A Pacific Western Bank sign is seen on May 4, 2023 in Los Angeles, California.
David Mcnew | Getty Images
Shares of PacWest were under pressure once again Thursday after the struggling regional bank said that deposit outflows resumed in the first week of May.
The stock dropped 22.7%, further extending its recent declines. PacWest’s shares have now fallen more than 50% this month and nearly 80% for the year.
PacWest’s stock was under pressure again on Thursday.
related investing news
The bank said in a securities filing Thursday that its deposits declined 9.5% during the week of May 5. PacWest said that the majority of those outflows came after media reports that said the lender was exploring strategic options.
The bank also said that it was able to fund those withdrawals with available liquidity. PacWest said it now has $15 billion of available liquidity compared with $5.2 billion in uninsured deposits.
The update marks a change from May 4, when PacWest said that it was not experiencing “out-of-the-ordinary deposit flows” and that total deposits had increased since the end of March.
During the first quarter, PacWest’s total deposits declined 16.9%, and the bank said it would use strategic asset sales to reshape its balance sheet.
Several Wall Street analysts theorized that the most recent outflows were from PacWest’s venture capital customers.
“While the deposit news is not what the company wants to report, if the outflows are truly from the venture depositors and not the core bank, that is better news, despite the higher total outflow disclosure. The financial result is that the company is borrowing more to replace those deposits,” RBC Capital Markets analyst Jon Arfstrom said in a note to clients.
Following PacWest’s filing, Western Alliance released its own update and said that total deposits have grown by $600 million since May 2. Shares of that bank were down less than 1% on Thursday. Elsewhere, shares of Zions Bancorp dipped 4.5% and the SPDR S&P Regional Banking ETF (KRE) was down 2.4%.
The regional banking sector has been under pressure since early March, when concern about the impact of higher interest rates led to a run on deposits at Silicon Valley Bank, which was seized by regulators. Signature Bank soon followed, and then First Republic was seized and sold to JPMorgan before the market opened on May 1.
JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon told Bloomberg News on Thursday that he thinks regional banks are “quite strong” but added “I think we have to assume there’ll be a little bit more” to the crisis.
A ‘Now Hiring’ sign posted outside of a restaurant looking to hire workers on May 05, 2023 in Miami, Florida.
Joe Raedle | 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.
The U.S. labor market is still hot. There were 253,000 new nonfarm jobs last month, handily beating Wall Street estimates for job growth of 180,000. Average hourly earnings unexpectedly rose by 0.5% — the biggest monthly gain in a year.
U.S. markets jumped Friday as Apple shares popped and regional bank stocks recovered. Asia-Pacific stocks mostly traded higher Monday. China’s Shanghai Composite rose 1.6% even as economists expect the country’s trade surplus to decrease slightly from March to April.
If the White House fails to raise the debt ceiling, there will be a “steep economic downturn” and “economic chaos will ensue,” U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen warned on Sunday. The U.S. might hit its debt ceiling as early as June 1.
PRO During Berkshire’s meeting, Buffett shared his favorite stocks. One of them is a “better business than any we own,” Buffett said. Another is “one of the best-managed and important companies in the world” — yet Buffett decided to sell shares in it. Here’s why.
A strong jobs reading, a note from JPMorgan and an optimistic earnings report from Apple buoyed U.S. markets Friday.
The gains made by stocks were impressive — especially after the previous few days of renewed banking fears — so let’s start with them. The Dow Jones Industrial Average added 1.65%, the S&P 500 rose 1.85% and the Nasdaq Composite jumped 2.25%.
The tech-heavy Nasdaq’s jump is straightforward: Apple shares leaped 4.7% after the company reported better-than-expected earnings and revenue Thursday. Other Big Tech companies, like Microsoft and Amazon, rose alongside Apple.
Broader markets were boosted by April’s jobs report, which showed a higher-than-expected increase in jobs growth and an unemployment rate of 3.4% — a record low since 1969.
Markets’ reaction might seem confusing at first. A tight labor market implies the Federal Reserve might continue raising interest rates. Generally speaking, that’s bad for markets. Recall January’s jobs report: There were 517,000 new jobs in December, almost three times the forecast. Markets fell on the news.
Yet this time, markets rallied, suggesting that the worry gripping traders is one of recession, not inflation. A strong jobs market increases the probability that the U.S. economy can tame inflation without contracting too severely.
There’s good news on that front, however. On Friday, banking titan JPMorgan Chase upgraded three regional bank stocks to “overweight,” saying that Western Alliance, Zions Bancorp and Comerica were all “substantially mispriced” — as I had argued in Friday’s edition of this newsletter.
Investors digested the note and pushed the SPDR S&P Regional Banking ETF (KRE) up 6.3%. Individual bank stocks saw more drastic jumps: PacWest surged 81.7% and Western Alliance popped 49.2%.
But make no mistake: This isn’t a sign that banking fears have been put to rest definitively. If stocks can swing so drastically in one direction on the back of a note, they can do so in the other at the faintest whisper of trouble. What we’re seeing isn’t renewed confidence, but continued volatility.
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A ‘Now Hiring’ sign posted outside of a restaurant looking to hire workers on May 05, 2023 in Miami, Florida.
Joe Raedle | 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.
The U.S. labor market is still hot. There were 253,000 new nonfarm jobs last month, handily beating Wall Street estimates for job growth of 180,000. Average hourly earnings unexpectedly rose by 0.5% — the biggest monthly gain in a year.
U.S. markets jumped Friday as Apple shares popped and regional bank stocks recovered. Europe’s Stoxx 600 rose 1.1% — Adidas, with an 8.9% surge, was a big winner in the index.
If the White House fails to raise the debt ceiling, there will be a “steep economic downturn” and “economic chaos will ensue,” U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen warned on Sunday. The U.S. might hit its debt ceiling as early as June 1.
PRO During Berkshire’s meeting, Buffett shared his favorite stocks. One of them is a “better business than any we own,” Buffett said. Another is “one of the best-managed and important companies in the world” — yet Buffett decided to sell shares in it. Here’s why.
A strong jobs reading, a note from JPMorgan and an optimistic earnings report from Apple buoyed U.S. markets Friday.
The gains made by stocks were impressive — especially after the previous few days of renewed banking fears — so let’s start with them. The Dow Jones Industrial Average added 1.65%, the S&P 500 rose 1.85% and the Nasdaq Composite jumped 2.25%.
The tech-heavy Nasdaq’s jump is straightforward: Apple shares leaped 4.7% after the company reported better-than-expected earnings and revenue Thursday. Other Big Tech companies, like Microsoft and Amazon, rose alongside Apple.
Broader markets were boosted by April’s jobs report, which showed a higher-than-expected increase in jobs growth and an unemployment rate of 3.4% — a record low since 1969.
Markets’ reaction might seem confusing at first. A tight labor market implies the Federal Reserve might continue raising interest rates. Generally speaking, that’s bad for markets. Recall January’s jobs report: There were 517,000 new jobs in December, almost three times the forecast. Markets fell on the news.
Yet this time, markets rallied, suggesting that the worry gripping traders is one of recession, not inflation. A strong jobs market increases the probability that the U.S. economy can tame inflation without contracting too severely.
There’s good news on that front, however. On Friday, banking titan JPMorgan Chase upgraded three regional bank stocks to “overweight,” saying that Western Alliance, Zions Bancorp and Comerica were all “substantially mispriced” — as I had argued in Friday’s edition of this newsletter.
Investors digested the note and pushed the SPDR S&P Regional Banking ETF (KRE) up 6.3%. Individual bank stocks saw more drastic jumps: PacWest surged 81.7% and Western Alliance popped 49.2%.
But make no mistake: This isn’t a sign that banking fears have been put to rest definitively. If stocks can swing so drastically in one direction on the back of a note, they can do so in the other at the faintest whisper of trouble. What we’re seeing isn’t renewed confidence, but continued volatility.
Subscribe here to get this report sent directly to your inbox each morning before markets open.
We’re buying 45 shares of Morgan Stanley (MS), at roughly $84.29 apiece. Following Friday’s trade, Jim Cramer’s Charitable Trust will own 1,400 shares of MS, increasing its weighting in the portfolio to 4.35% from 4.21%. With Morgan Stanley shares coming under pressure this week as a result of the ongoing crisis of confidence in regional banks, we’re stepping in to take advantage as the stock finds support below our overall cost basis. Morgan Stanley has dropped 6% since its April 28, even with Friday’s roughly 2% advance in the broader stock market rally. While the issues at regional banks are lurking as a headwind for the market and will likely keep upside in the financials sector limited in the near term, we think that Morgan Stanley comes through this period of uncertainty as an even stronger bank than it was previously. MS YTD mountain Morgan Stanley YTD performance Less than two weeks ago, Morgan Stanley reported a very strong first quarter with management calling out about $110 billion in net new assets for the quarter, about $20 billion of which the team believes resulted from regional bank outflows following the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank in March. With the regionals coming under additional pressure following the news that PacWest Bancorp (PACW) was exploring strategic options, including the possibility of a sale, we wouldn’t be surprised if the bank was seeing additional money coming in now. PacWest has been all over the map this week — down some 70% from the April 28 close to Thursday’s close of $3.17, and then up some 85% on Friday. In addition to the very real likelihood that Morgan Stanley is continuing to benefit from the decline in confidence at regional banks, we know that management is working diligently to ensure they protect the bottom line, including an announcement this week that the team is looking to eliminate about 3,000 jobs by the end of June. While we wait for the pressure in financials to abate and for investors to start differentiating the banks that are actually in trouble from those that are benefiting fundamentally but suffering as collateral damage, we are happy to stay patient and collect Morgan Stanley’s nearly 4% annual dividend while management also takes advantage of the stock decline to repurchase shares. With this trade, we are upgrading shares to a 1-rating, in line with Friday’s buy. (Jim Cramer’s Charitable Trust is long MS. See here for a full list of the stocks.) As a subscriber to the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer, you will receive a trade alert before Jim makes a trade. Jim waits 45 minutes after sending a trade alert before buying or selling a stock in his charitable trust’s portfolio. If Jim has talked about a stock on CNBC TV, he waits 72 hours after issuing the trade alert before executing the trade. THE ABOVE INVESTING CLUB INFORMATION IS SUBJECT TO OUR TERMS AND CONDITIONS AND PRIVACY POLICY , TOGETHER WITH OUR DISCLAIMER . NO FIDUCIARY OBLIGATION OR DUTY EXISTS, OR IS CREATED, BY VIRTUE OF YOUR RECEIPT OF ANY INFORMATION PROVIDED IN CONNECTION WITH THE INVESTING CLUB. NO SPECIFIC OUTCOME OR PROFIT IS GUARANTEED.
A person walks through the Wall Street subway station near the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York on May 27, 2022.
Angela Weiss | AFP | Getty Images
We’re buying 45 shares of Morgan Stanley (MS), at roughly $84.29 apiece. Following Friday’s trade, Jim Cramer’s Charitable Trust will own 1,400 shares of MS, increasing its weighting in the portfolio to 4.35% from 4.21%.
With Morgan Stanley shares coming under pressure this week as a result of the ongoing crisis of confidence in regional banks, we’re stepping in to take advantage as the stock finds support below our overall cost basis. Morgan Stanley has dropped 6% since its April 28, even with Friday’s roughly 2% advance in the broader stock market rally.
While the issues at regional banks are lurking as a headwind for the market and will likely keep upside in the financials sector limited in the near term, we think that Morgan Stanley comes through this period of uncertainty as an even stronger bank than it was previously.
Morgan Stanley YTD performance
Less than two weeks ago, Morgan Stanley reported a very strong first quarter with management calling out about $110 billion in net new assets for the quarter, about $20 billion of which the team believes resulted from regional bank outflows following the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank in March.
With the regionals coming under additional pressure following the news that PacWest Bancorp (PACW) was exploring strategic options, including the possibility of a sale, we wouldn’t be surprised if the bank was seeing additional money coming in now. PacWest has been all over the map this week — down some 70% from the April 28 close to Thursday’s close of $3.17, and then up some 85% on Friday.
In addition to the very real likelihood that Morgan Stanley is continuing to benefit from the decline in confidence at regional banks, we know that management is working diligently to ensure they protect the bottom line, including an announcement this week that the team is looking to eliminate about 3,000 jobs by the end of June.
While we wait for the pressure in financials to abate and for investors to start differentiating the banks that are actually in trouble from those that are benefiting fundamentally but suffering as collateral damage, we are happy to stay patient and collect Morgan Stanley’s nearly 4% annual dividend while management also takes advantage of the stock decline to repurchase shares. With this trade, we are upgrading shares to a 1-rating, in line with Friday’s buy.
(Jim Cramer’s Charitable Trust is long MS. See here for a full list of the stocks.)
As a subscriber to the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer, you will receive a trade alert before Jim makes a trade. Jim waits 45 minutes after sending a trade alert before buying or selling a stock in his charitable trust’s portfolio. If Jim has talked about a stock on CNBC TV, he waits 72 hours after issuing the trade alert before executing the trade.
THE ABOVE INVESTING CLUB INFORMATION IS SUBJECT TO OUR TERMS AND CONDITIONS AND PRIVACY POLICY, TOGETHER WITH OUR DISCLAIMER. NO FIDUCIARY OBLIGATION OR DUTY EXISTS, OR IS CREATED, BY VIRTUE OF YOUR RECEIPT OF ANY INFORMATION PROVIDED IN CONNECTION WITH THE INVESTING CLUB. NO SPECIFIC OUTCOME OR PROFIT IS GUARANTEED.
What a difference a day makes, as the shares of PacWest Bancorp PACW skyrocketed toward a record one-day gain Friday, after closing the previous session at a record low. The stock, which has already been halted six times for volatility since the open, powered up 77.9% in midday trading, which would surpass the current record gain on a closing basis of 33.9% on March 14, 2023. On Thursday, the stock had closed at a record low of $3.17, after plunging 71.4% amid a six-day losing streak. That was the longest losing streak since the six-day streak that ended March 13, 2023, as the regional banking crisis began, and the worst…
U.S. stocks recovered some ground on Friday, after four days of losses, as shares of regional banks rebounded and the main indexes received a boost from a strong April jobs and Apple’s better-than-forecast earnings.
What’s happening
On Thursday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 287 points, or 0.86%, to 33,128. It remains on track for a 1.5% weekly drop.
Upgrade CEO Renaud Laplanche speaks at a conference in Brooklyn, New York, in 2018.
Alex Flynn | Bloomberg via Getty Images
The technology industry is known for innovation and spawning the next big thing. But at a time of economic uncertainty and rising interest rates, a growing piece of the tech sector is going after one of the most noninnovative products on the planet: yield.
With U.S. Treasury yields climbing late last year to their highest in more than a decade, consumers and investors can finally generate returns just by parking their money in savings accounts.
Banks are responding by offering higher-yielding offerings. American Express, for example, offers consumers a 3.75% annual percentage yield (APY), and First Citizens‘ CIT Bank has a 4.75% APY for customers with at least $5,000 in deposits. Ally Bank, which is online only, is promoting a 4.8% certificate of deposit.
However, some of the highest rates available to savers aren’t coming from traditional financial firms or credit unions, but rather from companies in and around Silicon Valley.
Apple is the most notable new entrant. Last month, the iPhone maker launched its Apple Card savings account with a generous 4.15% APY in partnership with Wall Street giant Goldman Sachs.
Then there’s the whole fintech market, consisting of companies offering consumer financial services with a focus on digital products and a friendly mobile experience instead of physical branches with costly bank tellers and loan officers.
Stock trading app Robinhood has a feature called Robinhood Gold, which offers 4.65% APY. Interest is earned on uninvested cash swept from the client’s brokerage account to partner banks. It’s part of a $5-a-month subscription that also includes lower borrowing costs for margin investing and research for stock investing.
The company lifted its yield from 4.4% on Wednesday after the Federal Reserve approved its 10th rate increase in a little more than a year, raising its benchmark borrowing rate by 0.25 percentage point to a target range of 5%-5.25%.
Fed Chair Jerome Powell speaks during a conference at the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago on June 4, 2019.
Scott Olson | Getty Images
“At Robinhood, we’re always looking for ways to help our customers make their money work for them,” the company said in a press release announcing its hike.
LendingClub, an online lender, is promoting an account with a 4.25% yield. The company told CNBC that deposit growth was up 13% for the first quarter of 2023 compared with the prior quarter, “as depositors looked to diversify their money out of traditional banks and earn increased savings.” Year over year, savings deposits have increased by 81%.
And Upgrade, which is led by LendingClub founder Renaud Laplanche, offers 4.56% for customers with a minimum balance of $1,000.
“It’s really a trade-off for consumers, between safety or the appearance of safety, and yield,” Laplanche told CNBC. Upgrade, which is based in San Francisco, and most other fintech players keep customer deposits with institutions backed by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., so consumer funds are safe up to the $250,000 threshold.
SoFi is the rare example of a fintech with a banking charter, which it acquired last year. It offers a high-yield savings product with a 4.2% APY.
The story isn’t just about rising interest rates.
Across the emerging fintech spectrum, companies like Upgrade are, intentionally or not, taking advantage of a moment of upheaval in traditional finance. On Monday, First Republic became the third American bank to fail since March, following the collapses of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank. All three saw depositors rush for the exits as concerns about a liquidity crunch led to a cycle of doom.
Shares of PacWest and other regional banks have plummeted this week, even after First Republic’s orchestrated sale to JPMorgan Chase was meant to signal stability in the system.
After the collapse of SVB, Laplanche said Upgrade’s banking partners came to the company and asked it to step up the inflow of funds, an apparent effort to stanch the withdrawals at smaller banks. Upgrade farms out the money it attracts to a network of 200 small- and medium-sized banks and credit unions that pay the company for the deposits.
For well over a decade, before the recent jump in rates, savings accounts were dead money. Borrowing rates were so low that banks couldn’t profitably offer yield on deposits. Also, stocks were on such a tear that investors were doing just fine in equities and index funds. A subset of those with a stomach for risk went big in crypto.
As the price of bitcoin soared, a number of crypto exchanges and lenders began mimicking the banks’ savings model, offering very high yield (up to 20% annually) for investors to store their crypto. Those exchanges are now bankrupt following the crypto industry’s meltdown last year, and many thousands of clients lost their funds.
There is some potential instability for fintechs, even those outside of the crypto space. Many of them, including Upgrade and Affirm, partner with Cross River Bank, which serves as the regulated bank for companies that don’t have charters, allowing them to offer lending and credit products.
Last week, Cross River was hit with a consent order from the FDIC for what the agency called “unsafe or unsound banking practices.”
Cross River said in a statement that the order was focused on fair lending issues that occurred in 2021, and that it “places no limitations on our extensive existing fintech partnerships or the credit products we presently offer in partnership with them.”
While fintechs broadly are under far less regulatory pressure than crypto companies,the FDIC’s action suggests that regulators are beginning to pay closer attention to the kinds of products that high-yield accounts are designed to complement.
Still, the emerging group of high-yield savings products are much more mainstream than what the crypto platforms were promoting. That’s largely because the deposits come with government-backed insurance protections, which have a long history of safety.
They’re also not designed to be big profit centers. Rather, by offering high yields for consumers who have long housed their money in stagnant accounts, tech and fintech companies are opening the door to potentially new customers.
Apple has a whole suite of financial products, including a credit card and payments app, that pair smoothly with the savings account, which is only available to the 6 million-plus Apple Card holders. Those customers reportedly put in nearly $1 billion in deposits in the first four days the service was on the market.
Apple didn’t respond to a request for comment. CEO Tim Cook said on the company’s earnings call Thursday that, “we are very pleased with the initial response on it. It’s been incredible.”
Apple savings account
Apple
Robinhood, meanwhile, wants more people to use its trading platform, and companies like LendingClub and SoFi are building relationships with potential borrowers.
Laplanche said high-yield savings accounts, while compelling for the consumer, aren’t core to most fintech businesses but serve as an onboarding tool to more lucrative products, like consumer lending or conventional credit cards.
“We started with credit,” Laplanche said. “We think that’s a better strategy.”
SoFi launched its high-yield savings account in February of last year. In its annual SEC filing, the company said that offering checking and high-yield savings accounts provided “more daily interactions with our members.”
Affirm, best known as a buy now, pay later firm, has offered a savings account since 2020 as part of a “full suite” of financial products. Its yield is currently 3.75%.
“Consumers can use our app to manage payments, open a high-yield savings account, and access a personalized marketplace,” the company said in a 2022 SEC filing. A spokesperson for Affirm told CNBC that the saving account is “one of the many solutions in our suite of products that empower consumers with a smarter way to manage their finances.”
Set against the backdrop of a regional banking crisis, savings products from anywhere but a national bank might seem unappealing. But chasing yield does come with at least a little bit of risk.
“Citi or Chase, feels like it’s safe,” to the consumer, Laplanche said. “Apple and Goldman aren’t inherently risky, but it’s not the same as Chase.”
— CNBC’s Darla Mercado contributed to this report.
Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), May 3, 2023.
Brendan McDermid | Reuters
PacWest’s stock was rebounding on Friday.
However, Friday’s rally made only a small dent in the week-to-date losses. PacWest still finished the week down 43% and below its closing level from Wednesday. The bank confirmed this week that it is exploring strategic options.
Western Alliance, which said it is not seeking a sale, has also been under heavy pressure this week, falling 27% even after Friday’s rally. The KRE finished the week down about 10%.
The steep declines, which came even at banks that reported much smaller deposit outflows than First Republic, led Wall Street analysts to warn that the stocks have become detached from their fundamentals.
“We are arguably reaching a point of hysteria,” Fundstrat strategist Tom Lee said in a note to clients on Friday.
This week’s slide came after First Republic was seized by regulators and sold to JPMorgan Chase before the market opened on Monday. JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon and Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, among others, have said this week that they think the stage of banking crisis caused by deposit outflows is largely over, but the fall for the stocks shows investors are less confident.
Many on Wall Street are looking to Washington for regulatory changes to calm the banking system, such as potentially expanding deposit insurance rules. Some have raised the possibility of temporarily banning short-selling on bank stocks. Former Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Chair Sheila Bair told CNBC’s “The Exchange” on Thursday that some of the share price declines are likely being driven by short-selling.
A Pacific Western Bank branch in Los Angeles, California, US, on Friday, March 10, 2023.
Eric Thayer | Bloomberg | 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.
U.S. regional banks continued falling Thursday even though their deposits have been increasing.
U.S. regional banks continued falling Thursday. PacWest Bancorp lost half its value on the day, continuing a slide that began Wednesday on the news that the Los Angeles-based bank may put itself up for sale. First Horizon sank 33.2% after its merger deal with TD Bank was terminated, and Western Alliance plummeted 38.5%.
Apple reported a 3% year-over-year drop in both revenue and net income to $94.84 billion and $24.16 billion, respectively, for the quarter ended April 1. Both numbers, however, beat Wall Street expectations, buoyed by growth in iPhone sales. CEO Tim Cook is optimistic about Apple’s prospects in Asia, and the company’s shares rose 2.3% in extended trading.
Markets in the U.S. traded lower Thursday, with all major indexes ending the day in the red — though futures ticked up following the release of Apple’s earnings after the bell. Asia-Pacific stocks traded mixed Friday. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index led gains in the region, rising 0.6%, as its IPO market shows signs of life — albeit weak ones (more on that below).
Fears of fragility in the U.S. banking sector are spreading.
Regional bank stocks continued tumbling Thursday; shares of PacWest and Western Alliance were halted more than once. The SPDR S&P Regional Bank ETF (KRE) fell 5.5%. At one point on Thursday, every stock in the KRE traded lower as investors sold off regional banks.
It’s not just investors who are worried about banks’ health. Consumers — many of whom do not trade stocks — share the same sentiment. A Gallup survey found that half of respondents polled were “very worried” or “moderately worried” about the safety of their bank deposits — a proportion last seen during the 2008 financial crisis.
Against such a backdrop — and fresh off a quarter percentage point rate hike by the Federal Reserve on Wednesday — markets, unsurprisingly, didn’t do well. The Dow slid 0.86%, the S&P 500 lost 0.72% and the Nasdaq fell 0.49%. That’s the fourth consecutive day all major indexes fell.
But some analysts and bankers think the tumult is caused by fear more than analysis. (Though this is not to argue against the idea markets are, largely, driven by psychology.)
Evercore ISI’s John Pancari, for instance, wrote the advisory firm is confident about the “liquidity and capital levels at banks post 1Q.” Indeed, PacWest said its deposits grew $1.8 billion from March 20 to April 24; Western Alliance also reported that its deposits have increased since the end of March.
But Pancari warned bank valuations could still collapse because of a “self-fulfilling prophecy,” where investors, fearing the collapse of banks, actually trigger the process as they flee.
Or, as Peter McGratty, head of U.S. bank research at KBW, put it, “We’re in this situation that feels a lot like March, where we’re trading stocks on fear … not fundamentals.” And that’s particularly scary today, when SVB’s failure in March showed how fears can spread near instantly on social media and cause a bank to collapse in merely 36 hours.
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A “For Lease” sign at a Pacific Western Bank branch in Los Angeles, California, US, on Friday, March 10, 2023.
Eric Thayer | Bloomberg | 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.
U.S. regional banks continued falling Thursday even though their deposits have been increasing.
U.S. regional banks continued falling Thursday. PacWest Bancorp lost half its value on the day, continuing a slide that began Wednesday on the news that the Los Angeles-based bank may put itself up for sale. First Horizon sank 33.2% after its merger deal with TD Bank was terminated, and Western Alliance plummeted 38.5%.
Apple reported a 3% year-over-year drop in both revenue and net income to $94.84 billion and $24.16 billion, respectively, for the quarter ended April 1. Both numbers, however, beat Wall Street expectations, buoyed by growth in iPhone sales. CEO Tim Cook is optimistic about Apple’s prospects in Asia, and the company’s shares rose 2.3% in extended trading.
Markets in the U.S. traded lower Thursday, with all major indexes ending the day in the red — though futures ticked up following the release of Apple’s earnings after the bell. Europe’s Stoxx 600 index lost 0.5% after the European Central Bank raised interest rates (more on that below).
Fears of fragility in the U.S. banking sector are spreading.
Regional bank stocks continued tumbling Thursday; shares of PacWest and Western Alliance were halted more than once. The SPDR S&P Regional Bank ETF (KRE) fell 5.5%. At one point on Thursday, every stock in the KRE traded lower as investors sold off regional banks.
It’s not just investors who are worried about banks’ health. Consumers — many of whom do not trade stocks — share the same sentiment. A Gallup survey found that half of respondents polled were “very worried” or “moderately worried” about the safety of their bank deposits — a proportion last seen during the 2008 financial crisis.
Against such a backdrop — and fresh off a quarter percentage point rate hike by the Federal Reserve on Wednesday — markets, unsurprisingly, didn’t do well. The Dow slid 0.86%, the S&P 500 lost 0.72% and the Nasdaq fell 0.49%. That’s the fourth consecutive day all major indexes fell.
But some analysts and bankers think the tumult is caused by fear more than analysis. (Though this is not to argue against the idea markets are, largely, driven by psychology.)
Evercore ISI’s John Pancari, for instance, wrote the advisory firm is confident about the “liquidity and capital levels at banks post 1Q.” Indeed, PacWest said its deposits grew $1.8 billion from March 20 to April 24; Western Alliance also reported that its deposits have increased since the end of March.
But Pancari warned bank valuations could still collapse because of a “self-fulfilling prophecy,” where investors, fearing the collapse of banks, actually trigger the process as they flee.
Or, as Peter McGratty, head of U.S. bank research at KBW, put it, “We’re in this situation that feels a lot like March, where we’re trading stocks on fear … not fundamentals.” And that’s particularly scary today, when SVB’s failure in March showed how fears can spread near instantly on social media and cause a bank to collapse in merely 36 hours.
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The latest drop for regional bank shares is causing some Wall Street analysts to back away from their recommendations on the stocks, even if they still believe in the underlying fundamentals for the companies. PacWest Bancorp fell 50% Thursday after reports it is considering a possible sale, which is concerning for investors after First Republic Bank looked for extra financing for weeks before being seized by regulators . Other regional banks also sold off, including a 19% drop for Western Alliance Bank. PacWest confirmed in a press release it is exploring strategic options, but said that it “has not experienced out-of-the-ordinary deposit flows” since the sale of First Republic, adding core deposits have actually increased since the end of the quarter. The deposit update was not enough to reassure Wall Street analysts about the health of regional banks and there is concern the drops in stocks could reignite deposit flight. “We believe that WAL, and the broader regional banking group, are caught in a negative feedback loop driven by steep sell-off in stock prices that are feeding into deposit attrition fears,” Bank of America’s Ebrahim Poonawala said in a note to clients. D.A. Davidson analyst Gary Tenner downgraded PacWest for similar reasons. “We view PACW as not trading on fundamentals, given market fears, and move to the sidelines, with a neutral rating and $3 PT,” Tenner said in a note to clients. PACW 5D mountain PacWest’s stock has fallen sharply this week. Meanwhile, RBC Capital Markets’ analyst Jon Arfstrom stuck with his outperform rating on PacWest, but said only investors with strong stomachs should stick around. “Risk and volatility tolerance has to be very high in order to be in this stock, but our sense is that the trends from the earnings call, along with the strategic decisions being made at the company, are largely unchanged,” Arfstrom said in a note to clients. Janney’s Christopher Marinac, however, said that news of a potential strategic move for PacWest was “stale,” and reiterated his buy rating on the stock. Western Alliance Bank Another bank stock that has taken heavy losses in recent weeks is Western Alliance Bank . The bank said in a press release Wednesday it has not seen “unusual deposit flows” since the sale of First Republic. The bank added its deposits have risen $1.2 billion since the end of March. WAL YTD mountain The stock has fallen more than 60% since the start of the year. The update “highlights how the fundamentals of the balance sheet were completely de-coupled from any stock related volatility surrounding the FRC resolution,” UBS analyst Brody Preston said in a note to clients. Preston kept his buy rating on the stock. Janney analyst Timothy Coffey said in a note to clients Thursday the bank was being “tainted by association” and reiterated a buy rating on the stock. Jefferies and Piper Sandler also kept their positive ratings on the stock. Bank of America’s Poonawala, however, moved to no rating on the stock. “We believe that WAL is no longer trading on fundamentals, but rather market fears on whether it could experience additional stress on the funding side, potentially further squeeze profitability,” Poonawala said. — CNBC’s Michael Bloom contributed reporting.
The sell-off in regional banks may have created a buying opportunity for certain investors in some of the safer, large-cap names, UBS said in a note Thursday. PacWest Bancorp is the latest regional bank to lead the sector lower following news Wednesday it is weighing its options , including a possible sale. The rout began in March with the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank and subsequent deposit outflows in regional banks. On Monday, JPMorgan Chase acquired the majority of assets and deposits of the beleaguered First Republic Bank. “We have been hesitant to pound the table on the sector save for ‘cheap quality’ mega caps (e.g., BAC, WFC) given cyclical and structural concerns, but the negative after-hours action on regional banks has certainly caught our eye,” UBS analyst Erika Najarian wrote. While positive catalysts for the regionals appear scarce, the negatives appear to be fully discounted, she added. “We continue to prefer quality, but for investors that truly have a long-term time horizon, it might be time to start picking off some large-cap regional banks at these price levels,” Najarian said. The name that stands out for her is Citizens Financial Group due to its 0.89 times price to tangible book value, a key valuation metric, and its 10% Common Equity Tier 1 ratio. The CET1 ratio is a measure of the solvency of a bank, or its ability to absorb a financial shock. The Federal Reserve requires a minimum CET1 ratio of 4.5% for its bank stress tests. Shares of Citizens Financial are down nearly 40% year to date. CFG YTD mountain Citizens Financial Group year-to-date performance Another stock highlighted by UBS is KeyCorp . “Implied performance for KEY suggests it would have to raise — which is not our base case,” Najarian wrote. On Monday, JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon was optimistic the crisis was largely over. “There may be another smaller one, but this pretty much resolves them all,” he said. Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell also called the U.S. banking system ” sound and resilient ” in his post-meeting press conference Wednesday. However, regional banks were under pressure again Thursday. The SPDR S & P Regional Bank ETF (KRE) dropped more than 8%. — CNBC’s Michael Bloom contributed reporting.
My top 10 things to watch Thursday, May 4 1. In a widely expected move, the Federal Reserve on Wednesday raised interest rates by 25 basis points — the 10th rate increase in just over a year. Fed Chair Jerome Powell indicated the central bank may pause rate hikes going forward, but did not suggest it would begin cutting anytime soon. The Fed must see weakness in wages to consider pulling back. 2. Regional bank stocks are under pressure, with PacWest Bancorp (PACWP) in focus. Shares of the California lender are down 39% in premarket trading, at just under $4 apiece, and it is reportedly considering a sale. “Leaving rates this high is going to continue this stress,” DoubleLine CEO Jeffrey Gundlach told CNBC. “I believe with a very high degree of probability there’s going to be further regional bank failures .” 3. The debt-ceiling debacle continues , with the U.S. hurtling towards a June 1 deadline by which it could default on its debt obligations. The 2011 debt standoff offers some lessons for investors. 4. Oil prices fell to their lowest level since Dec. 2021 on concerns over demand and an uneven economic recovery in China, before edging up Thursday. West Texas Intermediate crude — the U.S. oil benchmark — slid nearly 11% over the past three sessions and was flat in morning trading, at around $68 a barrel. 5. Club holding Apple (AAPL) is set to report quarterly results after the closing bell Thursday, with analysts predicting the iPhone maker will announce $90 billion in share buybacks and dividends. We also got a potential readthrough from Club name Qualcomm (QCOM) Wednesday when the chipmaker announced a weaker-than-expected forecast for handsets on the back of slower demand in China. 6. A slate of banks on Thursday lower their price targets on Estee Lauder (EL) after shares of the Club holding plunged more than 20% Wednesday on weak forward guidance. Wells Fargo reduces its price target on the prestige beauty name to $225 per share, from $290, while Citi drops its target to $240 a share, from $295. 7. Mizuho lowers its price target on Club stock Emerson Electric (EMR) to $90 a share, from $103, and maintains a neutral rating, noting moderating demand in the discrete manufacturing market. Emerson on Wednesday delivered a solid fiscal second quarter , while raising its full-year outlook. 8. Citi says Yum! Brands ‘ (YUM) post-earnings selloff is a buying opportunity, with the stock closing down nearly 4% on Wednesday. The firm raises its price target on YUM to $172 a share, from $170, while reiterating a buy rating on the stock. 9. Club holding Costco Wholesale ‘s (COST) same-store sales for April rose 1.4%, compared with a 1.1% decline in March, the retailer reported Wednesday. Truist on Thursday lowers its price target on COST to $568 a share, from $571, but maintains a buy rating on the stock for its “extreme value proposition.” 10. Kellogg (K) delivers better-than expected first-quarter results Thursday, with adjusted earnings-per-share coming in at $1.10, compared with analysts’ forecasts for $1 a share. The food manufacturing company also raises its adjusted-basis operating profit growth to be in a range of more than 8% to more than 10%. (See here for a full list of the stocks in Jim Cramer’s Charitable Trust.) As a subscriber to the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer, you will receive a trade alert before Jim makes a trade. Jim waits 45 minutes after sending a trade alert before buying or selling a stock in his charitable trust’s portfolio. If Jim has talked about a stock on CNBC TV, he waits 72 hours after issuing the trade alert before executing the trade. THE ABOVE INVESTING CLUB INFORMATION IS SUBJECT TO OUR TERMS AND CONDITIONS AND PRIVACY POLICY , TOGETHER WITH OUR DISCLAIMER . NO FIDUCIARY OBLIGATION OR DUTY EXISTS, OR IS CREATED, BY VIRTUE OF YOUR RECEIPT OF ANY INFORMATION PROVIDED IN CONNECTION WITH THE INVESTING CLUB. NO SPECIFIC OUTCOME OR PROFIT IS GUARANTEED.
1. In a widely expected move, the Federal Reserve on Wednesday raised interest rates by 25 basis points — the 10th rate increase in just over a year. Fed Chair Jerome Powell indicated the central bank may pause rate hikes going forward, but did not suggest it would begin cutting anytime soon. The Fed must see weakness in wages to consider pulling back.
2. Regional bank stocks are under pressure, with PacWest Bancorp (PACWP) in focus. Shares of the California lender are down 39% in premarket trading, at just under $4 apiece, and it is reportedly considering a sale. “Leaving rates this high is going to continue this stress,” DoubleLine CEO Jeffrey Gundlach told CNBC. “I believe with a very high degree of probability there’s going to be further regional bank failures.”
3. The debt-ceiling debacle continues, with the U.S. hurtling towards a June 1 deadline by which it could default on its debt obligations. The 2011 debt standoff offers some lessons for investors.
4. Oil prices fell to their lowest level since Dec. 2021 on concerns over demand and an uneven economic recovery in China, before edging up Thursday. West Texas Intermediate crude — the U.S. oil benchmark — slid nearly 11% over the past three sessions and was flat in morning trading, at around $68 a barrel.
5. Club holding Apple (AAPL) is set to report quarterly results after the closing bell Thursday, with analysts predicting the iPhone maker will announce $90 billion in share buybacks and dividends. We also got a potential readthrough from Club name Qualcomm (QCOM) Wednesday when the chipmaker announced a weaker-than-expected forecast for handsets on the back of slower demand in China.
6. A slate of banks on Thursday lower their price targets on Estee Lauder (EL) after shares of the Club holding plunged more than 20% Wednesday on weak forward guidance. Wells Fargo reduces its price target on the prestige beauty name to $225 per share, from $290, while Citi drops its target to $240 a share, from $295.
7. Mizuho lowers its price target on Club stock Emerson Electric (EMR) to $90 a share, from $103, and maintains a neutral rating, noting moderating demand in the discrete manufacturing market. Emerson on Wednesday delivered a solid fiscal second quarter, while raising its full-year outlook.
8. Citi says Yum! Brands‘ (YUM) post-earnings selloff is a buying opportunity, with the stock closing down nearly 4% on Wednesday. The firm raises its price target on YUM to $172 a share, from $170, while reiterating a buy rating on the stock.
9. Club holding Costco Wholesale‘s (COST) same-store sales for April rose 1.4%, compared with a 1.1% decline in March, the retailer reported Wednesday. Truist on Thursday lowers its price target on COST to $568 a share, from $571, but maintains a buy rating on the stock for its “extreme value proposition.”
10. Kellogg (K) delivers better-than expected first-quarter results Thursday, with adjusted earnings-per-share coming in at $1.10, compared with analysts’ forecasts for $1 a share. The food manufacturing company also raises its adjusted-basis operating profit growth to be in a range of more than 8% to more than 10%.
(See here for a full list of the stocks in Jim Cramer’s Charitable Trust.)
As a subscriber to the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer, you will receive a trade alert before Jim makes a trade. Jim waits 45 minutes after sending a trade alert before buying or selling a stock in his charitable trust’s portfolio. If Jim has talked about a stock on CNBC TV, he waits 72 hours after issuing the trade alert before executing the trade.
THE ABOVE INVESTING CLUB INFORMATION IS SUBJECT TO OUR TERMS AND CONDITIONS AND PRIVACY POLICY, TOGETHER WITH OUR DISCLAIMER. NO FIDUCIARY OBLIGATION OR DUTY EXISTS, OR IS CREATED, BY VIRTUE OF YOUR RECEIPT OF ANY INFORMATION PROVIDED IN CONNECTION WITH THE INVESTING CLUB. NO SPECIFIC OUTCOME OR PROFIT IS GUARANTEED.
PacWest Bancorp PACW shares tumbled more than 50% in after-hours trading Wednesday, taking other bank stocks with it after a report that the company’s executives were weighing a possible sale.
The report, from Bloomberg News, adds to the concerns over the financial stability of regional banks, following the collapse in March of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank, and the sale of First Republic Bank to JPMorgan Chase & Co. JPM this week. PacWest’s shares have been diving this week in the wake of First Republic’s collapse….
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A Pacific Western Bank branch in Los Angeles, California, US, on Friday, March 10, 2023.
Eric Thayer | Bloomberg | Getty Images
Regional bank stocks fell sharply Tuesday as the fallout from the third major bank failure this year continued to put pressure on the sector.
Shares of PacWest fell nearly 28% on Tuesday and was on track for its fourth-straight negative session. The stock was halted for volatility multiple times.
The steep declines deepened losses in the sector from Monday. Over the weekend, regulators seized troubled regional bank First Republic and sold it to JPMorgan Chase.
First Republic is the third failure of a large regional bank this year, following Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank in March.
The reasons for Tuesday’s declines were not immediately clear. JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon said Monday that the initial phase of the regional bank crisis was “over,” and there was cautious optimism among Wall Street analysts that the deposit flight issues had been contained.
First Republic reported a decline in deposits of about 40% during the first quarter, raising questions about how the bank could survive on its own.
Most other regional banks reported smaller deposits declines, however, and some, such as PacWest, reported that deposits began rebounding in late March.
The recent bank failures and expected regulatory changes in response to them have also raised questions about the long-term profit outlooks for mid-sized regional banks.
“We believe that banks with assets >$500B and <$60B are the clearest winners in the new world order, while there is likely to be a no-man’s land between $80-120B, as banks in this range may need to shrink to avoid new regulations or more actively engage in M&A to increase scale and absorb regulatory costs,” KBW analyst David Konrad said in a note to clients Sunday.
Another issue for the regional banks is the possibility of more Fed rate hikes. Higher rates will make it more costly for the banks to hold on to their deposits while also lowering the market value of the long-dated bonds and loans on their books.
Concern about the market value of those assets was one of the sparks for the initial run on Silicon Valley Bank in March.
The central bank is expected to raise its benchmark rate by 0.25 percentage points Wednesday.
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.
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.
A Google Cloud logo at the Hannover Messe industrial technology fair in Hanover, Germany, on Thursday, April 20, 2023.
Krisztian Bocsi | Bloomberg | Getty Images
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Bank stocks fell as First Republic reignited fears. Meanwhile, Alphabet and Microsoft beat earnings estimates, giving markets a chance to rally around tech.
Alphabet, Google’s parent company, reported a 3% increase in first-quarter revenue to $69.79 billion from a year earlier, though net income fell from $16.44 billion to $15.05 billion. Nonetheless, the technology giant beat earnings and revenue forecasts after missing both for four straight quarters. Also, its cloud business finally turned profitable. Alphabet shares rose 1.68% in extended trading.
Microsoft’s revenue increased 7% year over year to $52.86 billion, and its net income rose 9% to $18.3 billion for the quarter ended March 31. Both top and bottom line numbers beat expectations, causing shares to surge 8.45% in overnight trading.
Can optimism in tech save markets from resurgent bank fears?
Investors must have felt an unwelcome sense of déjà vu. First Republic lost almost half its value in a single trading day, dragging down other regional banks. Western Alliance Bancorp lost 5.58%, Charles Schwab fell 3.93% and PacWest Bancorp sank 8.92% (though the Los Angeles-based bank managed to recoup its losses in overnight trading after reporting its earnings).
Bigger banks weren’t spared, either: The broader SPDR S&P Bank ETF lost 3.68%. Across the Atlantic, UBS shares dropped even though the Swiss bank managed to increase assets in March, suggesting investors are still jumpy at any sign of weakness in banks.
Losses in the financial sector weighed on major stock indexes. The Dow Jones Industrial Average slid 1.02%, the S&P 500 ended the day 1.58% lower and the Nasdaq Composite lost 1.98%.
However, Wednesday could look like a very different trading day in the United States. Investors were pleased with how both Alphabet and Microsoft managed to beat estimates on profit and revenue. Shares of those tech giants popped in extended trading and are likely to post more dramatic surges later today. Given Alphabet’s and Microsoft’s immense market capitalization, broader markets stand to benefit from their rise as well.
If Meta, which is due to report after the bell Wednesday, continues the streak of big tech surpassing Wall Street’s expectations, investors could be in for two good trading days for the Nasdaq, at the very least. That could be enough to banish any lingering sense of déjà vu surrounding banks.
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A sign reading “I’m Feeling Lucky” outside the Google Inc. regional headquarters in Paris, France, on Thursday, April 6, 2023.
Nathan Laine | Bloomberg | 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.
Bank stocks fell as First Republic reignited fears. Meanwhile, Alphabet and Microsoft beat earnings estimates, giving markets a chance to rally around tech.
Alphabet, Google’s parent company, reported a 3% increase in first-quarter revenue to $69.79 billion from a year earlier, though net income fell from $16.44 billion to $15.05 billion. Nonetheless, the technology giant beat earnings and revenue forecasts after missing both for four straight quarters. Also, its cloud business, Azure, finally turned profitable. Alphabet shares rose 1.3% in extended trading.
Microsoft’s revenue increased 7% year over year to $52.86 billion, and its net income rose 9% to $18.3 billion for the quarter ended March 31. Both top and bottom line numbers beat expectations, causing shares to surge 9% in overnight trading.
Turning to banks, UBS’ first-quarter profit fell 52% year on year to $1.03 billion, largely because of a $665 million provision it had to make for litigation related to mortgage-backed securities the bank sold almost 20 years ago. However, the bank’s wealth management unit attracted $28 billion amid the banking turmoil in March. Still, that news couldn’t stop shares from sliding 2.17%.
First Republic Bank fared worse. On Monday, the U.S. bank reported after markets closed that its deposits sank 40.8%; on Tuesday, traders fled the stock, causing it plummet 49.38% to hit a record low.
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Can optimism in tech save markets from resurgent bank fears?
Investors must have felt an unwelcome sense of déjà vu. First Republic lost almost half its value in a single trading day, dragging down other regional banks. Western Alliance Bancorp lost 5.58%, Charles Schwab fell 3.93% and PacWest Bancorp sank 8.92% (though the Los Angeles-based bank managed to recoup its losses in overnight trading after reporting its earnings).
Bigger banks weren’t spared, either: The broader SPDR S&P Bank ETF lost 3.68%. Across the Atlantic, UBS shares dropped even though the Swiss bank managed to increase assets in March, suggesting investors are still jumpy at any sign of weakness in banks.
Losses in the financial sector weighed on major stock indexes. The Dow Jones Industrial Average slid 1.02%, the S&P 500 ended the day 1.58% lower and the Nasdaq Composite lost 1.98%.
However, Wednesday could look like a very different trading day in the United States. Investors were pleased with how both Alphabet and Microsoft managed to beat estimates on profit and revenue. Shares of those tech giants popped in extended trading and are likely to post more dramatic surges later today. Given Alphabet’s and Microsoft’s immense market capitalization, broader markets stand to benefit from their rise as well.
If Meta, which is due to report after the bell Wednesday, continues the streak of big tech surpassing Wall Street’s expectations, investors could be in for two good trading days for the Nasdaq, at the very least. That could be enough to banish any lingering sense of déjà vu surrounding banks.
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Shares of PacWest Bancorp were shooting 15% higher in Tuesday’s aftermarket trading after the regional bank disclosed a rise in deposits in recent weeks.
PacWest PACW said alongside its first-quarter earnings report that total deposits rose to $28.2 billion as of March 31 from $27.1 billion when the company provided a March 20 investor update. The company saw deposit balances grow by an additional $700 million or so as of April 24.