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DemocracyCraft's Lehman moment: Vanguard collapse sparks financial meltdown

Fed and Treasury officials urged calm this week as DemocracyCraft (also known as Redmont) plunged into its worst-ever financial crisis following the collapse of Vanguard National Bank.

The bankruptcy of the multinational conglomerate has left banks, businesses, and players reeling as the status of its over D$95M (US$39K) in liabilities it owes to depositors and creditors globally was put into serious question.

The Treasury has already acknowledged that most of those liabilities will not be paid back, alleging in a public report that it was only able to claw back D$2.2M in cash out of the D$32.5M its accounts had previously indicated. It has stated that it will prioritise the repayment of depositors, who are guaranteed to receive back at least D$50K (US$20) under federal law.

Widespread reports of bank runs

The loss of deposits and credit has already led to widespread reports of a "domino effect" to hit Redmont's financial sector.

Voyager CEO Louder_Leo has claimed that nearly half of the bank's deposits, D$8M out of D$17M, were withdrawn in 48 hours after its five largest depositors withdrew from the bank. He added that the bank had around D$3M in deposits held in Vanguard.

Exchange CEO Stoppers has claimed that Vanguard's collapse had blown an over D$13M hole into its finances, leading to the Exchange's liquidity issues. By Wednesday evening, it was only able to process half of the D$6M withdrawal requests it received this week.

At least four separate sources, including bank insiders and government officials, have confirmed reports that Volt had suffered from a similar bank run. Volt officials were quoted as saying that the bank had D$5M in withdrawal outflows between the 1st and 18th June 2025 alone and that Voyager's D$4M withdrawal request further strained the bank's cash reserves.

Nationalisation floated

The reports, along with an urgent plea sent by Voyager CEO Louder_Leo for an emergency D$5M loan to prevent the bank's potential collapse, have led the Fed to vote for an emergency D$20M bailout package on Wednesday. Described as a measure to provide liquidity support, the package proposes the printing of D$20M of new currency which is to be handed to eligible banks in the form of short-term loans at a 1% per month interest rate.

In a bid to make the bailout package more palatable to Congress, who has the power to veto it, Fed officials have been quick to point out its 90-day time limit, after which the printed D$20M is to be "locked or burned, removing them from circulation entirely to prevent inflation or misuse."

The Fed's bailout package comes at a time when cabinet officials were reportedly debating a variety of possible options to deal with the financial crisis. According to two sources familiar with the discussions, these options included nationalising all financial institutions. "[You can't have] a bank run if none of the banks are open," one source remarked.

While both sources stressed that total nationalisation was merely an option that was floated and that no decision on it has yet been made, its use as a threat points to the left-wing government's growing impatience with the financial sector. "[Nationalising the entire financial sector] has been a WPR [Workers' Party of Redmont] goal for ages," another source said, "It's not likely, but the idea is always in the back of our minds."

Contagion on the stock market

Redmont's banks are not the only ones to be adversely impacted by Vanguard's bankruptcy. Companies listed on the Exchange are also understood to be affected by significant losses. Vendeka owner MgChamp2339 confirmed that the accounting company held D$300K in Vanguard, which made up over a third of the company's assets. BlueSteel Industries and Elite Real Estate owner dimitre977 has claimed that he had his "entire two companies" in Vanguard, saying he had upwards of D$300K of funds stored in the bank.

The losses sustained by some of the server's listed companies, along with the fire sale of Vanguard's stocks in liquidation proceedings, have caused concern among some in the financial sector of possible panic selling within the stock market.

These concerns dramatically came to the spotlight yesterday when Stoppers announced he was taking Uffizi Holdings, the investment firm that owns Volt Bank, private—slashing the market cap of the Exchange from over D$200M to D$90M in the process. Pledging to pay out over D$34M to its former shareholders using funds from the Exchange, Volt, and Uffizi's stock portfolio to buy the company, Stoppers said he had taken the company private to prevent the wholesale collapse of the Exchange and Volt.

When asked to explain further, he claimed that issues with Uffizi Holdings' "accounting discrepancies" had been uncovered, which "miscalculated ... subsidiary valuations and ... [mis-]recorded ... treasury stock." These alleged discrepancies, which included an apparent overvaluation of Volt Bank, totalled up to around D$10M. In a bid to prevent a collapse of Uffizi Holdings' share price, which could've triggered the panic selling of other stocks, Stoppers said he decided to take the losses himself—a move consistent with his previous promises to use his personal wealth to prevent the collapse of Redmont's financial institutions.

"No longer on DEFCON 1"

The Fed's bailout package, along with the purchase of Uffizi Holdings by Stoppers, appears to have brought some degree of relief to the ailing financial sector. One Treasury official commented today that the Treasury "is no longer on DEFCON 1 and the banks seem to be stable," adding that the Treasury "won't get involved for the time being."

Similar statements have been made by banking officials. Voyager CEO Louder_Leo stated yesterday that the bank's liquidity issues were resolved and that the bank no longer needs the emergency D$5M loan it requested from the Fed. Stoppers, the new owner of Volt, who tacitly acknowledged the bank's previous challenges (but denied it constituted a bank run), has said that the bank "is managing."

However, it is still unclear at the moment whether the actions taken will be sufficient to restore confidence in DemocracyCraft's financial sector. Three sources familiar with the forex market, for instance, have indicated potential capital flight from DemocracyCraft as players seek to hold foreign currencies such as CityRP dollars and StateCraft pounds. "My bet is that [the] Redmont [dollar] will collapse and my [StateCraft] pounds will be worth a gajillion dollars," one source said, adding, "I also have a CityRP stash in CityRP."

One Fed official, meanwhile, has raised concerns about an apparent increase in players withdrawing money from private banks to invest in Fed bonds, suggesting a growing distrust players have with Redmont's private banks. Interviews with over 20 of Vanguard's former depositors indicate that a sizeable number feel burned by the whole ordeal, holding the entire financial system culpable. As one former depositor, CopTop, put it, "[It's] the sad truth that we no longer have safe banks to trust."

DemocracyCraft's Lehman moment: Vanguard collapse sparks financial meltdown

Comments

I'm currently working on a DC Short III to give a conclusive end to the trilogy, and so this will be covered in the video (but I don't know to what extent). I find writing these articles extremely helpful in collecting my thoughts and research and I hope you all enjoy reading them (as a form of quasi-early access). Edit: With the amount of paywalled articles I'm writing on Minecraft finance, I'm very quickly turning into the Financial Times of Minecraft ... (But yes, I'll be covering other things other than Minecraft and economics, so don't worry!)

Daniel


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