Trading halted in shares of two more US lenders
as fears of banking crisis mount
Regulators step in after PacWest and Western Alliance
shares plunge as investors fear repeat of First Republic, SVB and Signature
failures
Dominic
Rushe, Julia Kollewe and Lois Beckett in Los Angeles
Thu 4 May
2023 22.23 BST
Trading in
the shares of two more regional US lenders was temporarily suspended on
Thursday amid a widening crisis for the country’s mid-sized banks.
Regulators
stepped in to halt trading in the Los Angeles-based PacWest and Arizona’s
Western Alliance following dramatic drops in their share prices.
It came
after another mid-sized bank, First Republic, was sold to JP Morgan earlier
this week. Depositors had pulled $100bn from First Republic, fearing their
money was no longer safe.
PacWest had
sought to calm markets on Wednesday and said it was in talks with several
potential investors after its shares fell by as much as 60%. But the sell-off
continued on Thursday and affected other regional banks.
Shares in
PacWest fell 50% on Thursday after Bloomberg News reported that the lender was
considering strategic options, including a sale or a fundraising round.
The bank
sought to reassure investors by saying it had not experienced unusual deposit
flows. “Recently, the company has been approached by several potential partners
and investors – discussions are ongoing,” it added.
Western
Alliance’s share price plummeted 45% after the Financial Times reported it was
exploring strategic options, including a potential sale, which the bank
strongly denied. It called the story “absolutely false” and said it had not
experienced unusual deposit flows after the sale of First Republic. Its shares
ended Thursday down 38%
First
Republic was the third US bank failure to be swept up in the crisis, the worst
since 2008, after the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature in March.
Bill
Ackman, chief executive of the New York hedge fund Pershing Square, warned that
the entire US regional banking system was at risk. In a tweet before PacWest’s
statement, he wrote: “Confidence in a financial institution is built over
decades and destroyed in days. As each domino falls, the next weakest bank
begins to wobble.
“We are
running out of time to fix this problem. How many more unnecessary bank failures
do we need to watch before the FDIC [Federal Deposit Insurance corporation],
and our government wake up? We need a systemwide deposit guarantee regime now.”
PacWest
said total deposits were $28bn (£22.2bn) as of Tuesday. “Our cash and available
liquidity remains solid and exceeded our uninsured deposits,” it said.
A PacWest
branch in Glendale, a city outside Los Angeles, was open, quiet, and mostly
empty on Thursday afternoon, with no visible signs of disturbance. A single
customer consulted with a bank staffer at a desk. Employees chatted with each
other, and, when asked for comment on the bank’s situation, provided a number
for a company spokesperson.
Outside the
branch, Erwin Lee, from Los Angeles, said he had just opened a CD account with
the bank that day, and was not worried about the news stories on PacWest’s
status, particularly because his new account was FDIC insured.
“People are
worrywarts, I guess, and they shouldn’t be,” Lee said. He said he trusted the
Biden administration to protect bank customers, particularly after the federal
government stepped in after the failure of Silicon Valley Bank.
“The
president will cover it no matter what,” Lee said. “They don’t want to see
other banks fail or people start withdrawing money.”
Other, less
well-known regional banks have also been affected. Shares in the
Dallas-headquartered Comerica were down 13%, and Zions Bancorporation fell by
about 16% on Thursday. Unlike in the UK, smaller, regional banks play a big
role in the economy, accounting for nearly half of US consumer and business
lending.
The
sell-off came despite reassurances from the chair of the Federal Reserve,
Jerome Powell, that the US banking system remained “sound and resilient”, after
the central bank voted to raise interest rates to a 16-year high. The benchmark
interest rate is now at a range of 5-5.25%.
On Monday,
JP Morgan, the biggest US bank, stepped in to acquire a majority of First
Republic’s assets in a $10.6bn deal after regulators seized the lender, which
became the largest US bank failure since 2008. It was the second largest
collapse in US banking history, beaten only by the 2008 demise of Washington
Mutual, which was also sold to JP Morgan.
“You can’t
ask JP Morgan to come to the rescue again,” said Neil Wilson, the chief markets
analyst at the trading platform markets.com. He pointed out that Powell had
said: “It’s probably good policy that we don’t want the largest banks doing big
acquisitions.”
Wilson
added: “No, but that is what happened, because it was the ‘best’ outcome for
the banking system … The quicker the Fed gets to a point of cutting rates, the
better for these mid-size banks, but there is a lot more time and likely a lot
more pain before we get there.”

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