US financial institutions hit by deposit flight as clients seek higher
returns
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[April 18, 2023] (Reuters)
-Deposits at three financial institutions fell in the first quarter as
the industry's biggest crisis in more than a decade prompted a flight of
funds, with customers seeking better returns elsewhere.
Deposits at custodian bank State Street Corp and regional bank M&T Bank
Corp fell 3% each, while those at Charles Schwab Corp shrank 11% from
the prior quarter.
State Street's stock plunged 9.2% to close at $72.68 on Monday, dragging
down peers Northern Trust Corp and Bank of New York Mellon Corp, while
shares of brokerage and financial advisory firm Schwab closed 3.9%
higher and M&T Bank shares were up nearly 8%.
The results mark a mixed start to a busy week during which a number of
regional lenders are expected to report earnings and the impact from the
crumbling of two banks last month.
Investors will also be parsing executive commentary for details on the
economic impact from the Federal Reserve's quantitative tightening,
which has boosted income earned via lending but has, at the same time,
fueled uncertainty.
Both Schwab and M&T Bank rode a surge in interest income to beat profit
expectations, but State Street fell short after an outflow of client
funds hurt its fees.
Credit Suisse analyst Susan Katzke wrote in a research note that State
Street's earnings fell short of estimates due to lower-than-expected net
interest income. The firm showed heavier outflows from non-interest
bearing accounts, Katzke wrote.
There is growing competition for deposits. Apple Inc said on Monday that
Apple Card users can earn 4.15% on their savings account, which it said
was ten times higher than the national average.
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The company logo for financial broker
Charles Schwab is displayed at a location in the financial district
in New York, U.S., March 20, 2023. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
Federal Reserve data released on Friday showed deposits at all
commercial banks rose to $17.43 trillion in the week ended April 5,
an increase about evenly shared between the largest 25 banks and the
small and mid-sized banks. That left deposits at the largest banks
above the levels prior to the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank and
Signature Bank, but at small banks still short of their previous
levels.
Schwab, which was caught up in the crisis last month, paused stock
buybacks, but moved to allay concerns about its financial strength.
Its chief executive officer, Walter Bettinger, addressed commentary
about portfolios of debt securities held by banks, including Schwab,
which are disclosed as unrealized losses in their earnings.
"I would certainly hope that by this point the short-driven
speculation that we would find ourselves in a position where we
would be forced to sell securities that have temporary paper losses
has been put to bed," Bettinger said on a conference call.
Fitch Senior Director Bain Rumohr said Schwab's net revenue may be
modestly pressured throughout 2023 as higher cost funding sources
weigh on net interest income, "but the firm’s size and scale ...
should support profit margins at levels consistent with historical
levels."
(Reporting by Niket Nishant in BengaluruAdditional reporting by
Siddarth S, Jaiveer Singh Shekhawat, Manya Saini and Saeed Azhar and
Megan DaviesEditing by Lananh Nguyen and Matthew Lewis)
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