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  • What a rescue for SVB depositors means for the stock market and interest rates

    What a rescue for SVB depositors means for the stock market and interest rates

    U.S. regulators came to the rescue of Silicon Valley Bank depositors late Sunday, triggering a modest relief rally in stock-index futures.

    But investors were left to weigh the outlook for Federal Reserve rate increases after the central bank’s aggressive tightening was flagged by economists and analysts for setting the stage for the second-largest bank failure in U.S. history.

    Federal regulators said depositors at Silicon Valley Bank, or SVB, would have access to all deposits on Monday morning. That includes uninsured deposits — those exceeding the FDIC’s $250,000 cap — in a move that analysts said would help avert runs similar to the event that capsized SVB from occurring elsewhere. SVB
    SIVB,
    -60.41%

    stock and bondholders, however, will be wiped out.

    Regulators said New York’s Signature Bank was also closed on Sunday and that its depositors would also be made whole.

    The Fed also announced a new emergency loan program that it said would help assure banks have the ability to meet the needs of all their depositors.

    A deal that spared depositors would be expected to let stocks “rally strongly,” said Barry Knapp, managing partner and director of research at Ironsides Macroeconomics, in a phone interview ahead of the announcement Sunday afternoon. Conversely, measures that would have forced depositors to take a hit would have had the potential to spark an ugly reaction, he said.

    Futures on the Dow Jones Industrial Average
    YM00,
    +0.93%

    rose 240 points, or 0.8% following the announcement, while S&P 500 futures
    ES00,
    +1.28%

    were up 1% and Nasdaq-100 futures
    NQ00,
    +1.18%

    gained 1.3%.

    Investors will also be assessing the fallout to see if it complicates the Federal Reserve’s plans to hike interest rates further and potentially faster than previously expected in its bid to tamp down inflation.

    SVB was closed by California regulators on Friday and taken over by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Regulators raced over the weekend to come to a resolution for depositors after uncertainty around SVB triggered a sharp market selloff late last week.

    “In what is an already jittery market, the emotional response to a failed bank reawakens our collective muscle memory of the GFC,” Art Hogan, chief market strategist at B. Riley Financial Wealth, told MarketWatch in an email, referring to the 2007-2009 financial crisis. “When the dust settles, we will likely find that SVB is not a ‘systematic’ issue.”

    In a statement Sunday, Securities and Exchange Commission Chair Gary Gensler warned that regulators are on the lookout for misconduct: “In times of increased volatility and uncertainty, we at the SEC are particularly focused on monitoring for market stability and identifying and prosecuting any form of misconduct that might threaten investors, capital formation, or the markets more broadly. Without speaking to any individual entity or person, we will investigate and bring enforcement actions if we find violations of the federal securities laws.”

    Weekend Snapshot: What’s next for stocks after Silicon Valley Bank collapse as investors await crucial inflation reading

    Knapp said a deal that leaves depositors whole would lift the overall market and allow bank stocks, which got hammered last week, to “rip” higher “because they are cheap” and the banking system “as a whole…is in really good shape.”

    Banking stocks dropped sharply Thursday, led by shares of regional institutions, and extended their losses Friday. The selloff in bank stocks pulled down the broader market, leaving the S&P 500
    SPX,
    -1.45%

    down 4.6%, nearly wiping out the large-cap benchmark’s early 2023 gains. The Dow
    DJIA,
    -1.07%

    saw a 4.6% weekly fall, while the Nasdaq Composite
    COMP,
    -1.76%

    declined 4.7%.

    Investors sold stocks but piled into safe-haven U.S. Treasurys, prompting a sharp retreat in yields, which move opposite to prices.

    SVB’s failure is being blamed on a mismatch between assets and liabilities. The bank catered to tech startups and venture-capital firms. Deposits grew rapidly and were placed in long-dated bonds, particularly government-backed mortgage securities. As the Federal Reserve began aggressively raising interest rates roughly a year ago, funding sources for tech startups dried up, putting pressure on deposits. At the same time, Fed rate hikes triggered a historic bond-market selloff, putting a big dent in the value of SVB’s securities holdings.

    SVB was forced to sell a large chunk of those holdings at a loss to meet withdrawals, leading it to plan a dilutive share offering that stoked a further run on deposits and ultimately led to its collapse.

    See: Silicon Valley Bank is a reminder that ‘things tend to break’ when Fed hikes rates

    Meanwhile, the Fed’s newly announced Bank Term Lending Program will make loans of up to 12 months to banks and other depository institutions. In a crucial twist, it will allow the assets used as collateral for those loans to be valued at par, or face value, rather than marked to market. The Fed will also accept collateral at its discount window on the same conditions.

    “These are strong moves,” said Paul Ashworth, chief North America economist at Capital Economics, in a note.

    By accepting collateral at par rather than marking to market means that banks that have accumulated more than $600 billion in unreazlied losses on held-to-maturity Treasury and mortgage-backed securities portfolios and had failed to hedge interest-rate risk should be able to survive, he said.

    “Rationally, this should be enough to stop any contagion from spreading and taking down more banks, which can happen in the blink of an eye in the digital age,” Ashworth wrote. “But contagion has always been more about irrational fear, so we would stress that there is no guarantee this will work.”

    Analysts and economists had largely dismissed the notion that SVB’s woes marked a systemic problem in the banking system. Instead, SVB appeared to be a “a rather special case of poor balance-sheet management, holding massive amounts of long-duration bonds funded by short-term liabilities,” said Erik F. Nielsen, group chief economics adviser at UniCredit Bank, in a Sunday note.

    Mismanagement aside, the Fed’s rate hikes created an environment that set the stage for problems, analysts said. A deeply inverted yield curve, in which short-dated Treasury yields run sharply above longer-dated Treasurys, amplifies liability and asset mismatches.

    The yield on the 2-year note early last week traded more than 100 basis points, or a full percentage point, above the 10-year for the first time since the early 1980s.

    “Inverting the yield curve as deeply as they did…there’s going to be more accidents if they continue down that path,” Knapp said. “Push that thing to 150 basis points and see what happens. You’re going to have more blowups.”

    Fed-funds futures traders last week moved to price in a more-than-70% chance of an outsize 50-basis-point, or half a percentage point, rise in the benchmark interest rate at the Fed’s March meeting after Chair Jerome Powell told lawmakers that rates would need to move higher than previously anticipated. Expectations swung back to a 25-basis-point, or quarter-point move, as the SVB collapse unfolded, with traders also scaling back expectations for when rates will likely peak.

    Meanwhile, a flight to safety saw the yield on the 2-year Treasury note, which had earlier in the week topped 5% for the first time since 2007, end the week down 27.3 basis points at 4.586%.

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  • Crypto-friendly Signature Bank shut down by regulators after collapses of SVB, Silvergate

    Crypto-friendly Signature Bank shut down by regulators after collapses of SVB, Silvergate

    State authorities closed New York-based Signature Bank
    SBNY,
    -22.87%

    on Sunday, after Silicon Valley Bank was shut down by regulators on Friday in the biggest bank failure since the 2008 financial crisis.

    All depositors of Signature Bank will be made whole, according to a joint statement by the Department of the Treasury, Federal Reserve and FDIC.

    Also see: Silicon Valley Bank depositors will get ‘all of their money,’ regulators say

    Signature Bank has been popular among crypto companies, especially after crypto-friendly Silvergate Bank
    SI,
    -11.27%

    said last Wednesday it would close its operations.

    Signature Bank provides deposit services for its clients’ digital assets, but does not invest in, does not trade, does not hold on its own balance sheet nor provide custody of digital assets, and does not lend against or make loans collateralized by such assets, the company said.

    The Federal Reserve on Sunday also announced a new emergency loan program to bolster the capacity of the banking system.

    U.S. equity markets traded higher Sunday afternoon, with the Dow futures
    YM00,
    +1.00%

    up 0.5%, and the S&P 500
    ES00,
    +1.40%

    futures up 0.8%. Futures for the Nasdaq 100
    NQ00,
    +1.37%

    rose 0.9%, according to FactSet data.

    Major cryptocurrencies rallied Sunday. Bitcoin
    BTCUSD,
    +3.54%

    surged 6.4% in the past 24 hours to around $21,842 and ether
    ETHUSD,
    +2.36%

    gained 7% to $1,576, according to CoinDesk data.

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  • Silicon Valley Bank depositors will get ‘all of their money,’ regulators say

    Silicon Valley Bank depositors will get ‘all of their money,’ regulators say

    U.S. financial regulators on Sunday said Silicon Valley Bank customers would have access to all their money on Monday, days after the bank failed.

    Announcing new steps, the Treasury Department, Federal Reserve and Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation said their moves would “ensure that the U.S. banking system continues to perform its vital roles of protecting deposits and providing access to credit to households and businesses in a manner that promotes strong and sustainable economic growth.”

    The FDIC will be able to complete its resolution of Silicon Valley Bank
    SIVB,
    -60.41%

    “in a manner that fully protects all depositors,” a joint statement said. “Depositors will have access to all of their money starting Monday, March 13,” the statement added, and no losses will be borne by U.S. taxpayers.

    “The American people and American businesses can have confidence that their bank deposits will be there when they need them,” President Joe Biden said in a statement Sunday night. “I am firmly committed to holding those responsible for this mess fully accountable and to continuing our efforts to strengthen oversight and regulation of larger banks so that we are not in this position again.”

    Read more: Full text of Treasury, Fed and FDIC joint statement on SVB and Signature Bank

    Signature Bank in New York was closed Sunday by its state regulator, the joint announcement said. “All depositors of this institution will be made whole. As with the resolution of Silicon Valley Bank, no losses will be borne by the taxpayer,” said the joint statement.

    Read: Crypto-friendly Signature Bank shut down by regulators after collapses of SVB, Silvergate

    Separately, the Fed said it would make additional funding available to banks to ensure they meet depositors’ needs through a new “Bank Term Funding Program.”

    See: Fed announces new emergency loan program for banks to ease contagion risk from Silicon Valley Bank

    Under the new program, banks and other lenders will be able to pledge Treasurys and mortgage-backed securities for cash. Banks can pledge collateral at par.

    This will eliminate the need for a bank to quickly sell its assets in times of stress.

    The central bank said “it is prepared to address any liquidity pressures that may arise.”

    In a separate statement Sunday, Securities and Exchange Commission Chair Gary Gensler said regulators are monitoring markets amid the recent turmoil. and promised to prosecute “any form of misconduct that might threaten investors, capital formation, or the markets more broadly.”

    Greg Robb contributed to this story.

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  • SVB collapse means more stock-market volatility: What investors need to know

    SVB collapse means more stock-market volatility: What investors need to know

    It’s all eyes on federal banking regulators as investors sift through the aftermath of last week’s market-rattling collapse of Silicon Valley Bank.

    The name of the game — and the key to a near-term market bounce — could be a deal that makes depositors at Silicon Valley Bank, or SVB, whole, analysts said. And efforts by regulators appeared to be focused on soothing worries over the ability of companies to access uninsured deposits — most such deposits exceed the FDIC’s $250,000 cap — in order to prevent runs similar to the event that capsized SVB from occurring elsewhere.

    “If a deal gets struck tonight that doesn’t haircut depositors, the market is going to rally strongly,” said Barry Knapp, managing partner and director of research at Ironsides Macroeconomics, in a phone interview Sunday afternoon.

    Investors will also be assessing the fallout to see if it complicates the Federal Reserve’s plans to hike interest rates further and potentially faster than previously expected in its bid to tamp down inflation.

    SVB was closed by California regulators on Friday and taken over by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., which was conducting an auction of the bank Sunday afternoon, according to news reports.

    See: U.S. and U.K. regulators consider ways to help SVB depositors, FDIC auctioning assets – reports

    “We want to make sure that the troubles that exist at one bank don’t create contagion to others that are sound,” Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said in a Sunday morning interview on “Face the Nation” on CBS, while ruling out a bailout that would rescue bondholders and shareholders of SVB parent SVB Financial Group SIVB.

    “We are concerned about depositors and are focused on trying to meet their needs,” she said.

    Continued uncertainty could leave a “sell first, ask questions later” dynamic in effect Monday.

    “In what is an already jittery market, the emotional response to a failed bank reawakens our collective muscle memory of the GFC,” Art Hogan, chief market strategist at B. Riley Financial Wealth, told MarketWatch in an email, referring to the 2007-2009 financial crisis. “When the dust settles, we will likely find that SVB is not a ‘systematic’ issue.”

    Weekend Snapshot: What’s next for stocks after Silicon Valley Bank collapse as investors await crucial inflation reading

    Knapp warned that market turmoil with significant potential downside for stocks could ensue if depositors are forced to take a haircut, likely sparking runs at other institutions. A deal that leaves depositors whole would lift the overall market and allow bank stocks, which got hammered last week, to “rip” higher “because they are cheap” and the banking system “as a whole…is in really good shape.”

    Muscle memory, meanwhile, was in effect at the end of last week. Banking stocks dropped sharply Thursday, led by shares of regional institutions, and extended their losses Friday. The selloff in bank stocks pulled down the broader market, leaving the S&P 500
    SPX,
    -1.45%

    down 4.6%, nearly wiping out the large-cap benchmark’s early 2023 gains.

    The Dow Jones Industrial Average
    DJIA,
    -1.07%

    saw a 4.6% weekly fall, while the Nasdaq Composite
    COMP,
    -1.76%

    declined 4.7%. Investors sold stocks but piled into safe-haven U.S. Treasurys, prompting a sharp retreat in yields, which move opposite to prices.

    SVB’s failure is being blamed on a mismatch between assets and liabilities. The bank catered to tech startups and venture-capital firms. Deposits grew rapidly and were placed in long-dated bonds, particularly government-backed mortgage securities. As the Federal Reserve began aggressively raising interest rates roughly a year ago, funding sources for tech startups dried up, putting pressure on deposits. At the same time, Fed rate hikes triggered a historic bond-market selloff, putting a big dent in the value of SVB’s securities holdings.

    See: Silicon Valley Bank is a reminder that ‘things tend to break’ when Fed hikes rates

    SVB was forced to sell a large chunk of those holdings at a loss to meet withdrawals, leading it to plan a dilutive share offering that stoked a further run on deposits and ultimately led to its collapse.

    Analysts and economists largely dismissed the notion that SVB’s woes marked a systemic problem in the banking system.

    Also see: 20 banks that are sitting on huge potential securities losses—as was SVB

    Instead, SVB appears to be a “a rather special case of poor balance-sheet management, holding massive amounts of long-duration bonds funded by short-term liabilities,” said Erik F. Nielsen, group chief economics adviser at UniCredit Bank, in a Sunday note.

    “I’ll stick my neck out and suggest that markets are vastly overreacting,” he said.

    Implications for the Fed’s monetary policy path also loom large. Fed-funds futures traders last week moved to price in a more-than-70% chance of an outsize 50-basis-point, or half a percentage point, rise in the benchmark interest rate at the Fed’s March meeting after Chair Jerome Powell told lawmakers that rates would need to move higher than previously anticipated.

    Expectations swung back to a 25-basis-point, or quarter-point move, as the SVB collapse unfolded, with traders also scaling back expectations for when rates will likely peak.

    Meanwhile, a flight to safety saw the yield on the 2-year Treasury note, which had earlier in the week topped 5% for the first time since 2007, end the week down 27.3 basis points at 4.586%.

    The market reaction wasn’t unusual, said Michael Kramer of Mott Capital Management, in a Sunday note, and should reverse once the situation around SVB calms down.

    Powell said incoming economic data would determine the size of the Fed’s next rate move. The market reaction to a stronger-than-expected rise in February nonfarm payrolls, which was tempered by a slowdown in wage growth and a rise in the unemployment rate, was clouded by the tumult around SVB.

    “I think they will raise rates by at least 25 basis points and signal that more rate hikes are coming,” Kramer said. “If they were to pause rate hikes unexpectedly, it would send a warning message that they are seeing something of grave concern, causing a significant change in their policy path, and that would not be bullish for stocks.”

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  • Hedge funds and banks offer to buy deposits trapped at Silicon Valley Bank

    Hedge funds and banks offer to buy deposits trapped at Silicon Valley Bank

    Hedge funds are offering to buy startup deposits at Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) for as little as 60 cents on the dollar, Semafor reported on Saturday, citing people familiar with the matter.

    Bids range from 60 to 80 cents on the dollar, the report said adding that the range reflects expectations for how much of the uninsured deposits will be eventually recovered once the bank’s assets are sold or wound down.

    Firms like Oaktree which are known for investing in distressed debt are contacting startup businesses after SVB’s
    SIVB,
    -60.41%

    seizure by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp (FDIC), the report said.

    Traders from investment bank Jefferies are also contacting startup founders with deposits at the bank, offering to buy their deposit claims at a discount, The Information reported separately.

    Jefferies is offering at least 70 cents on the dollar for deposit claims, the report said, citing several people with direct knowledge of the matter.

    Oaktree declined to comment on the reports. Jefferies could not be immediately reached for comment.

    Silicon Valley Bank was taken over by the U.S. Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation on Friday after depositors, concerned about the lender’s financial health, rushed to withdraw their their deposits. The two-day run on the bank stunned markets, wiping out more than $100 billion in market value for U.S. banks.

    See: Silicon Valley Bank branches closed by regulator in biggest bank failure since Washington Mutual

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  • Roku says it ‘does not know’ how much of its cash it will be able to recover from SVB

    Roku says it ‘does not know’ how much of its cash it will be able to recover from SVB

    Streaming platform Roku Inc.
    ROKU,
    -0.88%

    on Friday said it “does not know” to what extent it would be able to recover the cash it has deposited with the recently-failed Silicon Valley Bank. Roku said it had cash and cash equivalents of around $1.9 billion as of Friday, with around $487 million — or roughly 26% — at the bank. Roku said its deposits with SVB were “largely uninsured.” Shares fell 3.7% after hours.

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  • 20 banks that are sitting on huge potential securities losses—as was SVB

    20 banks that are sitting on huge potential securities losses—as was SVB

    Silicon Valley Bank has failed following a run on deposits, after its parent company’s share price crashed a record 60% on Thursday.

    Trading of SVB Financial Group’s
    SIVB,
    -60.41%

    stock was halted early Friday, after the shares plunged again in premarket trading. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said SVB was one of a few banks she was “monitoring very carefully.” Reaction poured in from several analysts who discussed the bank’s liquidity risk.

    California regulators closed Silicon Valley Bank and handed the wreckage over to the Federal Deposit Insurance Administration later on Friday.

    Below is the same list of 10 banks we highlighted on Thursday that showed similar red flags to those shown by SVB Financial through the fourth quarter. This time, we will show how much they reported in unrealized losses on securities — an item that played an important role in SVB’s crisis.

    Below that is a screen of U.S. banks with at least $10 billion in total assets, showing those that appeared to have the greatest exposure to unrealized securities losses, as a percentage of total capital, as of Dec. 31.

    First, a quick look at SVB

    Some media reports have referred to SVB of Santa Clara, Calif., as a small bank, but it had $212 billion in total assets as of Dec. 31, making it the 17th largest bank in the Russell 3000 Index
    RUA,
    -1.70%

    as of Dec. 31. That makes it the largest U.S. bank failure since Washington Mutual in 2008.

    One unique aspect of SVB was its decades-long focus on the venture capital industry. The bank’s loan growth had been slowing as interest rates rose. Meanwhile, when announcing its $21 billion dollars in securities sales on Thursday, SVB said it had taken the action not only to lower its interest-rate risk, but because “client cash burn has remained elevated and increased further in February, resulting in lower deposits than forecasted.”

    SVB estimated it would book a $1.8 billion loss on the securities sale and said it would raise $2.25 billion in capital through two offerings of new shares and a convertible bond offering. That offering wasn’t completed.

    So this appears to be an example of what can go wrong with a bank focused on a particular industry. The combination of a balance sheet heavy with securities and relatively light on loans, in a rising-rate environment in which bond prices have declined and in which depositors specific to that industry are themselves suffering from a decline in cash, led to a liquidity problem.

    Unrealized losses on securities

    Banks leverage their capital by gathering deposits or borrowing money either to lend the money out or purchase securities. They earn the spread between their average yield on loans and investments and their average cost for funds.

    The securities investments are held in two buckets:

    • Available for sale — these securities (mostly bonds) can be sold at any time, and under accounting rules are required to be marked to market each quarter. This means gains or losses are recorded for the AFS portfolio continually. The accumulated gains are added to, or losses subtracted from, total equity capital.

    • Held to maturity — these are bonds a bank intends to hold until they are repaid at face value. They are carried at cost and not marked to market each quarter.

    In its regulatory Consolidated Financial Statements for Holding Companies—FR Y-9C, filed with the Federal Reserve, SVB Financial, reported a negative $1.911 billion in accumulated other comprehensive income as of Dec. 31. That is line 26.b on Schedule HC of the report, for those keeping score at home. You can look up regulatory reports for any U.S. bank holding company, savings and loan holding company or subsidiary institution at the Federal Financial Institution Examination Council’s National Information Center. Be sure to get the name of the company or institution right — or you may be looking at the wrong entity.

    Here’s how accumulated other comprehensive income (AOCI) is defined in the report: “Includes, but is not limited to, net unrealized holding gains (losses) on available-for-sale securities, accumulated net gains (losses) on cash flow hedges, cumulative foreign currency translation adjustments, and accumulated defined benefit pension and other postretirement plan adjustments.”

    In other words, it was mostly unrealized losses on SVB’s available-for-sale securities. The bank booked an estimated $1.8 billion loss when selling “substantially all” of these securities on March 8.

    The list of 10 banks with unfavorable interest margin trends

    On the regulatory call reports, AOCI is added to regulatory capital. Since SVB’s AOCI was negative (because of its unrealized losses on AFS securities) as of Dec. 31, it lowered the company’s total equity capital. So a fair way to gauge the negative AOCI to the bank’s total equity capital would be to divide the negative AOCI by total equity capital less AOCI — effectively adding the unrealized losses back to total equity capital for the calculation.

    Getting back to our list of 10 banks that raised similar red margin flags to those of SVB, here’s the same group, in the same order, showing negative AOCI as a percentage of total equity capital as of Dec. 31. We have added SVB to the bottom of the list. The data was provided by FactSet:

    Bank

    Ticker

    City

    AOCI ($mil)

    Total equity capital ($mil)

    AOCI/ TEC – AOCI

    Total assets ($mil)

    Customers Bancorp Inc.

    CUBI,
    -13.11%
    West Reading, Pa.

    -$163

    $1,403

    -10.4%

    $20,896

    First Republic Bank

    FRC,
    -14.84%
    San Francisco

    -$331

    $17,446

    -1.9%

    $213,358

    Sandy Spring Bancorp Inc.

    SASR,
    -2.91%
    Olney, Md.

    -$132

    $1,484

    -8.2%

    $13,833

    New York Community Bancorp Inc.

    NYCB,
    -5.99%
    Hicksville, N.Y.

    -$620

    $8,824

    -6.6%

    $90,616

    First Foundation Inc.

    FFWM,
    -9.11%
    Dallas

    -$12

    $1,134

    -1.0%

    $13,014

    Ally Financial Inc.

    ALLY,
    -5.70%
    Detroit

    -$4,059

    $12,859

    -24.0%

    $191,826

    Dime Community Bancshares Inc.

    DCOM,
    -2.81%
    Hauppauge, N.Y.

    -$94

    $1,170

    -7.5%

    $13,228

    Pacific Premier Bancorp Inc.

    PPBI,
    -1.95%
    Irvine, Calif.

    -$265

    $2,798

    -8.7%

    $21,729

    Prosperity Bancshare Inc.

    PB,
    -4.46%
    Houston

    -$3

    $6,699

    -0.1%

    $37,751

    Columbia Financial, Inc.

    CLBK,
    -1.78%
    Fair Lawn, N.J.

    -$179

    $1,054

    -14.5%

    $10,408

    SVB Financial Group

    SIVB,
    -60.41%
    Santa Clara, Calif.

    -$1,911

    $16,295

    -10.5%

    $211,793

    Source: FactSet

    Click on the tickers for more about each bank.

    Read Tomi Kilgore’s detailed guide to the wealth of information available for free on the MarketWatch quote page.

    Ally Financial Inc.
    ALLY,
    -5.70%

    — the third largest bank on the list by Dec. 31 total assets — stands out as having the largest percentage of negative accumulated comprehensive income relative to total equity capital as of Dec. 31.

    To be sure, these numbers don’t mean that a bank is in trouble, or that it will be forced to sell securities for big losses. But SVB had both a troubling pattern for its interest margins and what appeared to be a relatively high percentage of securities losses relative to capital as of Dec. 31.

    Banks with the highest percentage of negative AOCI to capital

    There are 108 banks in the Russell 3000 Index
    RUA,
    -1.70%

    that had total assets of at least $10.0 billion as of Dec. 31. FactSet provided AOCI and total equity capital data for 105 of them. Here are the 20 which had the highest ratios of negative AOCI to total equity capital less AOCI (as explained above) as of Dec. 31:

    Bank

    Ticker

    City

    AOCI ($mil)

    Total equity capital ($mil)

    AOCI/ (TEC – AOCI)

    Total assets ($mil)

    Comerica Inc.

    CMA,
    -5.01%
    Dallas

    -$3,742

    $5,181

    -41.9%

    $85,406

    Zions Bancorporation N.A.

    ZION,
    -2.44%
    Salt Lake City

    -$3,112

    $4,893

    -38.9%

    $89,545

    Popular Inc.

    BPOP,
    -1.56%
    San Juan, Puerto Rico

    -$2,525

    $4,093

    -38.2%

    $67,638

    KeyCorp

    KEY,
    -2.55%
    Cleveland

    -$6,295

    $13,454

    -31.9%

    $189,813

    Community Bank System Inc.

    CBU,
    -0.22%
    DeWitt, N.Y.

    -$686

    $1,555

    -30.6%

    $15,911

    Commerce Bancshares Inc.

    CBSH,
    -1.61%
    Kansas City, Mo.

    -$1,087

    $2,482

    -30.5%

    $31,876

    Cullen/Frost Bankers Inc.

    CFR,
    -1.08%
    San Antonio

    -$1,348

    $3,137

    -30.1%

    $52,892

    First Financial Bankshares Inc.

    FFIN,
    -0.90%
    Abilene, Texas

    -$535

    $1,266

    -29.7%

    $12,974

    Eastern Bankshares Inc.

    EBC,
    -3.16%
    Boston

    -$923

    $2,472

    -27.2%

    $22,686

    Heartland Financial USA Inc.

    HTLF,
    -1.26%
    Denver

    -$620

    $1,735

    -26.3%

    $20,244

    First Bancorp

    FBNC,
    -0.31%
    Southern Pines, N.C.

    -$342

    $1,032

    -24.9%

    $10,644

    Silvergate Capital Corp. Class A

    SI,
    -11.27%
    La Jolla, Calif.

    -$199

    $603

    -24.8%

    $11,356

    Bank of Hawaii Corp

    BOH,
    -6.15%
    Honolulu

    -$435

    $1,317

    -24.8%

    $23,607

    Synovus Financial Corp.

    SNV,
    -2.91%
    Columbus, Ga.

    -$1,442

    $4,476

    -24.4%

    $59,911

    Ally Financial Inc

    ALLY,
    -5.70%
    Detroit

    -$4,059

    $12,859

    -24.0%

    $191,826

    WSFS Financial Corp.

    WSFS,
    -2.78%
    Wilmington, Del.

    -$676

    $2,202

    -23.5%

    $19,915

    Fifth Third Bancorp

    FITB,
    -4.17%
    Cincinnati

    -$5,110

    $17,327

    -22.8%

    $207,452

    First Hawaiian Inc.

    FHB,
    -3.48%
    Honolulu

    -$639

    $2,269

    -22.0%

    $24,666

    UMB Financial Corp.

    UMBF,
    -3.35%
    Kansas City, Mo.

    -$703

    $2,667

    -20.9%

    $38,854

    Signature Bank

    SBNY,
    -22.87%
    New York

    -$1,997

    $8,013

    -20.0%

    $110,635

    Again, this is not to suggest that any particular bank on this list based on Dec. 31 data is facing the type of perfect storm that has hurt SVB Financial. A bank sitting on large paper losses on its AFS securities may not need to sell them. In fact Comerica Inc.
    CMA,
    -5.01%
    ,
    which tops the list, also improved its interest margin the most over the past four quarters, as shown here.

    But it is interesting to note that Silvergate Capital Corp.
    SI,
    -11.27%
    ,
    which focused on serving clients in the virtual currency industry, made the list. It is shuttering its bank subsidiary voluntarily.

    Another bank on the list facing concern among depositors is Signature Bank
    SBNY,
    -22.87%

    of New York, which has a diverse business model, but has also faced a backlash related to the services it provides to the virtual currency industry. The bank’s shares fell 12% on Thursday and were down another 24% in afternoon trading on Friday.

    Signature Bank said in a statement that it was in a “strong, well-diversified financial position.”

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  • SVB Financial bonds sink to 31 cents on the dollar after failure of Silicon Valley Bank

    SVB Financial bonds sink to 31 cents on the dollar after failure of Silicon Valley Bank

    Heavy trading in SVB Financial Group’s
    SIVB,

    debt pulled its BBB-rated 10-year bonds as low as 31 cents on the dollar on Friday after subsidiary Silicon Valley Bank was closed by regulators, marking the biggest bank failure since the financial crisis.

    The Santa Clara, Calif.–based financial-services company has been reeling in recent days, with both its stock and bond prices hit hard, after it on Thursday disclosed a $1.8 billion loss from a sale of about $21 billion in securities.

    Its bond prices lost further ground Friday after the California Department of Financial Protection and Innovation closed Silicon Valley Bank, placing the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. in control of its assets.

    Silicon Valley Bank had an estimated $209 billion in total assets and about $175.4 billion in deposits as of Dec. 31, according to the FDIC.

    SVB Financial’s 4.57% bonds due April 2023 traded as low as 31 cents on the dollar on Friday in heavy trading, according to BondCliq. Since the low, the debt traded up to 38.50 cents. A week ago it was fetching 90 cents. Prices on U.S. corporate bonds below 70 cents on the dollar are broadly considered distressed.

    Worries about distress at Silicon Valley Bank, and potential risks in the broader distress in the banking system, have weighed on shares and the debt of financial companies.

    Bonds in the financial sector were broadly under pressure Friday, including debt issued by Bank of America Corp.
    BAC,
    -0.97%
    ,
    JPMorgan Chase and Co.
    JPM,
    +2.70%
    ,
    Goldman Sachs Group Inc.
    GS,
    -3.69%
    ,
    Morgan Stanley
    MS,
    -1.56%

    and other major banks, according to BondCliq.

    Shares of the Invesco KBW Bank ETF
    KBWB,
    -3.26%

    were down 16% on the week through midday Friday, with some investors expressing concern about potential cracks in the financial system following a year of aggressive interest-rate hikes by the Federal Reserve.

     Barclays analysts said Friday that they viewed the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank as an “isolated event, but that it still “raises risks of broader distress within the banking system” that could throw cold water on talk of a Fed interest-rate hike in March of 50 basis points vs. 25 basis points.

    “Indeed, the possibility of capital losses at other institutions cannot be completely dismissed, with rising policy rates raising banks’ funding costs, more elevated longer-term rates exerting pressure on asset valuations, and potential loan losses related to idiosyncratic credit exposures.”

    Shares of SBV Financial were halted Friday, but they are down about 54% on the year, according to FactSet. The S&P 500 index
    SPX,
    -1.11%

    was down about 1.2% Friday afternoon, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average
    DJIA,
    -0.82%

    fell 0.8% and the Nasdaq Composite
    COMP,
    -1.47%

    was 1.7% lower.

    Deep Dive: 10 banks that may face trouble in the wake of the SVB Financial Group debacle

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  • The government may stop issuing Social Security payments after the debt limit is hit — here’s why

    The government may stop issuing Social Security payments after the debt limit is hit — here’s why

    There’s a very real possibility the government will stop issuing Social Security payments after the debt limit is hit.

    Scary as that prospect is, however, the alternative might be even worse: A little-known provision of a 1996 law could be interpreted to allow the Social Security trust fund to be used not only to pay Social Security’s monthly checks but also to circumvent the debt limit and pay all the government’s otherwise overdue bills.

    If that happens, any short-term relief to Social Security recipients would come with a potentially huge long-term price tag: The Social Security trust fund could be exhausted much sooner than currently projected—in just a couple of years, in fact.

    Read: I’ll be 60, have $95,000 in cash and no debts — I think I can retire, but financial seminars ‘say otherwise’

    These dire possibilities emerge from an analysis conducted by Steve Robinson, the chief economist for The Concord Coalition, a group that describes itself as “a nonpartisan organization dedicated to educating the public and finding common sense solutions to our nation’s fiscal policy challenges.”

    An issue brief he wrote, entitled “Social Security’s Debt Limit Escape Clause,” is available on the group’s website.

    Let me hasten to add that Robinson is not advocating that the Social Security trust fund be used in this way. In an interview, he instead stressed that he wrote his issue brief because we need to be aware not only that this “escape clause” exists but that its use could have unintended consequences. Though hardly anyone outside Washington knows that it even exists, and relatively few on Capitol Hill, the Treasury Department and the Social Security Administration are very much aware of it.

    Read: ChatGPT is about to make the business of retirement planning and financial advice profoundly human

    Before reviewing the details of this escape clause, it’s worth focusing on the political dynamics that surround it. Because the escape clause lessens the pressure on Congress and the president to come up with a solution to the debt crisis, neither side has an incentive to publicize its existence. But if the government is otherwise pushed to the edge of the fiscal cliff, and it’s facing the potentially huge consequences of an outright default (including the nonpayment of monthly Social Security checks), the political pressure to use the escape clause could be intense.

    The 1996 law that creates the escape clause was passed in the wake of the government hitting its debt limit in 1995 and 1996. Ironically, the intent of that law was to prevent the Social Security trust fund from being used for anything other than paying Social Security benefits. But, Robinson explains, that’s unworkable in the real world. That’s because Social Security checks are sent out by the Treasury’s general account, and if that account is in default the checks would bounce.

    Read: These 3 things will bring you happiness in retirement — and life

    If and when the debt limit is hit, therefore, the only way—in practice—for Social Security checks to continue being issued and cleared through the banking system would be for the Social Security trust fund to “lend” the Treasury sufficient funds that it could pay all the government’s unmet obligations. (I put “lend” in quotes because that’s not exactly how it works; the key is that the “loan” can be structured in ways that don’t count against the debt limit. If you’re interested in reading more about the complex logistics involved, you should read Robinson’s issue brief.)

    Therefore, if the debt limit is hit, which it is projected to do perhaps as early as June, Congress and the president will be on the horns of a huge dilemma:

    • Do they allow Social Security checks to continue getting paid, risking the political fallout of being accused of “raiding” the Social Security trust fund?

    • Or do they stop issuing Social Security payments, risking the political fallout of not issuing Social Security payments, on whom the very livelihoods of many elderly currently depend?

    You can appreciate why Congress and the president don’t want us to know that this escape clause exists. Once we are aware of it, they are put in a no-win situation.

    So fasten your seat belts for a wild ride in coming months as both parties play political brinkmanship over the debt limit and, by extension, Social Security. With both sides by the day hardening their stances, there’s a very real possibility that the debt limit will be hit.

    If that happens, we’ll be hearing a lot more about the little-known provision of a nearly 30-year-old law.

    Mark Hulbert is a regular contributor to MarketWatch. His Hulbert Ratings tracks investment newsletters that pay a flat fee to be audited. He can be reached at mark@hulbertratings.com.

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  • Silicon Valley Bank branches closed by regulator in biggest bank failure since Washington Mutual

    Silicon Valley Bank branches closed by regulator in biggest bank failure since Washington Mutual

    Silicon Valley Bank has been closed by the California Department of Financial Protection and Innovation, and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) has been appointed receiver, becoming the first FDIC-backed institution to fail this year.

    The news comes amid a crisis at parent SVB Financial Group
    SIVB,
    -60.41%
    ,
    which lost a record 60% of its value on Thursday, after it disclosed large losses from securities sales and announced a dilutive stock offering along with a profit warning. The stock was halted premarket Friday amid reports the company was seeking a buyer.

    The FDIC, which insures deposits of up to $250,000 at eligible banks, said all insured depositors will have full access to their accounts no later than Monday morning. Uninsured depositors will get a receivership certificate and may be entitled to dividends once the FDIC sells the bank’s assets.

    The bank had 13 branches in California and Massachusetts and will reopen on Monday. As of Dec. 31, it had about $209 billion in total assets, and about $175.4 billion in deposits.

    That makes it the biggest bank failure since Washington Mutual Inc. was brought down during the financial crisis of 2008.

    See now: 10 banks that may face trouble in the wake of the SVB Financial Group debacle

    “At the time of closing, the amount of deposits in excess of the insurance limits was undetermined,” said the FDIC. “The amount of uninsured deposits will be determined once the FDIC obtains additional information from the bank and customers.”

    Read: Treasury monitoring a few banks ‘very carefully’ amid Silicon Valley Bank’s woes, Yellen says

    Related: Silicon Valley Bank collapse a cautionary tale, says New Constructs

    Customers with more than $250,000 in their accounts should contact the FDIC at 1-866-799-0959.

    The last FDIC-backed bank to close was Almena State Bank, Almena, Kansas, back in October of 2020, said the FDIC.

    The bank’s collapse has come swiftly just days after the parent announced a huge loss on bondholdings after it was caught out by interest rate increases. Some venture-capital firms reportedly told their startup clients to pull their money from the bank, triggering a classic run on the bank.

    On Friday, employees were told to “work from home today and until further notice,” the Wall Street Journal reported, citing an email it had obtained.

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  • Leading infectious-disease expert says COVID-19 is now endemic, but Americans are divided on whether pandemic is over

    Leading infectious-disease expert says COVID-19 is now endemic, but Americans are divided on whether pandemic is over

    A leading infectious-disease expert said this week that data is showing the coronavirus has moved to the endemic phase, meaning that COVID-19 is still with us but no longer causing huge waves of illness or clogging up healthcare systems.

    Eric Topol, the chair of innovative medicine at Scripps Research in La Jolla, Calif., said all indications from genomic surveillance of the virus, wastewater and clinical outcomes that are still being tracked point to an endemic phase. The caveat is that monitoring is more limited now and tracking is happening at lower frequency.

    Nonetheless, “there are no new SARS-CoV-2 variants that have yet cropped up with a growth advantage over XBB.1.5 (the recombinant with two significant mutations added on), which is dominant throughout much of the world, or its cousin, XBB.1.91.1,” Topol wrote in his Ground Truths Substack column.

    “For all the talk about the convergent ‘variant soup’ that preceded the most recent wave, the XBBs took hold and are not giving way to a long list of omicron family sub-variants,” he added.

    The New York Times daily tracker shows that cases are now averaging around 29,558 a day, down 15% from two weeks ago and at a level last seen around April 2022.

    Hospitalizations are down 11% at 24,965 a day. But the daily average death toll stands at 401, up 21% from two weeks ago and an undesirably high number.

    The Johns Hopkins University global tracker will stop collecting data on Saturday, which marks the third anniversary of the World Health Organization’s declaration of a global state of emergency.

    The tracker shows there have been 676.6 million cases of COVID and 6.8 million deaths globally since the start of the crisis. The U.S. leads the world with 103.8 million cases and 1.12 million deaths.

    The WHO counted nearly 4.5 million new COVID cases globally in the 28-day period through March 5, down 58% from the previous period, according to its weekly epidemiological update. The agency said some 32,000 deaths were reported, down 65% from the previous 28-day period.

    As has become its practice, it cautioned that an overall pullback in testing means those numbers are likely an undercount as prevalence surveys show higher ones.

    The WHO is now monitoring one variant of concern, namely omicron, and seven of its subvariants. The following table shows the weekly prevalence of those subvariants over time:


    World Health Organization

    A new Gallup poll, meanwhile, shows Americans are evenly divided over whether or not the pandemic is over: Some 49% say it is, while 51% say it’s not.

    Gallup first started asking the American public its views on the topic in June 2021, a time when many states were lifting restrictions on movement as the vaccine rollout was underway. At the time, just 29% of those polled said they thought the pandemic was over, giving way to a less upbeat 18% by fall of that year.

    “Since then, optimism has mostly only inched higher, rising to 34% last spring and to 44% in October before reaching 49% today,” said Gallup.

    A quarter of those polled said they are very or somewhat worried about contracting COVID. That was split between 3% who are very worried and 22% who are somewhat worried. Concerns spiked at 50% in January 2022, when omicron first started to circulate.

    The Gallup survey also found that many Americans are still at least partially isolating to protect themselves from the virus. Some 23% of those polled said they are still avoiding crowds, 18% are avoiding travel by air or public transportation and 14% are avoiding public places such as stores and restaurants. Just 10% are even avoiding small gatherings.

    But most people are no longer wearing face masks, with just 31% saying they still use one.


    Gallup

    A small majority of those surveyed, or 52%, said they have tested positive for COVID. Another 13% said they had not, but believed they have had the virus.

    As many as 83% of Americans may have some immunity against the virus due to the higher number that have had it and the 63% who are vaccinated, the survey found.

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  • Treasury monitoring a few banks ‘very carefully’ amid Silicon Valley Bank’s woes, Yellen says

    Treasury monitoring a few banks ‘very carefully’ amid Silicon Valley Bank’s woes, Yellen says

    U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said Friday she’s tracking a number of banks as Silicon Valley Bank has faced major problems.

    “You mentioned Silicon Valley Bank,” Yellen said, as she responded to a lawmaker while testifying before a House Ways and Means Committee hearing.

    “There are recent developments that concern a few banks that I’m monitoring very carefully, and when banks experience financial losses, it is and it should be a matter of concern.”

    The stock of Silicon Valley Bank parent company SVB Financial Group
    SIVB,
    -60.41%

    had plunged after the company disclosed large losses from securities sales.

    Later Friday, as the committee hearing still was underway, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation said Silicon Valley Bank had been closed by a California regulator.

    SVB has been seeking a buyer after scrapping a plan to shore up its finances through a stock offering, and as it faced widespread customer withdrawals, according to a Wall Street Journal report published earlier Friday.

    Related: SVB Financial is trying to sell itself: CNBC

    Sen. Sherrod Brown, the Ohio Democrat who heads the Senate Banking Committee, is “monitoring the situation closely,” a spokeswoman said Friday.

    “The FDIC and other banking regulators are on the job to protect insured depositors and our banking system,” she added.

    Billionaire hedge fund manager Bill Ackman had suggested that government intervention could be needed.

    “If private capital can’t provide a solution, a highly dilutive government preferred bailout should be considered,” Ackman said on Twitter late Thursday.

    U.S. stocks
    SPX,
    -1.45%

    DJIA,
    -1.07%

    COMP,
    -1.76%

    were lower Friday, as investors struggled to parse mixed signals in the latest jobs report and monitored Silicon Valley Bank’s troubles.

    Now read: Financial-system risks put a smaller March rate hike by Federal Reserve back in play

    Also see: SVB extends swoons on bank-run fears and analyst downgrades as it triggers bank-stock losses

    Plus: 10 banks that may face trouble in the wake of the SVB Financial Group debacle

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  • Jobs report shows strong 311,000 gain in February, puts pressure on Fed for bigger rate hike

    Jobs report shows strong 311,000 gain in February, puts pressure on Fed for bigger rate hike

    The numbers: The U.S. created a robust 311,000 new jobs in February, raising the odds of another sharp hike in interest rates by the Federal Reserve later this month.

    Economists polled by The Wall Street Journal had forecast 225,000 new jobs.

    The increase in employment last month followed a revised 504,000 gain (initially 517,000) in January, the government said Friday.

    The large back-to-back increases could force the Fed to raise interest rates higher than it had planned to slow the economy and loosen up the tightest labor market in decades. The central bank meets March 21-22 to plot its next move.

    A sign advertises job openings outside a business in Illinois. Lots of companies are still hiring, but the economy has slowed and job creation is likely to as well.


    Scott Olson/Getty Images

    Yet there were a few glimmers of hope for the Fed.

    The unemployment rate rose a few ticks to 3.6%. Hourly wages rose just 0.2% to mark the smallest increase in a year. And the share of able-bodied people in the labor force climbed to a three-year high.

    All of these are pressure valves on the labor market and the broader economy from high inflation.

    Investors appeared to put more weight on those factors than another big increase in employment. Stocks rose and bond yields fell.

    Big picture: An expanding U.S. economy has shown lots of resilience in the face of rising interest rates, but analysts doubt the good times can last. Higher borrowing costs typically slow the economy by depressing consumer spending and business investment.

    Just look at the housing market, where soaring mortgage rates have crushed sales and new construction. The same could happen to the rest of the economy if the Fed has to jack up rates more than Wall Street expects.

    Already, a robust U.S. labor market is showing signs of fraying. Job postings have declined, lots of large companies have announced layoffs and workers who lose a job are taking longer to find a new one.

    It just might not be enough for the Fed.

    Market reaction:  The Dow Jones Industrial Average
    DJIA,
    -1.66%

    and S&P 500
    SPX,
    -1.85%

    trimmed premarket losses in Friday trades. The yield on the 10-year Treasury fell to 3.78%.

    Investors hope some signs of cooling in the labor market will encourage the Fed to keep raising interest rates in smaller increments.

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  • SVB Financial stock tumbles 22% after hours on reports of funds advising clients to pull money from bank

    SVB Financial stock tumbles 22% after hours on reports of funds advising clients to pull money from bank

    SVB Financial Group
    SIVB,
    -60.41%

    fell more than 22% in the extended session Thursday as reports surfaced that several funds are advising clients to pull their money from Silicon Valley Bank.

    Bloomberg News late Thursday reported that Founders Fund, the San Francisco-based venture-capital fund co-founded by Peter Thiel, has advised companies to do just so. The report cited people familiar with the matter.

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  • Oracle stock falls following forecast as revenue disappoints

    Oracle stock falls following forecast as revenue disappoints

    Oracle Corp. shares recouped some of their losses in the extended session Thursday after the forecast revenue range bookended the Wall Street consensus, as the software company’s largest business unit topped forecasts, but its others didn’t.

    Oracle
    ORCL,
    -1.83%

    shares were down about 3.5% after hours following the forecast. Prior to the forecast, shares had dropped more than 5% and were around those levels when a conference call with analysts began. Oracle shares declined 1.8% in the regular session to close at $86.87.

    On the call with analysts, Oracle Chief Executive Safra Catz forecast fourth-quarter earnings of $1.56 to $1.60 a share on revenue growth of 15% to 17%, or $13.62 billion to $13.85 billion. Analysts surveyed by FactSet had estimated $1.47 a share on revenue of $13.75 billion.

    That followed fiscal third-quarter results in which Oracle reported net income of $1.9 billion, or 68 cents a share, compared with $2.32 billion, or 84 cents a share, a year ago.

    Adjusted earnings, which exclude stock-based compensation expenses and other items, were $1.22 a share, compared with $1.13 a share in the year-ago period.

    Revenue rose to $12.4 billion from $10.51 billion in the year-ago quarter.

    Analysts had estimated earnings of $1.20 a share and revenue of $12.43 billion for the third quarter.

    Oracle’s largest segment, cloud services and license support, rose 17% to $8.92 billion. Cloud license and on-premise license revenue was flat at $1.29 billion from a year ago, while hardware revenue rose 2% to $811 million, and services revenue jumped 74% to $1.38 billion.

    Analysts had forecast cloud services and license support revenue of $8.83 billion, cloud license and on-premise license revenue of $1.39 billion, hardware revenue of $815.5 million and services revenue of $1.43 billion.

    “Since June of last year when we acquired Cerner, that business has increased its healthcare contract base by approximately $5 billion,” said Larry Ellison, Oracle’s chairman, in a statement. “While we are pleased with this early success of the Cerner business, we expect the signing of new healthcare contracts to accelerate over the next few quarters.”

    Oracle’s board also hiked the quarterly dividend 25% to 40 cents a share. The dividend will be paid April 24 to shareholders of record as of April 11.

    Oracle shares are up 14% over the past 12 months, versus a 14% decline by the iShares Expanded Tech-Software Sector ETF 
    IGV,
    -2.26%
    ,
     while the S&P 500 index 
    SPX,
    -1.85%

    has dropped 8% and the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite Index 
    COMP,
    -2.05%

    has fallen 14% in that time.

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  • Dow tumbles over 400 points in final hour of trade as investors await monthly employment report

    Dow tumbles over 400 points in final hour of trade as investors await monthly employment report

    U.S. stocks extended losses in the final hour of trade on Thursday, while awaiting Friday’s February employment data that could help decide how large an interest rate hike the Federal Reserve will impose at its next meeting in two weeks.

    Financial sector stocks were particularly hard hit along with cryptocurrencies after Silvergate Capital Corp., collapsed overnight amid growing scrutiny in Washington. Other financial stocks fell, dragged down by SVB Financial Group, which fell by a record amount.

    How are stocks trading
    • The S&P 500
      SPX,
      -1.85%

      dropped 56 points, or 1.4%, to 3,936

    • Dow Jones Industrial Average
      DJIA,
      -1.66%

      was off 412 points, or 1.3%, to 32,387

    • Nasdaq Composite
      COMP,
      -2.05%

      declined by 174 points, or 1.5%, to 11,399

    Both the S&P 500 and Nasdaq finished higher on Wednesday, with only the Dow finishing in the red, while all three indexes remained on track for weekly losses. A weekly drop for the S&P 500 would mark its fourth such pullback in five weeks.

    What’s driving markets

    U.S. stocks trimmed earlier gains and extended losses on Thursday afternoon after trading modestly higher after the open when the latest weekly jobless claims data showed an unexpectedly large uptick in the number of Americans filing for unemployment benefits.

    The number of Americans who applied for unemployment benefits in early March jumped to a 10-week high of 211,000, the highest level since Christmas. That’s higher than the 195,000 new applicants that economists polled by the Wall Street Journal had anticipated.

    Economists said the data suggest that the labor market might be starting to slow, which is seen as a necessary prerequisite for driving inflation back to the Fed’s 2% target.

    “The labor market might just be on the cusp of an inflection point,” said Peter Boockvar, chief investment officer of Bleakley Financial Group, in emailed commentary.

    Investors are now looking ahead to Friday’s closely watched February jobs report from the Department of Labor. Economists polled by the Wall Street Journal expect 225,000 jobs were created last month after 517,000 new jobs were created in January, a number that was much higher than economists had anticipated.

    “If we do get the expected 200,000, or really anything between say 180,000 and 240,000, this would be a return to the prior trend and would signal that last month was indeed a one-off,” said Brad McMillan, chief investment officer of Commonwealth Financial Network, in emailed comments.

    “That would be perceived as a positive by the Fed and markets, suggesting that inflation may start moderating again but is still high enough to allow for continued economic growth.”

    See: Wall Street sees smaller 225,000 increase in U.S. jobs in February. A much larger gain might spur stiffer Fed rate hike.

    The Russell 2000
    RUT,
    -2.75%
    ,
    the small-cap index, is on pace to close below its 50-day moving average for the first time since January 9, 2023, according to Dow Jones Market Data.

    Regional bank stocks underperformed on Thursday. Shares of Silicon Valley Bank parent company SVB Financial Group
    SIVB,
    -60.41%

    plummeted more than 61% after the company disclosed large losses from securities sales and a stock offering meant to provide a boost to its balance sheet. SVB is on pace to book the biggest one-day selloff since the dotcom boom, while its trading was halted for volatility multiple times, according to Dow Jones Market Data.

    Signature Bank 
    SBNY,
    -12.18%

     shares dropped 11.2%undefined

    The KBW Bank Index
    BKX,
    -7.70%

    of 24 leading banks slumped 7.1%, on pace for its worst day since June 26, 2020, according to Dow Jones Market Data. SPDR S&P Bank ETF
    KBE,
    -7.30%

    was down 6.5%.

    See: SVB Financial’s stock suffers biggest drop in 25 years after large losses on securities sales, equity offering

    Treasury yields fell with the yield on the 2-year note BX:TMUBMUSD02Yslipped to 4.885% from 5.064% on Wednesday. 

    Stocks suffered earlier in the week after Powell said during testimony on Capitol Hill that rates would likely need to rise even further than market participants had expected. However, the main indexes saw some relief after the Fed chief clarified that policymakers hadn’t yet decided on the size of the next rate hike.

    Investors have already digested several reports on the labor market this week, including a report on the number of job openings, which showed that the number of Americans quitting their jobs had fallen below 4 million in January for the first time in 19 months.

    “The big picture is that the labor market is easing, but it’s still tighter than it was before the pandemic,” said Sonu Varghese, a global macro strategist at Carson Group.

    See: Bad economic data won’t be good for stocks, but good data will be even worse, this JPMorgan technical strategist says

    Companies in focus

    — Jamie Chisholm contributed to this article

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  • SVB Financial’s stock suffers biggest drop in 25 years after large losses on securities sales, equity offering

    SVB Financial’s stock suffers biggest drop in 25 years after large losses on securities sales, equity offering

    Shares of Silicon Valley Bank parent company SVB Financial Group plummeted Thursday toward the biggest one-day selloff since the dotcom boom, after the Santa Clara, Calif.-based financial-services company disclosed large losses from securities sales and a stock offering meant to provide a boost to its balance sheet.

    The bank
    SIVB,
    -43.86%
    ,
    which helps fund technology startups backed by venture-capital firms, said it took the “strategic actions” to strengthen its financial position as rising interest rates increase pressure on public and private markets and as clients face elevated cash burn levels.

    SVB also cut its first-quarter guidance ranges for net interest income (NII) to $880 million-$900 million from $925 million-$955 million and for net interest margin (NIM) to 1.75%-1.79% from 1.85%-1.95%. The outlook for declines in average deposits was increased to the low-double-digit percentage range from mid single digits.

    “While VC deployment has tracked our expectations, client cash burn has remained elevated and increased further in February, resulting in lower deposits than forecasted,” Chief Executive Greg Becker wrote in a letter to shareholders. “The related shift in our funding mix to more, higher-cost deposits and short-term borrowings, coupled with higher interest rates, continues to pressure NII and NIM.”

    The stock dove 41% in morning trading, outpacing the S&P 500’s
    SPX,
    +0.02%

    losers by a wide margin. It was suffering the biggest one-day selloff since its record 42.3% decline on Sept. 10, 1998.

    SVB said late Wednesday it sold about $21 billion worth of its available-for-sale securities. As of Dec. 31, the company had $26.1 billion in AFS securities.

    The sale will result in a loss of about $1.8 billion in the first quarter of 2023, while the FactSet consensus for first-quarter net income was $274.8 million.

    “The sale of substantially all of our AFS securities will enable us to increase our asset sensitivity, partially lock in funding costs, better insulate net interest income (NII) and net interest margin (NIM) from the impact of higher interest rates, and enhance profitability,” Becker wrote.

    Separately, the company said it plans to offer for sale $2.25 billion worth of equity securities to bolster its financial position.

    The offering includes $1.25 billion worth of common stock, which represents 13.4% of the company’s current market capitalization of $9.33 billion, and $500 million worth of mandatory convertible preferred stock. SVB has also entered into an agreement with private-equity investor General Atlantic to buy $500 million worth of common stock in a separate private transaction.

    “Our financial position enables us to take these strategic actions, which are intended to further bolster that position now and over the long term,” the bank said in a statement.

    JPMorgan analyst Steven Alexopoulos cut his stock-price target to $270 from $300 but reiterated the overweight rating he’s had on SVB for at least the past three years. The stock target is above Tuesday’s closing price of $267.83.

    “While this is yet another setback that will result in another negative [earnings-per-share] revision, we continue to believe that it remains a question of when rather than if the war chest of dry powder on the sidelines starts to get deployed at a much more rapid pace,” Alexopoulos wrote in a note to clients.

    The stock, which was headed for its lowest close since April 2020, has tumbled 28.3% over the past three months and plunged 70.7% over the past 12 months. In comparison, the Financial Select Sector SPDR exchange-traded fund
    XLF,
    -2.06%

    has lost 7.1% over the past year and the S&P 500 has shed 6.6%.

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  • GM’s stock slips 2% as auto maker announces buyouts

    GM’s stock slips 2% as auto maker announces buyouts

    General Motors Co. on Thursday announced employee buyouts that are expected to lead to charges of $1.5 billion as the auto maker seeks to be “nimble in an increasingly competitive market.”

    GM’s
    GM,
    -3.16%

    stock slipped 2% after the news. The announcement comes a little over a week after the Detroit News reported that GM was cutting about 500 jobs, which came roughly a month after the company said it wasn’t planning layoffs.

    “By permanently bringing down structured costs, we can improve vehicle profitability and remain nimble in an increasingly competitive market,” a GM spokesperson said.

    The buyouts, which the company is calling a voluntary separation program, are being offered to U.S. salaried employees with at least five years of service and to global executives with at least two years of service, GM said.

    The program offers employees “an opportunity to make a career change or retire earlier,” the company said. “Employees are strongly encouraged to consider the program.”

    GM said in late January that it planned to implement a program aimed at cutting costs by $2 billion per year by 2024.

    The buyouts are part of that effort, which also includes reducing vehicle complexity and cutting discretionary spending, GM said.

    U.S. employees taking the buyout would receive 1 month of pay for every year of service, up to 12 months, as well as COBRA benefits, a prorated performance bonus and help finding a new job.

    GM said it expects to record the bulk of the separation charges in the first half of 2023.

    The Wall Street Journal reported Wednesday that GM’s crucial pivot to electric vehicles had “stalled.”

    GM has not followed competitors Ford Motor Co.
    F,
    -2.20%

    and Tesla Inc.
    TSLA,
    -2.02%

    in announcing price cuts, with Chief Executive Mary Barra saying in January she believed “we’re priced where we need to be.”

    GM in January reported fourth-quarter earnings that beat Wall Street expectations and issued guidance that was also well above forecast.

    The company said it had led the U.S. auto industry in sales and had the largest year-over-year increase in market share among auto makers, thanks to “strong demand for our products and improved supply chain conditions.”

    GM’s stock has run up 18.2% year to date through Wednesday, while the S&P 500
    SPX,
    -0.22%

    has gained 4%.

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  • Jobless claims jump to 211,000, the highest since Christmas. Blame New York.

    Jobless claims jump to 211,000, the highest since Christmas. Blame New York.

    The numbers: The number of Americans who applied for unemployment benefits in early March jumped to a 10-week high of 211,000. Yet most of the increase was concentrated in New York and might not signal a broader cooling-off trend in the U.S. labor market.

    New U.S. applications for benefits rose 21,000 from 190,000 in the prior week, the government said Thursday. The numbers are seasonally adjusted.

    It’s the first time in eight weeks claims have topped the 200,000 mark.

    An unusually big increase took place in New York. Raw or actual unemployment applications in the state jumped to 30,241 from 13,878 in the prior week.

    Chief economist Stephen Stanley of Santander U.S. Capital Markets said school workers in New York City are allowed by contract to apply for benefits during winter and spring breaks.

    Asked about the upsurge, a government spokesperson said by email that “the New York State Department of Labor cannot speculate on the increase.”

    California also posted a sizable pickup, perhaps a sign that the recent spate of major corporate layoffs are starting to bite. A number of large tech firms have announced job cuts since last fall.

    The number of people applying for jobless benefits is one of the best barometers of whether the economy is getting better or worse. New unemployment applications remain near historically low levels, however.

    Economists polled by The Wall Street Journal had forecast new claims to total 195,000 in the seven days ending March 3.

    Key details: Thirty-seven of the 53 U.S. states and territories that report jobless claims showed an increase last week. Seventeen posted a decline.

    Most states aside from New York and California reported little change.

    The number of people collecting unemployment benefits across the country, meanwhile, rose by 69,000 to a two-month high of 1.72 million in the week ending Feb. 25. That number is reported with a one-week lag.

    These continuing claims are still low, but a gradual increase since last spring suggests it’s taking longer for people who lose their jobs to find new ones.

    Big picture: Jobless claims are one of the first indicators to emit danger signals when the U.S. is headed toward recession.

    So far, jobless claims remain remarkably low and the economy is still adding plenty of jobs. Economists estimate that the U.S. gained 225,000 new jobs in February.

    Economists expect hiring to slow and layoffs to increase later in the year, however, as rising interest rates restrain the economy and reduce demand for workers. A number of large companies, especially in tech, media and finance, have already announced job cuts.

    Looking ahead: “Absent [New York], the count would likely have been below 200,000 yet again,” Stanley of Santander said.

    “Broadly, initial jobless claims have remained remarkably low despite the flurry of layoff announcements in recent months, underscoring that the labor market retains considerable momentum.”

    Market reaction: The Dow Jones Industrial Average
    DJIA,
    -1.66%

    and S&P 500
    SPX,
    -1.85%

    rose in Thursday trades.

    Wall Street is hoping for signs of cooling in the labor market, which would discourage the Federal Reserve from raising interest rates more aggressively. The Fed is raising rates to snuff out inflation and reduce upward pressure on wages.

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  • Credit Suisse to delay publication of 2022 annual report on SEC comments

    Credit Suisse to delay publication of 2022 annual report on SEC comments

    Credit Suisse Group AG said Thursday that it will delay the publication of its 2022 report after a late call from U.S. market regulators over 2019 and 2020 cash-flow statements, adding a further headache as the lender attempts to woo back clients amid a costly turnaround effort.

    The Swiss bank
    CSGN,
    -5.57%

    CS,
    +0.35%

    said it received a call from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on Wednesday in relation to certain open SEC comments about the technical assessment of previously disclosed revisions to its consolidated cash-flow statements in the 2020 and 2019 fiscal years as well as related controls.

    “Management believes it is prudent to briefly delay the publication of its accounts in order to understand more thoroughly the comments received,” Credit Suisse said.

    The company said it wouldn’t affect its 2022 financial results released early in February.

    Credit Suisse’s share price hit a low in the weeks since the 2022 results on uncertainty about its future, with analysts fearing that recent large outflows from customers will hinder a recovery.

    Write to Ed Frankl at edward.frankl@wsj.com

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