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WaMu's $170 billion in customer deposits were "sold" to Chase for $1.9 billion (I thought both numbers were bigger, but so says Wikipedia). If you were a WaMu banking customer before the implosion, you were a Chase banking customer afterwards.


Again, you can't sell deposits. Chase assumed the business of WaMu, which included liabilities - mostly deposits. Deposits are a liability and it is impossible to sell a liability. So saying "they sold their deposits to Chase for less than the amount of the deposits" is entirely inaccurate. It's somewhat counter-intuitive because deposits "seem" like assets and loans "seem" like liabilities - but it's actually the other way around on the balance sheet.




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