By Liam Cosgrove and Emel Akan
April 30, 2023 Updated: May 1, 2023
U.S. regulators asked
large banks to submit their takeover bids for First Republic Bank (NYSE: FRC)
over the weekend, in an effort to rescue the troubled bank.
The Federal Deposit
Insurance Corp. (FDIC) reportedly held an auction, asking multiple banks
to solicit bids for FRC before an afternoon deadline on April 30. As of
press time, no announcement had been made.
First Republic released a
statement on April 28 stating that the bank is in talks with multiple parties
regarding its strategic options, while continuing to serve its clients.
Over the weekend, media
reported anonymous sources as saying that about six banks competed to acquire
all of FRC’s deposits, a large portion of its assets, and some of its
liabilities. Citizens Financial Group Inc., PNC Financial Services Group, US
Bancorp, and JPMorgan Chase were among the bidders in an auction run by the
FDIC.
FRC was the nation’s
14th-largest commercial bank, with $212.6 billion in total assets at the
end of 2022. The bank, which began operations in 1985 with a single office
in San Francisco, has grown to have more than 80 offices scattered across seven states
in high-income communities.
The bank’s share price
has dropped more than 95 percent since the beginning of March, wiping out
its $22 billion market value.
The news comes less than
two months after Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) and Signature Bank failed amid a
deposit flight from the banking system, leading the Federal Reserve and the
Treasury Department to take emergency measures.
A
Month of Pain
First Republic’s stock
price has tumbled by a staggering 97 percent from a year ago. Shares that were
valued at more than $153 last April dropped to $3.51 in regular trading on
April 28.
Last month, top U.S.
banks infused $30 billion into First Republic to avoid impending financial
problems. However, over $100 billion in deposits left the bank’s vaults since
early March, which experts said was a death blow to the bank.
In its latest earnings
report (pdf) released on April 24, FRC revealed it had
experienced an “unprecedented” run on deposits following the collapse of SVB
and Signature Bank.
News of the deposit
exodus sent the bank’s stock to record lows.
Investors were reminded
that the U.S. banking crisis and broader credit crunch are far from over, Will
Denyer of Gavekal Research said in an April 26 research note.
In the face of fleeing
deposits, First Republic was forced to borrow from federal programs to bolster
its balance sheet. The bank said in its earnings report that its total
borrowings peaked on March 15 at $138.1 billion.
In a bid to bolster its
balance sheet, First Republic also announced plans to sell off unprofitable
assets, including low-interest mortgages it provided to affluent customers, as
well as lay off 20 to 25 percent of its workforce, which totaled around 7,200
employees at the end of 2022.
More Uncertainty Ahead?
Some analysts predict
that the failure of First Republic will put more downward pressure on an
already battered financial sector.
Former Treasury Secretary
Larry Summers criticized Biden administration regulators for dithering in their
solution for First Republic.
“I’m surprised and
disappointed that this situation has continued to linger as long as it has,
with the bank’s stock down 95 percent,” Summers told Bloomberg on April 28. “I hope that
between the banks, the FDIC, the other public authorities, that the best way
forward will be found within the next week or 10 days.”
Others point to excessive
levels of government intervention as the primary cause of today’s financial
instability, to begin with.
“The environment now is
completely different than what it used to be, thanks to the activist central
bank,” former fund manager Bill Fleckenstein told The Epoch Times. “We have
out-of-control government spending and huge amounts of investment dollars moved
on a daily basis blindly by the Vanguards and BlackRocks of the world.”
Fleckenstein, author of “Greenspan’s Bubbles: The Age of Ignorance at the Federal
Reserve,” argued that decades of Keynesian monetary policy have made
our financial system fragile and unable to stomach the volatility brought on by
the Fed’s most recent round of rate hikes.
Who’s
to Blame?
The Federal Reserve
published on April 28 its much-anticipated review of the SVB collapse that gripped
the U.S. financial system in March. According to the central bank, the failure
of SVB was the result of a wide range of factors, including the Fed itself,
which conceded that it didn’t do enough to make sure that SVB management fixed
the company’s problems.
At the time of its
collapse, SVB had “31 unaddressed safe and soundness supervisory
warnings,” which is triple the average number of its industry peers, the report
stated.
Central bank regulators
failed to “fully appreciate the extent of the vulnerabilities as Silicon Valley
Bank grew in size and compressibility,” according to the report. But when the
central bank did identify the vulnerabilities, regulators “did not take sufficient
steps to ensure that” SVB remedied these problems at a fast enough pace.
The Fed report also
warned that banks with large unrealized losses “face significant safety and
soundness risks.”
Another report by the FDIC released on April 28
on the failure of Signature Bank said the “root cause” of the New York lender’s
failure was “poor management” but that the FDIC “could have escalated
supervisory actions sooner” and been more “forceful.”
How
Do Bank Failures Affect the Economy?
The banking crisis is
expected to cause “credit shocks,” which would drag down economic growth,
according to Morgan Stanley.
“Disruption in the
financial system will leave its mark on the real economy,” Morgan Stanley
economists wrote in a recent note. “Our banking analysts see permanently higher
funding costs for banks going forward, and the disruption to funding markets
will likely lead to a tightening in credit conditions.”
The manufacturing,
commercial real estate, and technology sectors are the most vulnerable to a
pullback in bank lending, according to Goldman Sachs.
A reduction in lending
will result in lower business investment in these industries, Jan
Hatzius, chief economist of Goldman Sachs, wrote in a recent note.
“We also expect slowing
job growth in the leisure and hospitality and other services industries, as
diminished loan availability dissuades restaurant operators and other smaller
businesses from hiring new workers and opening new establishments,” Hatzius
said.
Tom Ozimek and Andrew Moran contributed to this report.
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