wants to deal the 3-4 major banks being badly hurt, economically and socially that would be a disaster. If there was an easy honest way they'd be doing it, but I don't believe there is personally, however I'm not too familiar with the banking world but these companies are global and essentially part of an economy and a country, simply could not operate without both their investments and their services.

    • @thierryfaquet7405
      @thierryfaquet7405 Год назад

      @@fewik8567 Oh sweet summer child, credit suisse is charging you for their service... They won't do anything for free.

    • @MrMannyhw
      @MrMannyhw Год назад

      Why would anyone care? They know they will get bail out. It’s a 2008 plan from the US subprime crisis.

    • @rcisneros8567
      @rcisneros8567 Год назад +3

      It's not a belief. It's true. In the US almost nothing has changed since the last crisis.

    • @samsonsoturian6013
      @samsonsoturian6013 Год назад

      Who bails out banks and lenders? I've literally never heard of that happening. Sometimes governments TAKE OVER banks, other lenders aren't allowed to take deposits for this very reason, and governments do whatever they frick they want.

  • @BeemerTwelve
    @BeemerTwelve Год назад +41

    Money never vanishes, if it's not where you left it, someone took it.

    • @ethisfreedom
      @ethisfreedom Год назад

      ((()))

    • @rollinghippo2940
      @rollinghippo2940 Год назад +5

      Well the 'money' never existed in the first place

    • @nikibonev3699
      @nikibonev3699 Год назад

      Tell me you don't know anything about economics without actually saying you don't.

  • @judykinsman3258
    @judykinsman3258 Год назад +114

    This is why there are, or should be, regulations & regulators to make sure balance sheets can handle liability position fluctuations. Bad, ignorant management.

    • @jerzy1551
      @jerzy1551 Год назад +1

      This may be true from the point of view of the company's accounting but not in relation to the global banking system which operates under a completely different system of law like the Church (Holy See), for example.

    • @mrsamuelwatson12
      @mrsamuelwatson12 Год назад +3

      They have stress tests on banks all the time

    • @phpn99
      @phpn99 Год назад +5

      they're not ignorant ; they're reckless

    • @jerzy1551
      @jerzy1551 Год назад

      @@phpn99 They are a unique form of cancer that has begun to parasitize itself. Now they
      are probably in a transformational phase adapting to the digital revolution
      and artificial intelligence.

    • @francismarion6400
      @francismarion6400 Год назад +2

      Whose going to regulate the regulators?

  • @BigBoiiLeem
    @BigBoiiLeem Год назад +169

    I honestly think Credit Swisse needs to be allowed to fail. I mean, they haven't made a real profit in years, they're absolutely swimming in accounting and other scandals, and the bankers seem determined to fleece their customers. Credit Swisse is a case study for what can and does go wrong in banking when we let our eye off the ball and loosen regulations.

    • @malita354
      @malita354 Год назад +15

      As long as you are not affected

    • @BigBoiiLeem
      @BigBoiiLeem Год назад +11

      @ßpęřm I'm not saying depositors should be left without recourse. I'm saying the institution itself has serious issues with corruption and financial prudence, and therefore shouldn't be responsible for holding anyone's money.
      Once or before Credit Suisse fails, take possession, make creditors and depositors whole by liquidating assets, and then sell off divisions to other banks, employees included.

    • @malita354
      @malita354 Год назад +2

      @@BigBoiiLeem Agree! Sieze all the Fat Cats' assets. Every cent

    • @ruppollock4392
      @ruppollock4392 Год назад +5

      Each time the fed steps in and saves failed banks just puts off the correction that is needed to cut out the recklessness and greed of only upwards bull markets and free money.

    • @malita354
      @malita354 Год назад +2

      @@ruppollock4392 the bank customers of the whole world gets affected indirectly as fees will go up

  • @captainhagen1039
    @captainhagen1039 Год назад +43

    Never mind the losses. This better not affect bonus season!

    • @oliveoil3917
      @oliveoil3917 Год назад +5

      Exactly I have a Ferrari down payment to make , left Goldman for this 😐😐😐

    • @samsonsoturian6013
      @samsonsoturian6013 Год назад +1

      No one is getting boneses. Not without the shareholders suing, anyway.

    • @rrickarr
      @rrickarr Год назад

      Captain: Now you're talkin!

    • @elvism684
      @elvism684 Год назад

      @@samsonsoturian6013 No bonus we will just vote ourselves a pay raise and a higher dividend at shareholder meeting. We have majority of the shares=majority vote.

    • @samsonsoturian6013
      @samsonsoturian6013 Год назад

      @@elvism684 a court will fail to see the difference

  • @stevenhenry5267
    @stevenhenry5267 Год назад +175

    This is what happens when you let corporations dictate humanities fate.

    • @8088I
      @8088I Год назад +1

      With Credit Suisse, . . .
      Nobody wants to Co-mingle their Money
      with, Genocidal, Russian Oligarch Money,
      that's why.

    • @debbie5728
      @debbie5728 Год назад

      Government bureaucrats caused this, Archimedes. (Unless you can explain the trillions printed to democrat ATM banks that sneak $100ks to Gavin Newsome and democrat lobbyists)

    • @Morning404
      @Morning404 Год назад

      Capitalism sucks.

    • @judeirwin2222
      @judeirwin2222 Год назад +7

      Steven, you mean “Humanity’s fate”.

    • @_ArsNova
      @_ArsNova Год назад +13

      Don't think I'll be trusting the wisdom of a random nobody who doesn't even know how to spell "humanity's".

  • @gamingtonight1526
    @gamingtonight1526 Год назад +103

    And in the UK budget today, the Tories said they are planning to relax the banking rules that were brought in to stop another banking crisis, like we had in 2008!

    • @anthonyfn
      @anthonyfn Год назад +11

      Haha UK doesn't want to be left behind...

    • @FortitudineVincimus
      @FortitudineVincimus Год назад

      😳😑

    • @deborahschumann8286
      @deborahschumann8286 Год назад +3

      Of course…the tories. That is self explanatory. It’s what tories do. Help people? Nope, but Johnny on the spot to bail out the rich

    • @rcisneros8567
      @rcisneros8567 Год назад +3

      In the US almost nothing has changed since the last crisis.

    • @Hastur876
      @Hastur876 Год назад

      Trump did that a couple years ago and we can see that worked out so very well, so of course that clown Sunak will do the same thing. The UK is a democracy, people voted for the Tories.

  • @answerman9933
    @answerman9933 Год назад +18

    Credit Suisse Is always mentioned as being a part of any financial failure. If you do no hear about it at the beginning it is just a matter of time before you will.

    • @aurelvonmarx7914
      @aurelvonmarx7914 Год назад

      I think in 2008 it was the UBS and not the CS if i remember correctly…

    • @Hastur876
      @Hastur876 Год назад

      Credit Suisse has been grossly mismanaged for a decade now. Since the end of the Eurozone crisis their stock has down 95%. March 2020 and Feb 2016 were other periods where their stock crashed in price, and if you look at trading volume you'll see their investors have been vomiting their worthless stock into empty bids for a year now.

  • @DavidTa2
    @DavidTa2 Год назад +40

    Cant lose money from a bank if you dont have any money to put into one lol. Being broke sometimes has its benefits. 🤣

    • @lokis.3869
      @lokis.3869 Год назад +7

      You don't lose your "money" per se. But when bail out happen, we're all pay in the form of inflation

    • @ronbonora7872
      @ronbonora7872 Год назад +1

      congratulations mate!

    • @DavidTa2
      @DavidTa2 Год назад

      @@lokis.3869 Geez. I bet youre a real whoot at parties

    • @DavidTa2
      @DavidTa2 Год назад

      @@ronbonora7872 🤣🤣🤙🤙

    • @junzytech5450
      @junzytech5450 Год назад +1

      As a person who lives in the forest, i can confirm this is true

  • @maestrovso
    @maestrovso Год назад +21

    Credit Susie never misses a crazy party.

  • @Dr_Manhattan_Phd
    @Dr_Manhattan_Phd Год назад +34

    It doesn't make sense to deposit money into a bank that uses your money to make a lot of money but they only give you a fraction of the money they made?

    • @samsonsoturian6013
      @samsonsoturian6013 Год назад +1

      Checking accounts are safe and convenient. Large amounts of cash in your pocket isn't.

    • @eljanrimsa5843
      @eljanrimsa5843 Год назад +4

      Actually it does make sense as long as they are making money. The problems starts when they don't make money. At least they should have hedged the risks so that they remain liquid in a crisis, the company survives and deposits aren't affected. European banks have to do stress tests to prove that.

    • @reheyesd8666
      @reheyesd8666 Год назад +2

      Yup. You are taking a 100% risk to make not even 2-3% because banks are betting on fuck knows what and doing fuck knows what.

    • @hendrikdebruin4012
      @hendrikdebruin4012 Год назад +1

      @@samsonsoturian6013 Famous last words... watch this space. When I started working on payday we queued up at the pay office and received our pay in cash in a pay packet. Nothing wrong as far as I can remember. Fantastic days. It is when we started doing things electronically that the world took a turn for the worse that led to many failures and criminality. It also made you think twice before you spent your money as you did it with actual notes and not via an amount you see on some electronic device. Good old days never to return....

    • @pipo4158
      @pipo4158 Год назад

      Ypu need a Bank for a job, for getzing a apartment etc!!!

  • @frugalmind7050
    @frugalmind7050 Год назад +19

    They have so many analysts upgrading and downgrading companies all over the world, they couldn't find time to grade themselves. 😅

  • @e2rqey
    @e2rqey Год назад +14

    Banks: Oh no! The consequences of our own actions!

  • @allenhubbard4961
    @allenhubbard4961 Год назад +120

    You should make a content on how to earn 6 figures in monthly profits cos I've been reading about investors making up as much and I'd really love to know how to such substantial profit in this current market

    • @allenhubbard4961
      @allenhubbard4961 Год назад

      @Marcelo Rothstein who is your financial coach, do you mind hooking me up?

    • @allenhubbard4961
      @allenhubbard4961 Год назад

      @Marcelo Rothstein I took a look at your advisor and she looks quite the part, I have always thought advisors overrated but taking a look at yours she gives off some confidence, might as well see what advice she has for me.

  • @aadenmarousek
    @aadenmarousek Год назад +352

    My spouse and I are adding a variety of stocks/ETF to my present holdings for the long term, We've set aside $250k to start following inflation-indexed bonds and stocks of companies with solid cash flows, I believe it is a good time to capitalize on the market for long-term gains, but it wouldn't hurt to know means of actualizing short term profit

    • @pamelamonarch
      @pamelamonarch Год назад

      The stock market is a way to hedge against inflation. Most notably amidst recession, investors need to understand where and how to allocate funds to hedge against inflation and still make profits.

    • @itzeltorreson
      @itzeltorreson Год назад

      I agree, having a brokerage advisor for inveesting is genius! Not long ago amidst the pandemic crash in March 2020, I was really having inveesting nightmare prior touching base with a advisor. In a nutshell, i've accrued over $550k with the help of my advisor from an initial $120k investment thus far.

    • @vuhoahua
      @vuhoahua Год назад +1

      Thats true, I've been getting assisted by a FA for almost a year now, I started out with less than $200K and I'm just $19,000 short of half a millioin profit.

    • @jnick6
      @jnick6 Год назад +1

      @@vuhoahua crazy..

    • @akirakrusemark
      @akirakrusemark Год назад

      Mind sharing info on the adviser who assisted you? been saving for pension since age 18 - company scheme. along the way I hit higher tax, so I added to my company pension with a SIPP (tax benefits) I'm 46 now and would love to grow my finance more aggressively, there are a few cars I still wish to drive, a few mega holidays, etc

  • @naomiallen7443
    @naomiallen7443 Год назад +76

    I'm glad I got into trading when I did because it was a turning point for me financially it was my best decision so far

    • @investidorsardinha793
      @investidorsardinha793 Год назад +2

      As an independent woman, I started my first investment plan with just $1000 and am now earning a weekly income of $5000 trading cryptocurrency with my personal broker.

    • @eltonstephens4461
      @eltonstephens4461 Год назад +5

      Encrypted coin tokens are taken over the financial Market. Over the long term, there's been no better way to grow your wealth than investing in the stock/crypto market. The government and banks are failing in its responsibilities

    • @longyao722
      @longyao722 Год назад

      Inspiring! do you think you can give me advice on how to invest in a healthy way like you do? *

    • @investidorsardinha793
      @investidorsardinha793 Год назад

      @@longyao722 I will recommend my current trader, Ms Nicole Brusher, she is from the US and her strategies pay me a lot

    • @investidorsardinha793
      @investidorsardinha793 Год назад

      you can communicate with her on Instagram via

  • @arthurstube
    @arthurstube Год назад +71

    2008 financial crisis coming back like never before

    • @GetItRightUpYees
      @GetItRightUpYees Год назад +10

      You wish ,this will annihilate all the worst records

    • @ryanreedgibson
      @ryanreedgibson Год назад +2

      @@GetItRightUpYees BS! The fundamentals are different. But hey, I hope you're right. I shorted quite a few positions too.

    • @GetItRightUpYees
      @GetItRightUpYees Год назад +1

      @@ryanreedgibsonin 2008 it was most banks were fkd,now everything’s fkd ,nice story though,changed my life bri

    • @Prownilo
      @Prownilo Год назад +8

      2008 crises never ended, the economy died in 2008, everything after has been life support. It's going to collapse unless real fundamental reform takes place... but I think that's unlikely.

    • @ryanreedgibson
      @ryanreedgibson Год назад +1

      @@Prownilo You are right. I made 850 a year until 2009. Now I'm lucky to pull 85/year.

  • @deborahforrest5601
    @deborahforrest5601 Год назад +35

    C'mon people don't freak out, it just the greedy criminals that are in trouble

    • @MrMannyhw
      @MrMannyhw Год назад

      They won’t see any jail time. We know this.

    • @urimtefiki226
      @urimtefiki226 Год назад

      greedy criminals nice definition

    • @Xehiudx
      @Xehiudx Год назад

      Greedy criminals? How about thousands of companies that also have “common people” in it…

  • @steveholmes381
    @steveholmes381 Год назад +4

    Hopefully this will scupper the idea of removing the cap on Banker's bonuses !

  • @Buppasiri1
    @Buppasiri1 Год назад +6

    Centralbanks are the culprit. 2008 was a debt crisis. We couldn't borrow no more whitout rates rising sharply. Then centralbanks intervened and printed money to buy bonds to suppress rates. Banks jumped in and understood that buying low yield debt was good cause value of bond would rise due to centralbanks. Now the same CBs doing a total 180 and raise rates cause of inflation and put banks holdings in jeopardy when bonds value drops to junk.
    Well CBs have a solution. They will cover banks losses. The problem is this is money not exist but needs to come into existence. More money means more inflation. I would describe centralbanks position as hopeless now. Whatever they do it causes havoc. 😱

    • @kienhwengtai8113
      @kienhwengtai8113 Год назад

      Government is also to blame, deregulation meant banks kept gambling with other peoples money.

  • @craigbuckland8055
    @craigbuckland8055 Год назад +4

    Credit Suisse is going down faster than Kamala Harris.

  • @100anirudh
    @100anirudh Год назад +3

    It's 2007 all over, but instead of MBS it's treasury bonds

  • @Mistrons
    @Mistrons Год назад +9

    Make sure you don't have more than 85k in any one bank. There won't be bail-outs, instead it's bail-ins. Which means the bank will take money from your account.

    • @bobpadok5331
      @bobpadok5331 Год назад +2

      Bitcoin is solution!!

    • @play2win78
      @play2win78 Год назад

      Bail-in effects both creditors and debtors. What about if I have a debt in a bank that does bail-in?

    • @TheMundusvultdecipi
      @TheMundusvultdecipi Год назад +1

      ​@@play2win78 Then you hit the lottery Sir!

    • @rcisneros8567
      @rcisneros8567 Год назад +1

      In the US it's 250k. That was the solution to the banking crisis. No fixes to the causes, just more spending by the govt. BTW, the FDIC fund may be depleted just from the collapse of Silicon bank. Time for another bailout.

    • @TheMundusvultdecipi
      @TheMundusvultdecipi Год назад +1

      @@rcisneros8567 Right. The 85k mentioned is for the UK, so those are GBP 85k. The US has USD 250k (In 2018 Trump signed a bill rolling back some Dodd-Frank regulations btw), Canada CAD 100k, in the EU it's EUR 100k, Switzerland has CHF 100k (albeit there's a cap so it's relative), Norway NOK 2 m....

  • @andrewcross1469
    @andrewcross1469 Год назад +4

    Only banks whose name begins with an S seem to be at risk. Looking at you Santander.

  • @francomartini4328
    @francomartini4328 Год назад +15

    Ironic that a bank from a landlocked country should use two sails as its symbol. (Or maybe they're sharks' fins?)

    • @jakleo337
      @jakleo337 Год назад +3

      Two triangles. Two threes .... 33. The Bank of America logo has 'three elevens' .... 33. Coincidence or conspiracy?

    • @faridfarid6561
      @faridfarid6561 Год назад

      @@jakleo337 careful before they call you a conspiracy theorist 😂😂😂they’re about to implement the ISO 20022 Crypto currency. This is the end of fiat currency. We’re running out of “conspiracy theories “😁😁😁😂😂😂

    • @justinamusyoka4986
      @justinamusyoka4986 Год назад

      Masonic.

    • @francomartini4328
      @francomartini4328 Год назад +1

      @@justinamusyoka4986 masonic symbology revolves around the tools used in the construction industry because the first masonic lodges were a kind of proto-trade union meant to protect the builders of Europe's medieval cathedrals from the local rulers who commissioned the work but didn't like paying their bills. (Think Trump eight hundred years ago.)
      Banking started as a way to facilitate trade, particularly between different nations, at a time when there was no common currency and no neutral organizations that could be trusted to act as honest brokers between two parties in a transaction. Ships' sails have been a symbol of international trade for centuries which is why Credit Suisse chose them as the symbol for their bank.
      More facts, fewer conspiracy theories, please.

    • @ilovesuisse1
      @ilovesuisse1 Год назад

      Who cares?

  • @Greebstreebling
    @Greebstreebling Год назад +22

    This is a Swiss Bank, not just any bank somewhere in some long lost little known location. It's Switzerland, with all its huge reputation for financial top class. Anyone know what happens if a Swiss bank fails? Still not to worry, Capitalism and fortunes for the few (when it works) and socialism when it fails - we all pick up the bill as taxpayers. A truly nice system.

    • @bradc32
      @bradc32 Год назад +2

      certainly don't share when things are going well

    • @Alecb217
      @Alecb217 Год назад

      As honest as a Swiss banker, as the saying goes.

    • @rrickarr
      @rrickarr Год назад +1

      Credit Suisse will bounce back!

    • @Hastur876
      @Hastur876 Год назад

      Credit Suisse has had a reputation for being a garbage company run by idiots for the past decade. They're not "top class" by any measure.

  • @peterjeffery8495
    @peterjeffery8495 Год назад +13

    Regulation and "Red Tape" in the Financial Services Market = Guardrails. Remove them its logical to expect more frequent instances of Banks driving off of cliffs.

    • @byronbrimstone5163
      @byronbrimstone5163 Год назад

      "Regulation" from the hands of the corrupt just guarantees corruption.

  • @felipe-vibor
    @felipe-vibor Год назад +7

    With sanctions I was expecting Russian banks to collapse but it seems that expectation backfired

  • @miguelrodriguez9908
    @miguelrodriguez9908 Год назад +4

    Those poor poor billionaires. Wiping their tears with hundred dollar bills.

  • @kashif30189
    @kashif30189 Год назад +8

    When this happens, everyone asks the government to be strict on the banks. But in a normal condition if a government introduce legislation to safeguard the customer increasing the cost of operation for banks which then trickles down to customer, people are up in arms against it.

    • @SplitScreen2
      @SplitScreen2 Год назад +1

      Yes, I see people protesting every day, to deregulate banking sector. Even in 2008 people were mad because government increased regulations. Greetings, my neighbor from Narnia.

    • @SMSCOOBY71
      @SMSCOOBY71 Год назад

      @@SplitScreen2 Clearly he didn't mean ordinary working shmucks, he meant the people who have their money tied up in these criminal enterprises, they lobby 24/7 for less restrictions because their greed drives them.
      But they know that either they canabsorb potential losses or gov's will bail them out as people's money is protected by the current legislations in place.

  • @kvadratnixachapuri9745
    @kvadratnixachapuri9745 Год назад +3

    - - Fun Fact ;
    The Federal Reserve Bank is not federal, has zero reserves and is not a bank!

  • @samuelculper4231
    @samuelculper4231 Год назад +14

    Wonder just how many Russian Oligarchs held money in Suisse Bank

  • @wideawake914
    @wideawake914 Год назад +8

    If its not one thing then it's another. Always has, always will be.

    • @kevinobrien9271
      @kevinobrien9271 Год назад +1

      Lately, if it’s not one thing, it’s two things. 😮

    • @des_smith7658
      @des_smith7658 Год назад

      Another day another drama

    • @rcisneros8567
      @rcisneros8567 Год назад

      Not true. It was george bush jr that allowed banks to gamble. Then the rest of the world wanted to make big profits too. Canada does not play this game and did NOT have a banking crisis.

  • @richardharkness9427
    @richardharkness9427 Год назад +1

    As usual mainstream media in the UK are days/weeks behind with this news. The hangover of QE and low interest rates continues

  • @edwardpaterson1957
    @edwardpaterson1957 Год назад +2

    Few are aware of the REPO market of massive interbank lending. That regulators have let this aspect of banking become normal means that banks have become used to operating outside sound standards and have been relying on each other to fake the balancing of the books on a daily basis. This is just one fault in the modern banking model, but we saw in 2008 that this contributed to the system itself being vulnerable to a single bank failure.....they are all connected!!!

  • @JungledG
    @JungledG Год назад +3

    Credit Suisse claims to be committed to human rights and respects them as a key element of responsible business conduct. However, their actions speak louder than words. They have been involved in numerous allegations of abuse, such as financing fossil fuels, weapons, palm oil and mining companies that harm the environment and communities. They have also faced lawsuits for fraud, money laundering and tax evasion. Credit Suisse does not deserve to be bailed out by taxpayers or investors. They deserve to go bust for their human rights violations.

    • @Hastur876
      @Hastur876 Год назад

      You forgot their spying scandal. They also had a spying scandal.

  • @stephenjacks8196
    @stephenjacks8196 Год назад +1

    Root cause was US Federal Reserve raising interest rates to rein in inflation, which is rising with interest rate basis. Smart people those economists.

  • @MrMannyhw
    @MrMannyhw Год назад +1

    Nice. Socialize bank lost but privatize profits. Too big to fail. Nothing has changed.

  • @lildozen42069
    @lildozen42069 Год назад +1

    Material weaknesses in FR controls? Yeah that’s sketchy as hell.

  • @emzywillrich7243
    @emzywillrich7243 Год назад +3

    They should have kept Thiam as CEO!!!

  • @kunmwas9437
    @kunmwas9437 Год назад +1

    Petrodollar problem 😭😭

  • @cobbler40
    @cobbler40 Год назад +7

    So let me get this right. The bank is in trouble and the solution is to borrow a huge amount of money. Like maxing out your credit card. Doesn’t it have to be paid back ?

    • @fabienneisore7831
      @fabienneisore7831 Год назад

      No, credit cards are based on one source of repayment: your one salary. Banking, much like government spending is based on mutiple sources of revenue that counterbalance each other when properly regulated.

  • @rknaik76
    @rknaik76 Год назад +1

    Big bonuses, lavish employee parties .. they never learn and feed on common man earnings.

  • @soulflower8687
    @soulflower8687 Год назад

    was it a windy day on the way to the BBC TV news studio ?

  • @geoffbirchall7552
    @geoffbirchall7552 Год назад +8

    I hope everyone is prepared! Savers are just unsecured creditors with all banks.

    • @williamwilson6499
      @williamwilson6499 Год назад +2

      Actually, they’re secured up to $250,000. If covered by FDIC.

    • @geoffbirchall7552
      @geoffbirchall7552 Год назад +2

      @@williamwilson6499 when all the banks go bump, there is about 2% cash to pay out everyone. £75,000 is guaranteed, however, the bank has up to 100 years to give that amount back to the unsecured creditor!

  • @potita24
    @potita24 Год назад

    Material is the impact on missing or misstated information in financial estataments

  • @purplehaze8557
    @purplehaze8557 Год назад +20

    2008 all over again...

    • @Buppasiri1
      @Buppasiri1 Год назад +5

      Cause the disease of 2008 was never cured.

  • @jasonc2029AD
    @jasonc2029AD Год назад +1

    CS nearing collapse too...take out all your money if you've any in there!!

  • @haydar378
    @haydar378 Год назад +4

    Buy farm land that you can become self sufficient indefinitely

    • @JohnofthefamilySmith
      @JohnofthefamilySmith Год назад

      It is the only way that some people will survive. There is going to be a massive cull of the population and most people will not survive.

  • @blitz8702
    @blitz8702 Год назад +1

    dont forget sanook is a banker being ruled by bankers is a nightmare

  • @artisticendeavors5076
    @artisticendeavors5076 Год назад +2

    Well people are awoken to the fact that Switzerland has NEVER been neutral about ANYTHING❤

  • @stukafaust
    @stukafaust Год назад +8

    My heart weeps for the trouble Swiss banking giant.

    • @Xehiudx
      @Xehiudx Год назад +9

      Your heart should be with the normal people who will probably loose their job in one of the most expensive cities in the world..

    • @stukafaust
      @stukafaust Год назад +1

      @@Xehiudx They are a neutral country. Let them join the pointless army.

    • @ethisfreedom
      @ethisfreedom Год назад +1

      @@stukafaust okay jew

    • @Xehiudx
      @Xehiudx Год назад

      @@stukafaust i correct myself. All over the world not just people im switzerland. But that you won’t get that cause you’re probably scared, i understand. Let’s just do our best to survive this bs

  • @dougnuttall8413
    @dougnuttall8413 Год назад +1

    If regional/smaller banks lose money as people move to GSIBs (Global Systemic Important Bank) because the larger banks insure 100% deposits, and we end up with 4 of 5 SIBs could their terms of service could include digital Banking?

  • @jeanraphael6756
    @jeanraphael6756 Год назад +3

    So proud are the Swiss of their bank...quite extraordinary what's happening

  • @proton8689
    @proton8689 Год назад +1

    The 2020s really been hyping up the season final

  • @SteveXNYC
    @SteveXNYC Год назад +6

    Robbery global robbery

  • @atarileaf
    @atarileaf Год назад +4

    The end is nigh!!!!

  • @lighttheoryllc4337
    @lighttheoryllc4337 Год назад +1

    Weak Materials means they lost track of the market and got greedy and repeated 2008 mistakes

  • @leszeka7675
    @leszeka7675 Год назад

    Credit Suisse was killed by competition from Delaware, Nevada, etc., which was the disclosure of accounts

  • @haptic5273
    @haptic5273 Год назад +1

    Credit Suisse is one of Switzerland's largest banks and has been in operation for over 160 years. In recent years, the bank has faced several high-profile scandals and controversies, including involvement in tax evasion schemes, money laundering, and fraudulent activities.
    In April 2021, Credit Suisse was hit with significant losses due to the collapse of Archegos Capital, a family office that had taken out large, leveraged positions in various companies. This event resulted in a $4.7 billion loss for the bank and raised questions about its risk management practices.
    Furthermore, in 2019, Credit Suisse was embroiled in a spying scandal involving its former Chief Operating Officer, who hired investigators to follow and spy on several employees. This scandal led to the resignation of the CEO, Tidjane Thiam.
    As a result of these scandals and losses, Credit Suisse has seen a decline in its stock price and has been under increased scrutiny from regulators and investors.
    In terms of advice, it is crucial for banks to prioritize sound risk management practices and ethical behavior. These scandals and controversies highlight the importance of having strong oversight and controls in place to prevent such issues from arising. For investors, it is essential to conduct thorough research and due diligence before investing in any company, particularly in the financial sector where risk management is of utmost importance.

  • @nicwilkin4743
    @nicwilkin4743 Год назад +1

    Big money out to buy banks on the Cheap

  • @piotr.leniec-lincow5209
    @piotr.leniec-lincow5209 Год назад +8

    That's what happens when you start thinking that 3D is possible on a flat screen .

  • @reheyesd8666
    @reheyesd8666 Год назад +1

    15 years of economic growth and banks are collapsing because of 6 months of QT? What the fuck is happening in their decision making?

  • @rustyrench4278
    @rustyrench4278 Год назад +5

    I miss 2008 🥶🥶🥶

  • @Techinvestor567
    @Techinvestor567 Год назад

    My open end turbo from 2 days ago has rocketed

  • @stevewiles7132
    @stevewiles7132 Год назад +5

    If all these banks are borrowing money from each other to function, where is all the money from the depositors? If a bank has to keep borrowing, then isn't the bank already in trouble?

    • @time.dealer
      @time.dealer Год назад

      Banks do not keep a big enough cash reserve. The standart is 5% of all deposed money to be considered a "stable backed" bank, but when a bank run occures, 5%is not enough. The rest of the money is invested in quickly-sellable assets, that provide steady growth to keep investors in the bank happy, to not let the money lose it's value etc. The bad part is that bank investors are greedy and ivest our money with high-risk-high return strategy, because they are super greedy.

  • @marcusaetius9309
    @marcusaetius9309 Год назад +1

    Get your money out quick! 😳

  • @cholex
    @cholex Год назад +7

    It appears the Drone incident with the Russians didn't settled the markets and the investors by deviating the media attention back to this horrible war.
    The cost of this war is about to hit the Us and Europe like a ton of bricks....

    • @thetruthone7240
      @thetruthone7240 Год назад +1

      Uraaaah!!!. Slava Russia 🇷🇺

    • @play2win78
      @play2win78 Год назад

      @@thetruthone7240 Slava moscovia!

  • @leszeka7675
    @leszeka7675 Год назад

    The problem US is the trillion losses of banks, which cannot be talked about out loud because deposits will start to run away, not supervision, because it was supervision that encouraged permanent mortgage loans close to zero and the purchase of bonds with interest rates close to zero.

  • @MattIn3rtia
    @MattIn3rtia Год назад

    Well, I think it's pretty much accepted by now that the way the system's setup is basically musical chairs. Every now and again the music stops and someone's left standing. And that has to happen so the game can go on.

  • @lilacer6841
    @lilacer6841 Год назад +1

    Credit Suisse has long been in trouble

  • @michaelmichellis
    @michaelmichellis Год назад

    how do we know if UBS, is in fact, also experiencing a banking squeeze, and as such will use Credit Suisse’s huge line of credit to hiding this in the merge

  • @yecyec3927
    @yecyec3927 Год назад +3

    WATCH OUT FOR THE COLLAPSE OF HSBC OF HONG KONG THIS WILL BE THE START.

  • @silviashefa4097
    @silviashefa4097 Год назад +2

    What Are You Afraid of and Why?
    I am afraid of nothing anymore.
    In the past, I was afraid not having enough time to complete everything that I wanted to in life.
    That passed a long time ago though.
    What is there to fear? If we would see the truth, then we would have no fear of anything at all, because we would then see that we are in the hands of the good and benevolent upper force. Also, we would see that we have no control over our lives, and we thus have nothing to fear. In short, we have nothing to be afraid of.

  • @sengamine1442
    @sengamine1442 Год назад +3

    Debit Suisse

  • @nicwilkin4743
    @nicwilkin4743 Год назад +1

    Big CEOs paying them selves Big Bonuses for poor performance

  • @cmath6454
    @cmath6454 Год назад +4

    That's what I call a bait.... and Swiss.
    Have a nice day. 👍

  • @Shining237
    @Shining237 Год назад +1

    Not good. This isn't over, and will ultimately affect the entire EU 🇪🇺

  • @edd2184
    @edd2184 Год назад

    Kind of crazy when you have all the connections in world. Plus the technical ability to print money, hold minimum reserves,make a call to Wall Street and tell them to halt the sales of your yet still fail...

  • @matthewbowler6563
    @matthewbowler6563 Год назад +4

    Russias doing this

    • @GetItRightUpYees
      @GetItRightUpYees Год назад +2

      Russians can only fight who’s fighting them,Zelensky is doing this

    • @briant5685
      @briant5685 Год назад

      the mission was to collapse russia well it seems like the west is collapsing itself,a new recession with no one to bail out

    • @JohnofthefamilySmith
      @JohnofthefamilySmith Год назад

      US banks are failing after sending all their money to Zelensky.

  • @lobsterking3633
    @lobsterking3633 Год назад

    Actually by right interest rates up , equities down , bond interest should be going up.. But it’s interest low.. Something is brewing

  • @geoffbirchall7552
    @geoffbirchall7552 Год назад +11

    The financial collapse is upon us! 2008 will seem like a slight inconvenience compared!

    • @DanteLovesPizza
      @DanteLovesPizza Год назад

      It won't. Who banks in Switzerland? Billionaires. Where are they moving their money to in this "exodus of deposits?" Narnia?
      Also, Saudi National Bank isn't investing more due to regulations, but a shell company in the British Virgin Islands owned by another shell company in the Cayman Islands owned by the butler of the Saudi royal family can.
      Saudi National Bank, owned by the Saudi government, owned by the Saudi royal family, like yeah, they're going to watch their 10% share in the bank sink to the bottom of the ocean and not do anything about it. Lol, OK.

    • @geoffbirchall7552
      @geoffbirchall7552 Год назад +1

      @@DanteLovesPizzasorry pal, fiat money is collapsing, all by design, for your digital ID. You should have been preparing for this, this will make Germany 1930s look like a lovely weekend break!

    • @DanteLovesPizza
      @DanteLovesPizza Год назад

      @@geoffbirchall7552
      Yeah, the Saudi royal family are just going to write off their 10% share in it and the billionaires are going to withdraw all their deposits and bring it to the UK.
      The flying unicorn that feeds off plastic and craps out gold bars I ordered from Amazon should be arriving any day as well now.

  • @Witnessmoo
    @Witnessmoo Год назад +1

    The long dated bonds these banks hold are not worth what the banks say they’re worth - these bonds are a huge part of the banks’ balance sheet. If they aren’t worth what the banks say they’re worth, then the banks are potentially insolvent, so depositor are fleeing…

  • @janechoy2073
    @janechoy2073 Год назад

    PwC issued a material weakness on their ICFR audit opinion on Credit Suisse. That means that PwC is saying the internal controls and operational protocols that CS has designed and implememented - are not actually working according to their design and have material weaknesses that may lead to a material misstatement in their financial statements. "material weakness" is the worst grade that an auditor can give on an audit report and no auditor does this without care; this is like, defcon 1.

  • @billypocoyeah
    @billypocoyeah Год назад +6

    and this is why deregulation and free market capitalism is a stupid idea

    • @markschade6951
      @markschade6951 Год назад +2

      Except for the fact that it's objectively lifted more people out of poverty to a higher standard of living, by the billions, than any other system in the history of humanity. You want to see stupid ideas go spend some time reading up on centrally planned economies.

    • @play2win78
      @play2win78 Год назад

      Well there are plenty of stupid ideas. Lets also forget the word "free" since it just does not exist. If it gets F-ed up it probably has something to do with corruption and greed. We can also look at Russland, where one man tells how to live as he sees in his dreams.

    • @billypocoyeah
      @billypocoyeah Год назад

      ​@@markschade6951 yeah capitalism has lifted people out of poverty. But it also enabled the 2008 crash when banks made absurd loans and the government wasn't putting any rules in place. It also creates huge wealth inequality which you cannot deny. I never mentioned a totally planned or centrally controlled economy, with my suggestion being a mixed economy where the government steps in where needed

  • @lambertois11
    @lambertois11 Год назад

    The Silicon Valley Bank reserves were in long-term low interest treasuries, without any hedging for interest rate increase. Big risk management failure!
    It seem that Credit Suisse did a similar risk management failure?

  • @objectionism
    @objectionism Год назад

    this is why fractional reserve banking and a usury based fiscal system is what plunges people into poverty. Your £5 only a year ago had more purchasing power than today and its all because of interest based monetary system

  • @thetruthone7240
    @thetruthone7240 Год назад +4

    😂😂😂... Russia is laughing. Uraaaah 🇷🇺. Slava Russia. Karma is sweet.

  • @michaelellis4222
    @michaelellis4222 Год назад

    Why would they care if they get bailed out every time they mess up?

  • @hinduismsanatanadharmam
    @hinduismsanatanadharmam Год назад

    Protected Banks vs Unprotected Banks. Commercial Banks vs Investment Banks. Regulation vs Deregulation. Bring Glass Steagal Act of 1933

  • @orlandoburgess4858
    @orlandoburgess4858 Год назад

    Accepting FTT tokens as collateral apparently wasn't such a great idea............no s**t!

  • @hailua2013
    @hailua2013 Год назад +1

    Does sanctioning work??