Yellen told Reuters she was not seeing evidence of pressure on
smaller community banks, which had a large percentage of insured
deposits. She expressed confidence that nearly all banks had
access to sufficient liquidity to guard against unexpected
deposit outflows from uninsured depositors.
However, she said a certain degree of consolidation in the
regional and midsize banking sector could occur. She declined to
discuss any specific banks.
"This might be an environment in which we're going to see more
mergers, and you know, that's something I think the regulators
will be open to, if it occurs," she said in an interview on the
sidelines of meetings of finance officials from the Group of
Seven rich nations n Japan.
Yellen sought to reassure her G7 partners this week that the
U.S. financial system was stable, saying the United States had
taken action to strengthen confidence in its banking system
after the failure of three regional banks since mid-March.
On Friday she told Bloomberg TV that all three of those banks
had tended to have substantial losses and a very high proportion
of uninsured deposits but that the overall banking system was
well-capitalized and still had "very solid earnings."
Shares of major U.S. regional lenders have been more volatile in
recent weeks, with investors still wary about the stability of
mid-sized banks.
The KBW Regional Banking index, which has fallen nearly 14% so
far this month, rose 0.39% on Friday, but PacWest Bancorp, which
lost 23% on Thursday after reporting a decline in deposits,
dropped a further 3%.
Yellen noted that pressure on a bank's stock could unsettle
uninsured depositors. "The unfortunate dynamic is that once a
bank's stock is under pressure, it can trigger concern among
uninsured depositors ... even though the bank has adequate
capital and liquidity," she said.
(Reporting by Andrea Shalal in Niigata; Editing by William
Mallard)
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