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Cede & Co - The $54.2 Trillion Shadow Trust That Owns The World - YouTube
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INTRO:
Do you know what happens when you buy a stock?
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Most people would assume that their brokerage
would go out and get a stock certificate under
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your name. This way, even if the brokerage
collapsed, those shares would belong to you.
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But this is actually not what happens. When
you buy a stock from your brokerage, you basically
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get an IOU contract from the brokerage. This
contract gives you certain rights to the stock
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but not ownership. Before you get mad at the
brokerages though, you should know that they
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donât own the stock either. When they want
to buy or sell a stock on behalf of their
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clients, they have to send their order to
the Depository Trust Company or the DTC also
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known as Cede & Co. The DTC will issue the
brokerage an IOU statement, and this is what
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gets passed down to you. So, itâs actually
the DTC that not only owns your stock, but
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also virtually all publicly traded shares
and securities in the US and 131 other countries.
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According to their official website, theyâre
job is to bring efficiency to the securities
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industry by retaining custody of wait for
it $54.2 trillion. And that was as of July
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2017. Since then, the US stock market has
grown $18 trillion and the US has issued trillions
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of dollars worth of bonds, so the DTCâs
total assets are likely well above $70 trillion
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today. So, hereâs how Cede & Co got to owning
the world.
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FOUNDING THE DTC:
Taking a look back, the story of the DTC dates
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back to the 1960s. America had not only recovered
from the great depression but the economy
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and more specifically the automotive industry
was booming. Americans were making and spending
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more money than ever before. Most of these
guys had no interest in saving or investing.
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Either they themselves or their parents had
lost everything to the great depression, so
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they felt that it was way better to just live
in the moment. This is what really spawned
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the terrible but extremely common trend of
living paycheck to paycheck. If your retirement
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can be ruined by some irresponsible financial
institution, why save in the first place?
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Despite this popular sentiment, given how
large and diverse America is, there were naturally
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some people who still wanted to invest their
money. And given that these guys were making
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more money than ever before, they were able
to invest more money than ever before. This
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resulted in unprecedented trade volume leading
into the 1970s. The New York Stock Exchange
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was regularly processing more than 8 million
shares per day. Now, compared to todayâs
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6 billion shares per day, this was nothing.
But, they didnât have computers or fancy
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technology that could just automatically execute
each trade. So, they had to manually handle
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8 million shares every single day, and this
was basically their limit. So, in 1968, the
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NYSE decided to create a securities clearing
firm called the Central Certificate Service
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or the CCS. The CCS was basically responsible
for automating the stock market. The president
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of the NYSE at the time, Robert Haack, promised
quote, âWe are going to automate the stock
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certificate out of business by substituting
a punch card.â Instead of keeping track
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of ownership through stock certificates, the
CCS kept all the stock certificates to themselves
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and tracked ownership through electronic records.
The NYSE hoped to reduce the prevalence of
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stock certificates by 75% with the CCS, but
there was one major issue. â
of brokers
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refused to use the service. Electronic records
were extremely attractive for brokers, but
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they didnât trust the CCS or computers in
general for that matter. So, most brokers
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opted to continue in their old ways. Despite
this, the CCS continued to expand their services
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and attempted to build credibility. In 1970,
for instance, CCSâs services were extended
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to the American Stock Exchange. Around the
same time, we also saw the creation of the
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Banking and Securities Industry Committee
or BASIC. BASIC gave bankers and brokerages
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a way to propose rules and standards that
the CCS must follow. Banks and brokers deliberated
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for years about how such an institution should
be run, but eventually, in 1973, BASIC members
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agreed to create a beefed up version of the
CCS called the DTC.
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INNER WORKINGS OF THE DTC:
Once the DTC was created, more and more brokerages
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jumped on board. Though most brokerages didnât
use the CCS, they wanted to use it. They simply
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didnât want to explain to their clients
that they will no longer receive stock certificates
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because the brokerage is either too lazy or
didnât want to handle that much paper. But,
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as notable banks and brokerages embraced the
DTC, smaller institutions flooded in. Now,
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thatâs all cool and all, but how exactly
does the DTC work? Well, I explained it as
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an IOU contract at the beginning, but itâs
of course not that simple. Whenever a brokerage
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or bank agrees to work with the DTC, the DTC
will take all of the institutionâs stock
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certificates, bond certificates, and money
market instruments and enter them into their
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database. The DTC already owns billions if
not trillions of dollars worth of each security,
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so theyâll mark down that Chase has rights
to 10.4% of the DTCâs Apple shares and 12%
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of their Google shares and so on and so forth.
Whenever buy and sell orders flow in during
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the day, the DTC tallies up the total inflow
and outflow of each of their clients for each
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security. And at the end of each day, the
DTC simply changes the numbers in their database
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to reflect the result of the trading day.
For example, Chaseâs stake in Apple might
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be reduced to 10.2% and their stake in Google
might be increased to 12.2%, but no stock
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certificates are actually swapped and no paper
is being traded. The DTC only settles securities
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at the end of each day, and each security
takes different amounts of time to process
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based on their time sensitivity. For example,
options have expiration dates, so theyâre
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processed within 1 business day. Stocks on
the other hand take 2 business days while
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slower moving assets like bonds take 3 days.
If you have a cash brokerage account, youâre
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probably well aware of these settlement times.
Once you sell a stock, you actually have to
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wait two days to get your money. But, with
most brokerage accounts, the brokerage will
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simply give you the money instantly and theyâll
be reimbursed by the DTC over the next few
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days. So, a lot of stock buyers are completely
unaware of settlement times, but thatâs
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what's going on in the background whenever
you buy or sell. Buying and selling only accounts
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for a small portion of the stock market though.
Most people simply hold onto their stocks
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for years if not decades, so what happens
to shares that are simply held. Well, the
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DTC will give each of their clients a certain
amount of rights to their shares. For example,
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clients will retain voting rights, the right
to use the shares as collateral, and the right
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to buy and sell options using the underlying
stock. The DTC will also process dividend
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payments and ensure that each client is paid
out appropriately. In essence, the DTC basically
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takes care of everything. I think itâs pretty
clear why banks prefer this over trading billions
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of stock certificates per day.
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DTC AFFILIATION:
All of this still leaves the question, is
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your brokerage or bank associated with the
DTC. Well, if you live in the US, the answer
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is yes. Unless you keep your money in some
obscure offshore bank, itâs almost a certainty
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that your brokerage and bank works directly
with the DTC. The DTC does publicly post all
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the institutions they work with, so you can
go check out this list if youâre interested.
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But the easiest way to identify affiliation
with the DTC is to simply check if your brokerage
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allows for transferring to or from other brokerages.
Brokerages donât wanna complete transfers
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manually especially for customers that are
leaving. So, if you have the ability to easily
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transfer to another brokerage, it's because
the brokerage simply offloads the transferring
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responsibility to the DTC. Just because your
brokerage is associated with the DTC though
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doesnât mean that itâs impossible for
you to get a stock certificate. It is nearly
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impossible as brokerages put up as many roadblocks
as they can, and I really donât recommend
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that you try to do this. But if you want the
certificate for novelty purposes or something,
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you can ask your broker and theyâre required
by state law to give you your certificate.
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The process will likely take months, youâll
probably be charged hundreds of dollars, and
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youâll end up spending hours on the phone
with your brokerage, but if youâre super
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persistent, you should be able to get it.
This too is changing fast though, and itâs
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just a matter of time until itâs impossible
to get a stock certificate. In the UK, for
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example, stock certificates will no longer
be a thing starting in 2025. This is really
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nothing to worry about as it's simply the
far overdue digitalization of this part of
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the industry. But, as you would guess, this
has sparked a lot of conspiracies regarding
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the DTC.
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CONCERNS & CONSPIRACIES:
Before we put on our tin foil hats, letâs
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discuss some legitimate concerns with Cede
& Co. First of all, given the sheer volume
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of money Cede handles, itâs possible that
an insider steals some of that money. Stealing
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$1 billion from Cede would be like stealing
$1 from someone who has $54,000. Stealing
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$10 million would be like stealing 1 cent.
Cede only has 12 directors and half a dozen
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employees, so theoretically, it wouldn't be
that hard for insiders to collude and steal
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serious amounts of money. Again, this is improbable,
but seeing cases like Bernie Madoff, it is
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possible. The other more serious concern is
illegal short selling. The process is super
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convoluted and technical, but in essence,
hedge funds are able to leverage the DTCâs
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settlement time and borrowing program to engage
in naked short selling which is illegal. This
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problem can probably be addressed by some
changes in regulation, but the government
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is too lazy to do anything about it until
it actually leads to some sort of tangible
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consequences. So, in the meantime, the DTC
is unintentionally enabling naked short selling.
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And finally, the third major concern is that
thereâs very little transparency from the
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DTC. Given the scale of money that they deal
with, all of their activities should be public
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knowledge and heavily scrutinized. But, only
the DTC and their banker clients have access
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to DTCâs daily activities. Making this information
public wouldnât necessarily prevent a well
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thought out scheme from taking place, but
it would reduce the chances. Anyway, moving
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onto the conspiracy, some people believe that
Cede & Co is owned by the billionaires of
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the world and used to crash the stock market
for their benefit. Cede & Co is a private
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company and itâs officially owned by its
clients, but some believe that these clients
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are actually just a handful of powerful families
like the Rockefellers and the Rothschilds.
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There seems to be some sort of unverifiable
evidence that these families have stakes in
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the company, but even if they did, it doesnât
have to be nefarious. If you were rich, youâd
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probably deal with the DTC directly as well
instead of going through brokers. Another
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piece of evidence thatâs used to propel
this conspiracy is that in the early 1990s,
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Jim Mcneff who was a director at the DTC,
told the media that the DTCâs first controlled
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test was 4 or 5 years ago. This means that
he was probably referring to Black Monday
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and the stock market crash of 1987. Trading
volume is generally the highest during stock
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market crashes because investors are most
emotional during these periods. In 2007, for
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instance, the DTC settled transactions that
were worth $513 trillion. So, Iâm pretty
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sure Jim was just referring to testing if
the DTC could efficiently handle that much
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volume. But, conspiracists believe that Jim
slipped up and accidentally admitted to causing
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the crash. Now, is the DTC intertwined with
a bunch of hedge fund and market maker manipulation
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games? Iâm sure they are. But Do I believe
that the DTC is a conspiracy organization
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created specifically to crash and pump markets,
no not really. And even if that is the case,
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itâs not like we can do anything about it.
So, itâs probably best to not look too into
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it, but thatâs just what I think. Do you
guys think Cede & Co is involved in nefarious
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activities? Comment that down below. Also,
drop a like if youâve never heard about
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this company till now. And of course, consider
joining our discord community to suggest future
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more questions logically answered.
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