Global banking stocks are crashing hard

– just like they did in 2008

“Fortress balance sheets?”…  “It’s different this time”… “Greatest economy ever.”

If all of that is true, then why are the stocks of the most systemically important banks in the world collapsing?

And the banking collapse is leading global stocks lower – probably not coincidentally as global central bank balance sheets contract…

As The Economic Collapse blog’s Michael Snyder notes, if this reminds you of 2008, it should, because that is precisely what we witnessed back then.  Banking stocks collapsed as fear gripped the marketplace, and ultimately many large global banks had to be bailed out either directly or indirectly by their national governments as they failed one after another.  The health of the banking system is absolutely paramount, because the flow of money is our economic lifeblood.  When the flow of money tightens up during a credit crunch, the consequences can be rapid and dramatic just like we witnessed in 2008.

So let’s keep a very close eye on banking stocks.  Global systemically important bank stocks surged in the aftermath of Trump’s victory in 2016, but now they are absolutely plunging.  They are now down a whopping 27 percent from the peak, and that puts them solidly in bear market territory.

U.S. banking stocks are not officially in bear market territory yet, but they are getting close. 

For the rest of this article please go to source link below.

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By Tyler Durden / Editors

A group of editors who collectively write under the pseudonym "Tyler Durden" (a character from the novel and film Fight Club).

(Source: zerohedge.com; October 23, 2018; http://tinyurl.com/y9mm3hzx)
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