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Some of the depositors, not all. My employer didn’t conspire about anything.

When and how much money is returned is going to make the difference between life and death for some of these companies. And the difference between having a job and healthcare or not for a lot of people.

Don’t forget that this is happening to depositors / companies after weathering a pandemic and in a really shitty economies where things are already very challenging. Having additional cash flow problems and/or additional debt to service all the sudden may be the proverbial straw that sends companies and people into bankruptcy.




I’m sympathetic. I was in the hospitality industry during COVID, I watched a company that employs 60 people struggle to make payroll while 90% of their business was legally barred from operating for months on end with no clue when it would end. I saw managers and fellow employees giving each other loans, I paid for a coworker’s car repairs. I am not wishing this on you.

By this evening you’ll know if a sale has gone through; if so, everything is back to normal. Otherwise, the FDIC has 250k waiting for your employer on Monday morning, guaranteed. Even if that’s not a week’s payroll, for all but the largest companies that’s enough to get employees by for a week.

The money isn’t gone, just locked up in securities. By the end of the week some percentage of the account will be released - I’ve heard predictions of 80%, 60%, 50%, but even if it’s 20% that is still enough for almost any place to run close to full payroll and operating costs for a month. By the end of the month you’ll have 50-80% back, and you’re back to normality. Maybe the last 20% takes a year. It can wait. This isn’t the end! It’s scary, but it is not the end.


My employer didn’t conspire about anything.

They didn't "conspire", per se. But they failed to do due diligence on the nature of the financial institution they were relying upon.

Or even to think, for a minute, about fussy terminology like "FDIC insured" actually means.




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