‘Banking crisis set to continue, dealing heavy blow to US economic prospects’

WASHINGTON: First Republic Bank has become the latest U.S. regional bank to come into intense focus following the second- and third-largest bank failures in U.S. history. The bank’s shares have shed 95 precent of their value since the regional banking crisis started on March 8, and more than $100 billion in deposits were pulled out of the bank in the first quarter, according to its earnings report published last week.
The California Department of Financial Protection and Innovation (DFPI) said on Monday that regulators had seized First Republic Bank, in what is the third major U.S. bank to fail in two months, after the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank.
DFPI appointed the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) as receiver of First Republic Bank and said it accepted a bid from J.P. Morgan Chase Bank, National Association, Columbus, Ohio, to assume all deposits.
Analysts anticipate that the U.S. banking tumult will continue to spread with more banks likely to go under, which they warn could drag down economic growth in the U.S.
Wang Tianyang, associate professor in the Department of Finance and Real Estate at Colorado State University, said that the U.S. banking turmoil is not yet over. He anticipates a large-scale restructuring in the U.S. banking sector in the near future, with many more medium- and small-sized banks being unable to survive the loss of deposits acquired by large banks at low prices.
The pullback in bank lending resulting from stress in the banking sector, coupled with raised lending standard, would further tighten monetary supply in the U.S., adding to the risk of a hard landing of the U.S. economy, Wang said.
–The Daily Mail-CGTN news exchange item