Back in 2019, a financial analyst highlighted that Iran's government had secured control of roughly 70% of the banking sector. When Ayandeh Bank subsequently collapsed, it exposed a harsh reality—the entire banking infrastructure was far more fragile than many assumed. The failure sent shockwaves through markets, crystallizing concerns that if systemic problems emerge, everyday citizens and public budgets inevitably bear the burden. It's a stark reminder of how interconnected financial fragility can be, with ripple effects that extend well beyond institutional walls.
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FreeRider
· 18h ago
When a bank collapses, ordinary people have to foot the bill. This trick is the same worldwide.
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ChainWatcher
· 18h ago
A 70% control can still collapse, indicating that no one truly has control; it's all just superficial.
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DegenApeSurfer
· 01-16 01:16
The financial system over in Iran has been having big problems for a long time. When banks collapse, a bunch of people lose everything. This is the consequence of centralization.
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GasFeeLover
· 01-14 18:56
When Iran's banking system collapses, ordinary people are the ones who get blamed... This trick is the same worldwide.
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StakeWhisperer
· 01-14 18:54
The banking system is so fragile, how can ordinary people survive...
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MetaReckt
· 01-14 18:54
When a bank collapses, the common people pay the price. This trick is universally used worldwide.
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ChainComedian
· 01-14 18:52
70% control can still lead to a collapse, this is called a fragile big holder...
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DaoResearcher
· 01-14 18:29
70% concentration... It is worth noting that this governance structure has already met all the trigger conditions for systemic risk, a result that can be fully predicted based on white paper-level financial vulnerability theory.
Back in 2019, a financial analyst highlighted that Iran's government had secured control of roughly 70% of the banking sector. When Ayandeh Bank subsequently collapsed, it exposed a harsh reality—the entire banking infrastructure was far more fragile than many assumed. The failure sent shockwaves through markets, crystallizing concerns that if systemic problems emerge, everyday citizens and public budgets inevitably bear the burden. It's a stark reminder of how interconnected financial fragility can be, with ripple effects that extend well beyond institutional walls.