A Quote by Jim Rogers

Without giving specific names, most of the significant American banks, the larger banks, are bankrupt, totally bankrupt. — © Jim Rogers
Without giving specific names, most of the significant American banks, the larger banks, are bankrupt, totally bankrupt.
The whole banking sector in Mexico was literally bankrupt. For whatever reason, instead of intervening in the sector or supporting the banks, the government expropriated them. We went through the very laborious period of selling the failing banks to the wealthy people of Mexico.
Barack Obama inherited a bankrupt economy, a bankrupt government, and a bankrupt foreign policy.
Investment banks manage to go bankrupt through their investment-banking activities, commercial banks manage to go bankrupt through their commercial-banking activities.
Obamacare won't just bankrupt the country. It may bankrupt small businesses. It may bankrupt individuals.
The state is a bankrupt institution. The only alternative to this bankrupt 'humanistic' system is a God-centered government.
We can't bankrupt Exxon. But we can politically and morally bankrupt them.
When I started the business, only banks operated at airports, only banks issued travellers' cheques, only banks issued international payments, only banks serviced their own branch networks.
The soul lives forever by giving, not receiving. This is the grand paradox. You get most by giving most. Conversely, by receiving much you impoverish yourself. By selfish accumulation you become bankrupt.
Capping the size of American banks won't eliminate the needs of big businesses; it will force them to turn to foreign banks that won't face the same restrictions.
Separating out banks and investment banks right now under Glass-Steagall would have very big implications to the liquidity and the capital markets and banks being able to perform necessary lending.
People with banking experience haven't all flocked to the biggest banks; community banks and regional banks, along with smaller trading houses and credit unions, have some very talented people.
No business in the economy has the easy money that banks get to play with.... The existence of banks with single digit amounts of equity is a completely unhealthy existence -- that is not only a risk for the banks, but for all of us.
As American citizens, if you believe all banks were bailed out, you would hate banks. I would, too.
These are stupid people that say, ‘Oh didn’t Trump declare bankruptcy? Didn’t he go bankrupt?’ I didn’t go bankrupt.
I'm not bankrupt of effervescence. I'm not bankrupt of craic.
The same things happen to quite an extent around the globe. I mean, the European banks were doing what the American banks were.
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