What if the bank decides to keep all $1.000 and loan out $10.000? While money wasn't printed, phantom money was most definitely conjured out of thin air. And with the magic I don't see how a bank couldn't have, say, bought Disney with the phantom dollars
Normal commercial banks cannot just print money, which is exactly what you're implying with "phantom money." The money has to come from somewhere and/or be backed by something. So no, a bank can't just magically turn $1000 into $10,000 without something securing the additional money or the extra money coming from other funds. Only the Fed (or other countries' central banks/governments) can print money on a whim.
I think the most generous interpretation of what they seem to be trying to explain is the "phantom plans" created from loaning loaned money.
A deposits 1k into bank
Bank loans B 1k
B loans C 500
There's only 1k in circulation, 500 in B's hands and 500 in C's, but there is technically 1500 in total loans.
I could be off base that this is what they're talking about, and I don't necessarily think it's all that relevant to the conversation, just spitballing.
What if the bank decides to keep all $1.000 and loan out $10.000? While money wasn't printed, phantom money was most definitely conjured out of thin air. And with the magic I don't see how a bank couldn't have, say, bought Disney with the phantom dollars
You're misunderstanding the basics of banking like the other fellow I responded to. I provided a link by the IMF that explains the fundamentals in another reply. I'll provide another one: https://www.investopedia.com/terms/f/fractionalreservebanking.asp
Normal commercial banks cannot just print money, which is exactly what you're implying with "phantom money." The money has to come from somewhere and/or be backed by something. So no, a bank can't just magically turn $1000 into $10,000 without something securing the additional money or the extra money coming from other funds. Only the Fed (or other countries' central banks/governments) can print money on a whim.
I think the most generous interpretation of what they seem to be trying to explain is the "phantom plans" created from loaning loaned money.
A deposits 1k into bank Bank loans B 1k B loans C 500
There's only 1k in circulation, 500 in B's hands and 500 in C's, but there is technically 1500 in total loans.
I could be off base that this is what they're talking about, and I don't necessarily think it's all that relevant to the conversation, just spitballing.