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Tag: First Republic Bank

  • Jamie Dimon says ‘this part of the crisis is over’ after JPMorgan Chase buys First Republic

    Jamie Dimon says ‘this part of the crisis is over’ after JPMorgan Chase buys First Republic

    Jamie Dimon, chairman and chief executive officer of JPMorgan Chase & Co., during a Bloomberg Television interview at the JPMorgan Global High Yield and Leveraged Finance Conference in Miami, Florida, US, on Monday, March 6, 2023.

    Marco Bello | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    The crisis that led to the downfall of three regional U.S. banks in recent weeks is largely over after the resolution of First Republic, according to JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon.

    JPMorgan emerged as the winner of a weekend auction for First Republic after regulators decided that time had run out on a private sector solution. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation seized the bank and New York-based JPMorgan announced early Monday that it was acquiring nearly all of the deposits and most of the assets of First Republic.

    “There are only so many banks that were offsides this way,” Dimon told analysts in a call shortly after the deal was announced.

    “There may be another smaller one, but this pretty much resolves them all,” Dimon said. “This part of the crisis is over.”

    In the wake of the sudden collapse in March of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank, investors have punished other lenders that had similar characteristics to SVB. Companies with the highest percentage of uninsured deposits and losses on their balance sheet were most scrutinized.

    The March turmoil exposed poor management by some midsized banks that essentially bet that interest rates wouldn’t rise; when rates did rise, the banks were caught “offsides” with unrealized losses from bonds on their balance sheet.

    But the $30 billion injection of deposits into First Republic last month bought time for the industry, allowing mid-sized banks to report first-quarter results in recent weeks that in many cases showed a stabilization of deposits. That eased investors’ fears that many more lenders would soon topple.

    Shares of regional banks including PacWest and Citizens Financial slumped in premarket trading.

    Down the road, investors are still exposed to risks created by the Federal Reserve’s interest rate hikes and their impact on assets including real estate, Dimon added.

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  • JPMorgan to take over First Republic after fourth bank failure of the year

    JPMorgan to take over First Republic after fourth bank failure of the year

    JPMorgan Chase has won the auction to take over fallen First Republic Bank, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. announced early Monday morning.

    The deal will see America’s largest bank JPM assume all the deposits and “substantially all the assets” of First Republic FRC, which became the fourth U.S. bank to fail this year.

    “Our government invited…

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  • JPMorgan shares rise after winning First Republic auction

    JPMorgan shares rise after winning First Republic auction

    JPMorgan Chase JPM shares rose 3% in early premarket trade after winning the auction to buy First Republic Bank. JPMorgan said it expects the deal to be modestly earnings per share accretive, generating more than $500 million of incremental net income per year, excluding a $2.6 billion one-time gain and estimated $2 billion of restructuring costs. First Republic shares FRC fell 36% to $2.24, even though neither the FDIC nor JPMorgan release indicates shareholders will get any consideration. JPMorgan said it is not assuming First Republic’s corporate debt or preferred stock. Shares of PNC Financial Services PNC, which…

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  • Troubled First Republic Bank seized by regulators, then sold to JP Morgan Chase

    Troubled First Republic Bank seized by regulators, then sold to JP Morgan Chase

    Regulators seized control of First Republic Bank early Monday, making it the third financial institution taken under government control this year, then promptly accepted a bid from JP Morgan Chase for all of First Republic’s assets, a California agency said.

    The state’s Department of Financial Protection and Innovation (DFPI) said it had taken over San Francisco-based First Republic and appointed the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) as receiver. The DFPI said the FDIC then “accepted a bid from JPMorgan Chase Bank, National Association, Columbus, Ohio, to assume all deposits, including all uninsured deposits, and substantially all assets of First Republic Bank.”

    The DFPI said it acted under California law regarding a financial entity “conducting its business in an unsafe or unsound manner” and being in a “condition that … is unsafe or unsound” to transact banking business.”

    The moves were made nearly a week after First Republic revealed that customers withdrew more than $100 billion during a panic last month — a revelation that further fueled concerns First Republic couldn’t survive on its own. 

    First Republic follows Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank, both of which experienced runs last month and were taken over by the government. As with Silicon Valley, a significant share of First Republic’s deposits were uninsured, which made it more prone to withdrawals from skittish customers.

    In a rare move, 11 of the nation’s largest financial institutions gave First Republic $30 billion in deposits last month to prop up the troubled bank. 

    Federal officials from the FDIC, Treasury Department and Federal Reserve held private talks with other banks on Friday hoping to find a bailout plan for First Republic, Reuters reported, but no private rescue materialized. Takeover talks continued all weekend in the hope a deal could be struck before U.S. stock markets opened Monday.

    The bank went into FDIC receivership while holding roughly $233 billion in assets. Its shares have lost 97% of their value since January, taking more than $21 billion off First Republic’s market value.

    On the CBS News broadcast “Face the Nation” Sunday, Gary Cohn, a former Goldman Sachs president who served as former President Donald Trump’s top economic adviser, was on-target, predicting that, “The FDIC would prefer to sell the bank in its entirety than the pieces. What will most likely happen is the FDIC will seize control and then simultaneously resell the asset to the successful bidder.” Cohn is now IBM vice chairman.

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  • JPMorgan to take over First Republic after regional bank was closed

    JPMorgan to take over First Republic after regional bank was closed

    JPMorgan Chase has won the auction to take over fallen First Republic Bank, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. announced early Monday morning.

    The deal will see America’s largest bank JPM assume all the deposits and “substantially all the assets” of First Republic FRC.

    The deal will see First Republic depositors — which include 11 leading…

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  • JPMorgan takes over First Republic after it’s seized by Californian financial regulator

    JPMorgan takes over First Republic after it’s seized by Californian financial regulator

    A view of the First Republic Bank logo at the Park Avenue location, in New York City, March 10, 2023.

    David Dee Delgado | Reuters

    The Californian financial regulator has taken possession of First Republic, resulting in the third failure of an American bank since March, after a last-ditch effort to persuade rival lenders to keep the ailing bank afloat failed.

    JPMorgan Chase Bank will assume all deposits, including uninsured deposits, and “substantially all assets” of the bank, according to a release early Monday.

    The California Department of Financial Protection and Innovation said it had taken possession of the bank and appointed the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation receiver of the bank. The FDIC accepted JPMorgan’s bid for the bank’s assets.

    Since the sudden collapse of Silicon Valley Bank in March, attention has focused on First Republic as the weakest link in the U.S. banking system. Like SVB, which catered to the tech startup community, First Republic was also a California-based specialty lender of sorts. It focused on serving rich coastal Americans, enticing them with low-rate mortgages in exchange for leaving cash at the bank.

    But that model unraveled in the wake of the SVB collapse, as First Republic clients withdrew more than $100 billion in deposits, the bank revealed in its earnings report April 24. Institutions with a high proportion of uninsured deposits like SVB and First Republic found themselves vulnerable because clients feared losing savings in a bank run.

    Shares of First Republic are down 97% so far this year as of Friday’s close.

    That deposit drain forced First Republic to borrow heavily from Federal Reserve facilities to maintain operations, which pressured the company’s margins because its cost of funding is far higher now. First Republic accounted for 72% of all borrowing from the Fed’s discount window recently, according to BCA Research chief strategist Doug Peta.

    On April 24, First Republic CEO Michael Roffler sought to portray an image of stability after the events of March. Deposit outflows have slowed in recent weeks, he said. But the stock tanked after the company disavowed its previous financial guidance and Roffler opted not to take questions after an unusually brief conference call.

    The bank’s advisors had hoped to persuade the biggest U.S. banks to help First Republic once again. One version of the plan circulated recently involved asking banks to pay above-market rates for bonds on First Republic’s balance sheet, which would enable it to raise capital from other sources.

    But ultimately the banks, which had banded together in March to inject $30 billion of deposits into First Republic, couldn’t agree on the rescue plan and regulators took action, ending the bank’s 38-year run.

    This story is developing. Please check back for updates.

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  • Army identifies 3 soldiers killed in helicopter crash

    Army identifies 3 soldiers killed in helicopter crash

    Army identifies 3 soldiers killed in helicopter crash – CBS News


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    The U.S. Army has identified three soldiers killed when two helicopters collided during a training mission in Alaska.

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  • Feds poised to take control of troubled First Republic Bank

    Feds poised to take control of troubled First Republic Bank

    Feds poised to take control of troubled First Republic Bank – CBS News


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    The FDIC could soon seize control of First Republic Bank, which has seen its stock value plunge since the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank last month. Willie James Inman has the latest.

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  • Big banks including JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America asked for final bids on First Republic

    Big banks including JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America asked for final bids on First Republic

    A First Republic bank branch in Manhattan on April 24, 2023 in New York City.

    Spencer Platt | Getty Images

    U.S. regulators have asked banks for their best and final takeover offers for First Republic by Sunday afternoon, in a move that authorities hope will calm markets and cap a period of uncertainty for regional lenders.

    JPMorgan Chase and PNC are likely bidders for the ailing lender, which would be seized in receivership and immediately sold to the winning bank, according to people with knowledge of the situation. The Wall Street Journal reported those banks’ interest late Friday.

    Other companies are likely to step up. Bank of America is among several other institutions that are weighing a potential bid for First Republic, according to people with knowledge of the matter.

    This is breaking news. Please check back for updates.

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  • Fed takes some blame for Silicon Valley Bank collapse

    Fed takes some blame for Silicon Valley Bank collapse

    Fed takes some blame for Silicon Valley Bank collapse – CBS News


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    In a report released Friday, the Federal Reserve acknowledged some of its own supervisors were slow to recognize that Silicon Valley Bank was in trouble.

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  • First Republic on the brink: Shares plummet as hopes for rescue plan dim

    First Republic on the brink: Shares plummet as hopes for rescue plan dim

    Hosted by Brian Sullivan, “Last Call” is a fast-paced, entertaining business show that explores the intersection of money, culture and policy. Tune in Monday through Friday at 7 p.m. ET on CNBC. Kate Kelly, New York Times Gerard Cassidy, RBC Capital Markets, and Leslie Picker, CNBC Business News, join the show to report the latest on First Republic Bank.

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  • First Republic Bank teeters on collapse as regulators circle troubled lender

    First Republic Bank teeters on collapse as regulators circle troubled lender

    The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation is set to seize control of First Republic Bank, according to multiple reports.

    Shares of the ailing regional bank cratered on Friday following a CNBC report that it is likely to be seized by federal financial regulators, putting it in jeopardy of becoming the third bank to collapse since Silicon Valley and Signature Bank failed last month. FDIC officials think First Republic is out of time to arrange a rescue involving other banks, leaving the agency no choice but to take the bank into receivership, Reuters reported.

    First Republic’s stock price, which topped $200 as recently as 2021, plunged 43% on Friday and continued to sink in after-hours trading. The shares have fallen 97% this year. 

    Investors were spooked earlier this week by the San Francisco bank’s disclosure that depositors withdrew more than $100 billion during last month’s crisis, raising concerns about First Republic’s stability. The fund outflows were “unprecedented,” bank executives said on an earnings call Monday. 

    As with Silicon Valley, a significant share of First Republic’s deposits were uninsured, which makes it more prone to withdrawals from skittish customers.

    The troubled bank, which had roughly $233 billion in assets under management as of March 31, said it now plans to sell off assets and restructure its balance sheet, as well as lay off as much as a quarter of its workforce, which totaled about 7,200 employees at the end of 2022. The bank will also shrink its corporate office footprint, cut executives’ compensation by a “significant” amount and eliminate “nonessential” projects, executives said Monday.

    In a rare move, 11 of the nation’s largest financial institutions gave First Republic $30 billion in deposits last month to prop up the troubled bank. 


    11 big banks rescue First Republic Bank with $30 billion bailout

    02:33

    Silicon Valley Bank, at the time the 16th-largest U.S. bank with $210 billion in assets, was taken over by state regulators in March after concerns about potential losses spurred many depositors to withdraw their funds. New York’s Signature Bank failed only days later after a similar bank run.

    In a self-critical report on Friday, the Federal Reserve attributed SVB’s startling collapse to a combination of extremely poor bank management, weakened regulations and lax government supervision.

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  • Production Board CEO on FDIC receivership, A.I. and Big Tech

    Production Board CEO on FDIC receivership, A.I. and Big Tech

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    David Friedberg, The Production Board CEO, joins ‘Closing Bell: Overtime’ to discuss reports that First Republic is most likely headed for FDIC receivership.

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  • First Republic most likely headed for FDIC receivership, sources say; shares drop 40%

    First Republic most likely headed for FDIC receivership, sources say; shares drop 40%

    People walk in front of a First Republic Bank branch on March 20, 2023, in New York City.

    Gary Hershorn | Corbis News | Getty Images

    Shares of First Republic dropped sharply Friday as hopes dimmed for a rescue deal that could keep the bank afloat.

    Sources told CNBC’s David Faber that the most likely outcome for the troubled bank is for the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation to take it into receivership. The stock slid 43% and was halted for volatility multiple times.

    Stock Chart IconStock chart icon

    Shares of First Republic fell sharply on Friday.

    Shares of First Republic were down more than 50% at one point during the session, hitting an intraday low of $2.98 per share. The stock has now fallen 97% this year, with most of the losses coming after investors lost confidence in the bank following the failure of two regional lenders in March.

    The FDIC is asking other banks for potential bids on First Republic if the regulator were to seize the bank, sources told Faber. There is still hope for a solution that doesn’t include receivership, according to those sources.

    First Republic told Faber on Friday that “we are engaged in discussions with multiple parties about our strategic options while continuing to serve our clients.”

    Fed: Silicon Valley Bank failed to manage basic interest rate, liquidity risk

    CNBC reported Wednesday that First Republic’s advisors were preparing to pitch larger banks on a plan that would let the regional lender sell bonds and other assets at an above-market rate and then raise equity. The sales would result in a loss for the banks that buy the bonds but could be cheaper long-term than letting the bank fail and get seized by regulators.

    Reuters reported Friday that U.S. officials — including from the FDIC, Treasury Department and Federal Reserve — are coordinating meetings with other banks to broker a rescue plan for First Republic.

    Shares of First Republic closed at $16 on Monday before the bank reported its first-quarter results, which showed a decline in deposits of about 40%. The stock fell more than 60% over the next two days, hitting a new all-time low.

    First Republic is a regional bank that has focused on high net worth individuals and their businesses, including offering mortgages at low interest rates to those customers.

    Those mortgages, as well as other long-term assets on the bank’s balance sheet, have fallen in market value since the Fed began hiking rates last year, making investors worried that the bank would have to book a sizeable loss if forced to sell those assets to raise cash.

    The bank’s massive deposit outflows came after the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank in March. The nation’s largest banks, including JPMorgan Chase, have already helped out First Republic since then with $30 billion in time deposits.

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  • Stocks end higher Friday, Dow books best month since January

    Stocks end higher Friday, Dow books best month since January

    U.S. stocks ended April higher on Friday, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average booking its best monthly gain since January. Despite renewed focus on stress in the U.S. banking system, major stock indexes were able to post gains on Friday to end the week and month on higher ground, in part as earnings reports from several big technology companies, including Meta Platforms Inc. META were received positively by investors. The Dow DJIA rose about 272 points Friday, or 0.8%, ending near 34,098, according to preliminary FactSet levels. The S&P 500 index SPX posted a 0.8% gain, while the Nasdaq Composite Index COMP advanced…

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  • Analyst sees market betting on First Republic bailout as early as Friday

    Analyst sees market betting on First Republic bailout as early as Friday

    Odeon Capital analyst Richard Bove said the steep slide in First Republic Bank FRC stock on Friday is partly attributed to investor sentiment that the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. will take over the ailing bank after the closing bell on Friday. “The stock is going to down toward zero because if the FDIC takes over a bank, they do it on a Friday afternoon after the market closes,” Bove said. “The market clearly believes that’s what’s going to happen today.” The FDIC typically acts on a Friday afternoon to give itself time to open the bank up for business on Monday. At last check, First Republic stock was down 37% to…

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  • U.S. stocks head for best day in 2 weeks on strong earnings from Meta and other big-tech names

    U.S. stocks head for best day in 2 weeks on strong earnings from Meta and other big-tech names

    U.S. stocks rose on Thursday, on track for their biggest gain in two weeks, as another batch of strong big-tech earnings reports helped boost the broader market while offsetting signs of slowing economic growth.

    How are stocks trading

    On Wednesday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 229 points, or 0.68%, to 33,302 as worries about First Republic Bank FRC overshadowed upbeat big-tech earnings.

    What’s driving markets

    For…

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  • Here’s what we know about First Republic Bank | CNN Business

    Here’s what we know about First Republic Bank | CNN Business

    A version of this story first appeared in CNN Business’ Before the Bell newsletter. Not a subscriber? You can sign up right here. You can listen to an audio version of the newsletter by clicking the same link.


    New York
    CNN
     — 

    First Republic Bank has been teetering on the edge for weeks. It may be finally falling.

    The San Francisco-based lender could be next in the line to collapse, following in the footsteps of former competitors Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank.

    It certainly fits the bill: First Republic

    (FRC)
    , like SVB, is a mid-sized regional bank with a highly concentrated customer base, outsized amounts of uninsured deposits and loads of unrealized losses on the bonds and treasuries it holds.

    Rumors swirled on Wednesday as publications rushed out reports from unnamed sources saying that the bank was looking to cut a deal to sell assets, that the White House wasn’t interested in facilitating a bailout (there were also reports that it is) and that the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation is considering downgrading the bank’s debt, which would limit its access to essential Federal Reserve loans.

    The FDIC, Federal Reserve, White House and First Republic did not respond to requests for comment about those reports. But the damage has been done.

    Shares of the stock fell by nearly 30% on Wednesday, after plunging by 49% on Tuesday. The stock’s trading was halted numerous times both days as its rapid decline triggered volatility-triggered timeouts by the New York Stock Exchange.

    But what’s actually happening here?

    The reality of the situation: What we do know for certain is that First Republic reported on Monday that its total deposits fell 41% in the first quarter of 2023 to $104.5 billion, even after a consortium of banks stepped in with $30 billion to prevent the lender from failing. Without that cash infusion, deposits would have fallen by over 50%.

    But, importantly, the bank said that while it saw a sharp drop in deposit activity after the collapse of SVB and Signature Bank last month, activity began to stabilize at the end of March and has since remained steady.

    We also know that First Republic’s net interest income, which shows how much money the bank earned from lending and borrowing, was down 19.4% year-over-year at the end of the first quarter.

    On top of all that, the bank is vulnerable to liquidity problems.

    When the banking crisis erupted in mid-March, about two-thirds of First Republic’s deposits were uninsured with the FDIC. That’s lower than the 94% at Silicon Valley Bank — but at the end of last year, First Republic had an exceptionally high ratio of 111% for loans and long-term investments to deposits, according to S&P Global — meaning it has loaned and invested more money than it has in deposits.

    In short: The outlook for the bank is not good.

    “It’s becoming clearer each day” that First Republic is “toast,” said Don Bilson at Gordon Haskett, in a note Wednesday. “The only question that really needs to be answered is whether the [Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation] moves in before the weekend or during the weekend, which is when it usually does its thing.”

    Possible solutions: We also know that it’s not over until it’s over, and that the bank is still operating. There are still some narrow paths forward.

    There’s a small chance that First Republic stays the course and “muddles along as a standalone company,” said David Chiaverini, managing director of equity research at Wedbush Securities.

    What’s more likely is that the company will try to sell some of its loans and securities at the same cost they bought them for. In exchange, the buyer would receive a preferred equity interest in the company.

    That will be a tough sell since those assets would probably sell for well above market rate. First Republic’s bonds maturing in 2046 are currently trading at just 43 cents on the dollar. But the bank has been lucky before. First Republic has stayed afloat since March largely thanks to a $30 billion bailout from a conglomerate of large US banks and a $70 billion line of credit from JPMorgan.

    The third option is the worst for shareholders: the bank could go into receivership. When a struggling bank goes into receivership it means that a regulatory authority or government agency takes control of the bank and its assets, usually with the goal of liquidating those assets to repay the bank’s creditors.

    Investors in First Republic would most likely see their money wiped out in that scenario.

    Coming next: First Republic is in a very tricky situation. Investors will be crossing their fingers and holding their breath until Friday at 4 p.m. ET. That’s when newly-collapsed banks have admitted defeat in the past.

    Facebook-parent Meta on Wednesday reported that it grew sales by 3% during the first three months of the year, reversing a trend of three consecutive quarters of revenue declines and far exceeding Wall Street analysts’ expectations, reports my colleague Clare Duffy.

    Meta shares jumped as much as 12% in after-hours trading following the report, continuing the company’s strong trajectory since CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced that 2023 would be a “year of efficiency.”

    Another bright spot: user growth was relatively strong compared to recent quarters. The number of monthly active people on Meta’s family of apps grew 5% from the prior year to more than 3.8 billion and Facebook daily active users increased 4% to more than 2 billion.

    Still, Meta has a big hill ahead of it. The company also reported that profits declined by nearly a quarter to $5.7 billion compared to the same period in the prior year. Price per advertisement — an indicator of the health of the company’s core digital ad business — also decreased by 17% from the year prior.

    Meta has been in the midst of a massive restructuring, as it attempts to recover from a perfect storm of heightened competition, lingering recession fears resulting in fewer ad dollars and a multibillion dollar effort to build a future version of the internet it calls the metaverse.

    Meta said in November it would eliminate 11,000 jobs, the single largest round of cuts in its history. And in March, Zuckerberg announced Meta would lay off another 10,000 employees. All told, the cuts will shrink Meta’s workforce by a quarter.

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  • CNBC Daily Open: A regional bank casts a shadow over Big Tech

    CNBC Daily Open: A regional bank casts a shadow over Big Tech

    A pedestrian walks by a First Republic bank on April 26, 2023 in San Francisco, California.

    Justin Sullivan | Getty Images News | Getty Images

    This report is from today’s CNBC Daily Open, our new, international markets newsletter. CNBC Daily Open brings investors up to speed on everything they need to know, no matter where they are. Like what you see? You can subscribe here.

    Big Tech continues its winning streak, but it wasn’t enough to ignite a broader rally in markets because of fears reignited by First Republic.

    What you need to know today

    • First Republic Bank has a plan to save itself, CNBC learned from sources. Advisors to First Republic are persuading big U.S. banks to buy bonds from First Republic at above-market prices. Though those big banks will lose money on the purchase, their losses would be much lower than the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. fees banks would have to pay if First Republic fails.
    • Meanwhile, First Republic’s stock continued its freefall. It plummeted 29.75% Wednesday to hit an all-time low of $5.69, giving the bank a market value below $1 billion.
    • Still, the global banking sector looks mostly solid, at least for big banks. Deutsche Bank reported a net profit attributable to shareholders of 1.158 billion euros, which was a 9.2% increase from a year earlier. That’s the 11th straight quarter of profit for the German bank — though it’s joining other companies in laying off workers because of falling revenue.
    • U.S. stocks ended Wednesday mixed as First Republic’s troubles overshadowed excitement about Big Tech earnings. Asia-Pacific markets traded higher Thursday. Singapore’s Straits Times Index lost 0.39%, weighed down by real estate stocks, as the country increased stamp duties on property purchases.
    • PRO First-quarter economic growth in the U.S. is likely to hit at least 2% year on year, according to analysts’ projections. Despite that solid number, there are signals that a recession is still coming.

    The bottom line

    Big Tech continues its winning streak, but it wasn’t enough to ignite a broader rally in markets.

    On Wednesday, Microsoft rallied 7.24% on the back of a strong earnings report that was boosted by a jump in revenue from its Intelligent Cloud business segment. The tech company’s stock hit a 52-week high, putting it within a hair’s breadth of $300 per share. Amazon climbed 2.35% as investors hoped the e-commerce giant, which is the market leader in cloud services, would post strong numbers Thursday too.

    Still, the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite finished the day only 0.47% higher. (Meta, which also had an excellent first quarter, posted earnings after markets closed.)

    Why didn’t the Nasdaq rise more from Big Tech’s better-than-expected first-quarter results? Probably because tech stocks were already doing so well.

    “There was such a rally into their earnings season that I think you needed earnings to really clear a high bar to actually catalyze another leg higher,” said Ross Mayfield, investment strategy analyst at Baird. “That just hasn’t been the case, especially when you have other headwinds pressing down on the market.”

    Indeed, fears around First Republic induced losses in other major indexes. The Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 0.68% and the S&P slipped 0.38%.

    Banks might not be as exciting as technology companies. But banks are so fundamental to the health of the economy that any sign of weakness in one is enough to send waves of fear throughout investors and make them forget, if only temporarily, the promises of Big Tech. What use is there, after all, in building a skyscraper if the foundation is shaky?

    Subscribe here to get this report sent directly to your inbox each morning before markets open.

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  • Stocks fall as First Republic Bank shares plummet

    Stocks fall as First Republic Bank shares plummet

    Stocks fall as First Republic Bank shares plummet – CBS News


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    The Dow Jones closed in the red Wednesday as investors reacted to earnings reports and falling shares of First Republic Bank. Axios markets correspondent Emily Peck joined CBS News to discuss what this means for investors and the economy.

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