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Wells Fargo, JPMorgan, and Citigroup have filed government documents that identify which investors absorb losses in the next banking crisis — and it's not the taxpayers. If you own a bank-issued structured note, yield note, or income product, this video shows you exactly where you stand. Under the post-2008 Dodd-Frank framework and the Federal Reserve's 2017 TLAC rule (Total Loss-Absorbing Capacity), the largest U.S. banks — JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup, Wells Fargo, Bank of America, and Goldman Sachs — are required to hold a layer of unsecured long-term debt specifically designed to absorb losses before taxpayers in a resolution. Wells Fargo's SEC-filed securities disclosures explicitly state that their bail-in strategy could result in greater losses to holders of their debt securities, including notes, than alternative strategies. Citigroup's TLAC-eligible debt disclosure states that "any value realized by holders of our unsecured long-term debt may not be sufficient to repay the amounts owed." In June 2024, the Federal Reserve and FDIC issued a joint statement flagging formal "shortcomings" in the resolution plans of multiple Globally Systemically Important Banks (G-SIBs), raising questions about the feasibility of their own bail-in machinery. The U.S. structured notes market currently exceeds $150 billion, with significant retail distribution to investors over 55 seeking yield alternatives to FDIC-insured CDs. The First National Bank of Lindsay (Oklahoma, October 2024) and Metropolitan Capital Bank & Trust (Chicago, January 2026) are recent confirmed FDIC failures where uninsured depositors received partial recovery. FINRA's own investor guidance states that structured note holders are typically considered unsecured creditors who may recover little or none of their investment if the issuer fails. Before you buy gold... Take this with you 👉 https://HedgeTheFed.com Before you hire a real estate pro... Check this first 👉 https://EpicRealEstate.com Before you lose another dollar to inflation... Read this 👉 https://InflationDefense.com To secure the perimeter... Every American needs this in their corner 👉 https://BullyProofMyLife.com Your new biggest fan, Matt P.S. Hey, if any of this stuff resonated with you, I've got a few things that might help: My new newsletter thing - It's called Shadow Capital Brief. Basically, I take all the confusing money news and break it down so you actually know what to do next. 👉 https://ShadowCapitalBrief.com My book - Rich Dad asked me to create a course to go with it. It's everything I wish someone told me before I wasted years figuring this stuff out the hard way. 👉 https://MyEscapeBook.com Our community - It's a bunch of fed-up professionals who got tired of playing by rules that don't work. We're doing creative real estate, AI stuff, alternative investing... you know, actual solutions. 👉 https://TheEscape.club Oh yeah, and if you need passive income without all the guru nonsense... I made this guide 👉 https://FrustratedInvestor.com And if you could use some money for deals, there's this 0% interest thing 👉 https://LoopholeLending.com that banks really don't want you to know about. #BailIn #StructuredNotes #hedgingstrategies Legal Stuff, Disclaimers, and a Dose of Common Sense Since you made it all the way down here, here’s the real deal: Everything on this channel—videos, posts, wild ideas, occasional rants—is mine. Epic Real Estate is a real company, but what you see and hear here is me sharing my personal thoughts, observations, and questionable opinions for your information and entertainment only. Not financial advice, not legal advice, not “go do this and sue me if it goes sideways” advice. Just a guy sharing what’s worked, what hasn’t, and what I think might work if you’re bold (and a little crazy). I do my research, double-check facts, and try to keep it all up-to-date. But sometimes, I just share what I’ve seen, lived through, or picked up along the way—which might not always be verifiable or true for everyone. Stuff changes. Your mileage will definitely vary. If you’re about to make a big financial move because you watched a YouTube video (mine or anyone’s), please—get some professional advice first. You’re a grown-up. Own your decisions. Heads up: Sometimes I recommend products or services. I might get paid. I might not. I only talk about stuff I think is useful, but don’t take my word as gospel—do your own homework. Oh, and as for the cool stock images, music, or footage in these videos: all properly licensed and not for you to reuse, screenshot, or swipe. Don’t be that person. Bottom line: You’re responsible for what you do with your own money, time, and energy. I’m not liable for anything that happens to you as a result of watching, reading, or listening to my stuff. Don’t blame me for your losses, and definitely don’t credit me for your wins—I’ll just say “told ya so.” That’s it. Now go do something cool.