Negative Retail Interest Rates Have Arrived in Germany

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I only have three words in response to the following article.

Gold. Silver. Bitcoin.

Bloomberg reports:

When the European Central Bank introduced a negative interest rate on lenders’ deposits two years ago, few thought things would ever go this far.

This week, a German cooperative savings bank in the Bavarian village of Gmund am Tegernsee — population 5,767 — said it’ll start charging retail customers to hold their cash. From September, for savings in excess of 100,000 euros ($111,710), the community’s Raiffeisen bank will take back 0.4 percent. That’s a direct pass through of the current level of the ECB’s negative deposit rate.

“With our business clients there’s been a negative rate for quite some time, so why should it be any different for private individuals with big balances?,” Josef Paul, a board member of the bank, said by phone on Thursday. “As it looks today, charges on deposits won’t be extended to customers with lower amounts” than 100,000 euros, he said. 

Raiffeisen Gmund am Tegernsee may be a tiny bank that’s only introducing penalties to well-off customers — it says fewer than 140 will be affected — but in principle the ECB’s negative deposit rate was meant to encourage spending and investment in the euro area’s sluggish economy, not to tax thrifty Bavarians. A spokesman for the Frankfurt-based central bank declined to comment.

So far, policy makers have said there haven’t been any serious negative side-effects, such as customers withdrawing their cash and stashing it elsewhere. 

Famous last words.

For related articles, see:

Abenomics Fail – Safe Sales Soar in Japan as People Move to Store Cash Amid Negative Interest Rate Turmoil

Headline of the Day – ‘Europe’s Credit Investors Are Seeing Bubbles and Still Adding Risk’

The ECB’s Insane Monetary Policy is Creating a Rush Into Derivatives

Japan’s Bond Market is One Gigantic Joke – “No One Judges Corporate Credit Risks Seriously Anymore”

In Liberty,
Michael Krieger

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