Regulators seize First Republic Bank, sell assets to JPMorgan
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[May 02, 2023] By
Scott Murdoch, Niket Nishant and Chris Prentice
(Reuters) -Regulators seized First Republic Bank and sold its assets to
JPMorgan Chase & Co on Monday, in a deal to resolve the largest U.S.
bank failure since the 2008 financial crisis and draw a line under a
lingering banking turmoil.
First Republic was among regional U.S. lenders most battered by a crisis
in confidence in the banking sector in March, when depositors fled en
masse from smaller banks to giants like JPMorgan as they panicked over
the collapse of two other mid-sized U.S. banks.
The bank had limped along since then, but investors fled again last week
when it disclosed more than $100 billion in outflows in the first
quarter and a plan to explore new options.
Barely a week later, California regulators on Monday seized First
Republic and put it into FDIC receivership alongside the sale of its
assets, marking the third major U.S. bank failure in two months and the
largest since Washington Mutual in 2008.
Shares of JPMorgan rose 2% on Monday, while those of mid-tier banks fell
and the KBW Regional Banking Index closed down 2.7%. First Republic
shareholders will be wiped out in the transaction, Wedbush analysts
said. The bank's shares tumbled 43.3% in premarket trading on Monday
before they were halted.
JPMorgan will pay $10.6 billion to the U.S. Federal Deposit Insurance
Corp (FDIC) as part of the deal to take control of most of the San
Francisco-based bank's assets and get access to First Republic's coveted
wealthy client base.
"Our government invited us and others to step up, and we did," said
Jamie Dimon, JPMorgan Chairman and CEO, who had been a key player in the
2008 financial crisis as well and bought Bear Stearns in a weekend
rescue.
The deal will cost FDIC's Deposit Insurance Fund about $13 billion,
according to the regulator's initial estimate.
U.S. President Joe Biden on Monday hailed the deal for protecting
depositors without making taxpayers foot the bill. He repeated his call
for stronger bank regulation and supervision.
"These actions are going to make sure that the banking system is safe
and sound," Biden told an event at the White House. "Critically,
taxpayers are not the ones that are on hook."
The White House praised "decisive" actions taken by regulators to
protect depositors and keep the banking system stable. White House press
secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said the actions would also ensure that
First Republic, which she said was "severely mismanaged," would be held
accountable.
TOO BIG TO FAIL?
Analysts and industry executives said the deal -- struck over the
weekend after the FDIC ran an auction process that saw several other
banks bid -- should calm markets. But they added that it came at a cost:
the biggest banks were getting stronger while it was getting harder for
smaller banks to do business.
Dennis Kelleher, CEO of Wall Street reform group Better Markets, said
the auction's outcome showed "unhealthy consolidation, unfair
competition, a dangerous increase in too-big-to-fail banks -- all while
harming community banks, small business lending, and economic growth.”
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People walk past a First Republic Bank
branch in San Francisco, California, U.S. April 28, 2023.
REUTERS/Loren Elliott/File Photo
JPMorgan already holds more than 10% of the nation’s total bank
deposits. Wells Fargo in a research note said that JPM's net
deposits would increase by 3% as a result of the deal.
"We need large, successful banks in the largest economy in the
world," Dimon told reporters on a conference call. "We have
capabilities to serve our clients, who can be cities, schools,
hospitals, governments. We bank the IMF, the World Bank. And anyone
who thinks the United States should not have that can call me
directly."
Jane Fraser, CEO of rival Citigroup, hailed the deal as resolving
the last major source of uncertainty for the sector after a period
of turmoil.
"Let’s not tarnish all the regional and small banks as having an
enormous problem,” Fraser told a conference.
"This is not the world financial crisis, this is not the savings and
loan crisis. There will be stress, but let’s be targeted where it
is."
RISING RATES
Global banking has been rocked by the closure of Silicon Valley Bank
and Signature Bank in March, as deposit flight from U.S. lenders
forced the Fed to step in with emergency measures to stabilize
markets while Switzerland's Credit Suisse had to be rescued by rival
UBS. Those failures came after crypto-focused Silvergate voluntarily
liquidated.
Some blamed the root cause of the crisis in the banking sector on
ultra-loose monetary policy for many years followed by an abrupt
reversal and fast-paced interest rate hikes by the U.S. Federal
Reserve over the past year.
"When it was just SVB, it was easy to blame management. However, now
that we see the pattern, it is evident that the Fed has moved too
far, too fast and is breaking things," said Thomas J. Hayes,
Chairman and Managing Member, Great Hill Capital.
JPMorgan was one of several interested buyers including PNC
Financial Services Group, and Citizens Financial Group Inc, which
submitted final bids on Sunday in an auction by U.S. regulators,
sources familiar with the matter said.
JPMorgan has assumed all of the bank's deposits, it said, and will
repay $25 billion of $30 billion big banks deposited with First
Republic in March to help shore it up.
The failed bank's 84 offices in eight states will reopen as branches
of JPMorgan Chase Bank from Monday, it added.
(Reporting by Scott Murdoch and Niket Nishant, additional reporting
by Saeed Azhar, Nupur Anand, Tatiana Bautzer in New York and Akriti
Sharma, Medha Singh, Andrea Shalal, Manya Saini; Writing by Noor
Zainab Hussain and Deepa Babington; Editing by Megan Davies, Stephen
Coates, Kirsten Donovan Emelia Sithole-Matarise, Alexander Smith,
Nick Zieminski, David Gregorio and Anna Driver)
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