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Businesses The Almighty Buck

More and More Americans Are Gaming the Deposit-Insurance System (economist.com) 49

A new report looks at the firms that quietly move billions around the banking industry each day. Reciprocal deposits enable banks to place deposits with another bank and receive the same value back through technology firms, reshuffling approximately $1 trillion through their platforms. This deposit-swapping allows banks to offer customers more insurance, a priority after Silicon Valley Bank's failure, where 93% of deposits were uninsured. At the end of last year, around 45% of deposits in the American banking system were uninsured.

Invented by Eugene Ludwig in 2002, reciprocal deposits help banks offer greater deposit insurance without forgoing deposit funding. Ludwig's firm, IntraFi, allows banks to place insured deposits around the system while receiving the same value from other locations. IntraFi, the largest firm with 3,000 banks on its platform, has been joined by r&t Deposit Solutions, ModernFi, and StoneCastle Cash Management. These firms are experiencing rapid growth, with reciprocal deposits' value increasing significantly since March.

The story asks: All this deposit-swapping raises the question of whether it makes sense to maintain the federal cap. The private sector has come up with a clever workaround to offer more deposit insurance than mandated. It is conceivable that, with several thousand banks in the network, an account could offer deposit insurance for hundreds of millions of dollars. Indeed, StoneCastle offers an account with $125m in deposit insurance. But there is a difference between a private-sector workaround and a public-sector mandate. It is currently difficult to match banks so that all are able to offer such high limits (most offer just a few million dollars' insurance), and reciprocal-deposit firms levy fees, too. They apply on top of the charges, of between 0.05% and 0.32% of the value of total liabilities, that institutions pay for federal-deposit insurance.

Abolishing the cap would make insurance pricier across the system; these higher costs would almost certainly be passed on to customers in the form of lower interest rates. Still, if enough depositors seek insurance by spreading deposits around, higher costs might be the result anyway.

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More and More Americans Are Gaming the Deposit-Insurance System

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  • by redmid17 ( 1217076 ) on Thursday April 13, 2023 @01:07PM (#63447204)
    Every time the banks try to come up with a workaround or the government relaxes / removes barriers, the banking system crashes. For the love of god, please stop removing safeguards that have worked for 80+ years when we know removing those barriers caused, in part, the 2009 recession and this SV / regional bank meltdown.

    I wouldn't have expected this kind of trash from the economist.
    • The Economist is /the/ place for this kind of trash...
      • The Economist is /the/ place for this kind of trash...

        The Economist wasn't nearly as exciting as John Wayne's followup (and final) film The Shootist [wikipedia.org].

    • Every time the banks try to come up with a workaround or the government relaxes / removes barriers, the banking system crashes.

      No, it is just a complex and developing system. Regulating the economy requires making numerous risk assessments and trying to balance that against desirable features like liquidity, innovation, and competition, and any time there's a problem you can always say "oh we got something wrong" but that doesn't mean you shouldn't have been trying. Yes, every time it breaks you can go back and point to something. But it's a bit like saying developers writing code causes bugs.

      The results of overregulation are argua

  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Thursday April 13, 2023 @01:17PM (#63447226)
    this is how it's supposed to work. This makes it so risk gets spread out across multiple banks.
    • by Xenx ( 2211586 )
      That isn't quite accurate. Sure, it spreads out that singular account across multiple banks. However, each one of those banks also puts the same amount of money back into the first bank. If that bank goes under, the same amount of money is lost. It's just that more of it is covered under FDIC. Good for the account holders, bad for the FDIC. If the payouts increase, I can only assume the premiums would increase. That means increased costs for the banks. In a perfect world, the banks would be able to account
      • by Xenx ( 2211586 )
        I guess it might be more correct to say, "I don't know if they accurately considered the drawbacks."
      • by edwdig ( 47888 )

        Spreading the accounts out like this is going to massively increase the overhead at all the banks involved. Costs are already up to cover this. Might as well cut out all the extra layers of complexity and just increase the FDIC limits and premiums. It'll have the same net result in the end, but less overhead and less costs to manage everything.

    • That was my first thought, but I do wonder whether having the reciprocal agreements removes any benefit to diversity?
  • Spreading your deposit across multiple banks greatly decreases your exposure to bank failures, which generally happen one at a time.

  • Articles like this really make me think someone is trying to bring the entire banking system down. Are people really that dumb or is it malicious?
    • The banking system is malicious.

    • by Frank Burly ( 4247955 ) on Thursday April 13, 2023 @01:41PM (#63447286)

      They aren't trying to bring down banking, they are trying to get rid of the cap in FDIC insurance. Doing so will mean that huge depositors will do even less due diligence than they did when choosing SVB.

      This will weaken the market forces that make banks careful with depositors money (who cares, is all insured) meaning that banks can do whatever they like with your money, as long as regulations permit it.

      But those regulations will make it harder to make money. So banks will sponsor a study/thinkpiece on how Regulation X is a vestige of an earlier time and it is now counterproductive.

      Ok, you're right, they are trying to bring down banking.

      • by migos ( 10321981 )
        They are just saving people the trouble of opening multiple accounts at different banks. Even if we get rid of the interbank swapping as a service, there will be 3rd party services that will help people open 50 accounts and operate as a middleman for deposit/withdraw. The only solution is to charge premium proportional to the amount insured, as well as the risk profile of the bank.
  • Title sucks... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by dark.nebulae ( 3950923 ) on Thursday April 13, 2023 @02:05PM (#63447350)

    More and More Americans are not gaming anything with the Deposit Insurance System.

    I'm not seeing a single thing in the article which shows average Americans gaming anything.

    I see big banks working together to insure each other while still being able to put the cash to work, but there's nothing there for the average American to game.

    Heck, you don't even need to read TFA to know that the title is very much out of line with the actual content of the article...

    • Heck, you don't even need to read TFA to know that the title is very much out of line with the actual content of the article...

      So... no different than most other Slashdot submissions?

    • More and More Americans are not gaming anything with the Deposit Insurance System.

      I'm not seeing a single thing in the article which shows average Americans gaming anything.

      This graph [statista.com] indicates that most large banks are not gaming the FDIC limit. In fact, this non-gaming of the system was part of the problem with Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank.

  • Make the insurance per citizen, nothing to game any more.

  • The stupid thing people forget is the government can't back up infinite risk and it shouldn't either. It should back up a reasonable amount of risk, and it shouldn't have to back up high risk. An easier thing to do would be to regulate banks more to prevent them from doing stupid things, but they lobby against that because they can't take on more risk and generate more profits.
  • But what happens when you actually try to claim a 125 million dollar insurance payout?
    • Well, figure that a minimum of 500 banks would have to fail to reach that milestone. Long before that point there is no money. Kaput.
  • Glass-Steagall (Score:4, Interesting)

    by eriks ( 31863 ) on Thursday April 13, 2023 @03:01PM (#63447518)

    I realize this is somewhat of a tangent, since most of the balances over a quarter mil probably belong to companies, rather than individuals, but if it *is* a case where actual individual people are depositing more than $250,000 in a single "SAVINGS" bank (e.g. a checking account or savings account), why not just make that literally not allowed, and/or make all these money shuffling shenanigans illegal. That should be what "INVESTMENT" banks are for, though even then, I'd think the smart money would want to be as diversified as possible, but what do I know. Anyway, I guess this is (one of the many reasons) why we need Glass-Steagall back.

    Further: if multi-millionaires and billionaires want to have their deposits over $250,000 insured, let them buy their own fucking insurance. Raising the cap would essentially be a regressive tax, since 90%+ of Americans probably don't have $2,500 in a bank account, much less $250,000.

    The financial landscape is *completely* different now compared to when the FDIC was created, since back then, many people actually *had* savings, so a good chunk of the money in banks was held by "regular Joes", so a "run on the banks" could actually happen if a lot of people were to withdraw their savings, whereas now almost all of it is held by the extremely wealthy, so they're the only ones that can create a meaningful "run on the banks" anyway.

    • When the bank buys insurance on behalf of the customer, they are going to pass along the costs. Why not mandate banks pay for insurance for all balances, and let the banks pass the costs along to customers? In effect it's the same thing as customers buying insurance except there's less paperwork.
  • Abolishing the cap would make insurance pricier across the system; these higher costs would almost certainly be passed on to customers in the form of lower interest rates. Still, if enough depositors seek insurance by spreading deposits around, higher costs might be the result anyway.

    Currently, its higher costs for those who need to use a private product or service to hedge their risk. Same costs for the smaller depositors. There are things like credit default swaps (CDS) which allow a wealthy investor/depositor to insure against defaults. You want one? Buy it yourself. Abolishing the cap puts that insurance cost on all depositors.

    You rich folks want something? Pay for it yourself.

  • So the whole reason for FDIC was basically to stop bank runs, it had a low limit because they thought your average farmer or worker just needed someplace to park cash and it be safe, and your average person probably has no clue how to do DD on a bank to understand its financials to see if its safe or note. However back then cash was much more prevalent ; like employees may have been paid in cash, when a company paid wages it might just have a big safe with cash in it. Well now you have to basically store
  • All this deposit-swapping raises the question of whether it makes sense to maintain the federal cap. The private sector has come up with a clever workaround to offer more deposit insurance than mandated. It is conceivable that, with several thousand banks in the network, an account could offer deposit insurance for hundreds of millions of dollars. Indeed, StoneCastle offers an account with $125m in deposit insurance. But there is a difference between a private-sector workaround and a public-sector mandate.

    There's also a substantial risk difference between the liability of allowing people to "game" the system by using private services to spread their accounts among hundreds of banks and insuring each one for a small amount, versus insuring the full amount as a lump sum.

    I don't see why the Fed would ever want to insure huge lump sums since they'd then be on the hook if one bank failed, whereas in the current situation they only have to pay out $250k for each bank that fails. That means if you spread your mone

    • I don't see why the Fed would ever want to insure huge lump sums since they'd then be on the hook if one bank failed, whereas in the current situation they only have to pay out $250k for each bank that fails. That means if you spread your money with these services the Fed is likely never going to have to pay you anywhere close to your full amount unless the entire banking system fails, which is preferable to one bank failing and them owing depositors millions of dollars each.

      I think it ends up being a wash, personally.

      Think about it. If customers are spreading their money around in different accounts, that means each bank is going to have more accounts on average.

      What you seemed to miss is that it isn't $250k for each bank, it's up to $250k for each account at that bank.

      So if banks have 10% more accounts from people keeping their money in multiple accounts to stay under the limit, that means that the FDIC is on the hook for up to 10% more money.

      Or we could just increase the li

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