If the US Treasury should prove insufficient to back a banking meltdown, then your cash is worthless anyway.
The bailout of IndyBank will cost about $6-8 billion. That's approximately the bottled water bill for a week in Iraq. (OK, being a bit facetious here.) Chump change.
The chance that 200 banks will go down, based on an aggregate assets to deposits analysis, is less than the chance that you are going to die from a lightning strike or from drowning in your bathtub. Reserve ratios (assets vs. deposits) provide a way to calculate that risk, and that's what the data currently show.
Bank runs are a mass panic phenomenon. Once people understand that the government is dead serious about preventing collapse of the financial system, and see that failed banks are mopped up as promised, the panic subsides as the emotion that drives it cools.
Here are some useful links:
Check out your bank or credit union at the following links to make sure they are insured, and examine their financial statements and ratio reports, which give a good idea of their health. First, get their FDIC/NCUA number:
NCUA credit union
http://webapps.ncua.gov/ncuafpr/OnlineFPR.aspx?cu_number=FDIC bank
http://www4.fdic.gov/IDASP/main_bankfind.aspNow, use BankRate.com's Safe & Sound ratings to figure out how your bank fares. The analyses are based on actual call report data.
http://www.bankrate.com/brm/safesound/ss_home.aspYou might try a read of this seminal book, too, for a way to replace emotions with reason when trying to understand market swings and what drives them:
http://www.amazon.com/Irrational-Exuberance-Robert-J-Shiller/dp/0767923634/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1216134825&sr=8-1