

Without one, he continued, “the market will keep testing weak links - or perceived weak links.” “I believe it really only ends after we get some type of government intervention,” Michaud told me.

That means this bout of instability may require a circuit breaker. “Unfortunately, there’s a feedback loop here,” said Tom Michaud, the CEO of Keefe, Bruyette & Woods, an investment bank owned by Stifel that specializes in financial services. Banks fail when too many people try to withdraw their deposits at once. Customers may see a drop in their bank’s share price, assume it’s in trouble, and yank their funds. Now, they’re anxious to get ahead of the next shoe to drop.īut skittishness can become a self-fulfilling prophecy. While authorities stepped in to protect depositors at those banks, investors were left with stocks that were suddenly worthless. “The bank has not experienced out-of-the-ordinary deposit flows following the sale of First Republic Bank and other news,” PacWest said in a statement, noting that 75% of its deposits were insured as of May 2.īreaking it down: Wall Street is on the hunt for any signs of vulnerability in the banking system after the high-profile demise of Silicon Valley Bank, Signature Bank and First Republic Bank in a matter of weeks. What’s particularly alarming, according to industry insiders? These banks weren’t seeing depositors rush for the exits when investors panicked. Regional bank shares rallied on Friday but were still down sharply compared to one week ago. Utah’s Zions and Texas’ Comerica both suffered stock declines topping 12%. Shares of Arizona’s Western Alliance finished down 39% despite the company’s denouncement of a Financial Times report it was considering a sale. (PACW) shares lost half their value on Thursday after the California-based lender said it was exploring all strategic options. US regional bank stocks veered wildly on Thursday and Friday, accentuating fears that federal regulators have not yet contained a crisis in the sector that could shake the financial system.
