Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said Wednesday that the seizure of First Republic was “an important step toward drawing a line under” turmoil in the banking system. Within two hours the stock of another troubled regional lender was down more than 50%.

The trigger was a series of media reports that Beverly Hills, Calif.-based PacWest (PACW) was weighing a range of strategic options, including a sale or capital raise. Its stock continued to fall during Thursday morning trading, down by more than 52% after being halted temporarily.

Other regional banks under scrutiny from investors also plunged, including Phoenix-based Western Alliance (WAL), which is also reportedly considering a sale of all or parts of its business, according to the Financial Times. A Memphis-based lender, First Horizon (FHN), plummeted more than 38% Thursday after Toronto-Dominion Bank called off its deal to acquire the company.

The new round of volatility for regional banks punctuates a disconnect in the financial world as the industry’s unrest drags into an eighth week.

While top figures on Wall Street and Washington display optimism that the worst is over, investors continue to punish other regional lenders that share any characteristics of the three mid-sized banks already seized by regulators.

‘The regional banking system is at risk’

On Monday JPMorgan Chase (JPM) CEO Jamie Dimon captured the industry’s hopes when he said “this part of the crisis is over” after announcing JPMorgan’s purchase of First Republic. Jane Fraser, CEO of Citigroup (C), on Monday called First Republic “the last remaining main uncertainty of the small handful of banks that did not do a good job with asset liability management.”

Powell reinforced this view on Wednesday, citing the failures of First Republic, Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank as the “three large banks really from the very beginning that were at heart of the stress we saw in early March,” he said.

“Those have all now been resolved” and the US banking system, he added, is now “sound and resilient.”

Billionaire hedge fund manager Bill Ackman offered a much more pessimistic take on the situation Wednesday night on Twitter. The Pershing Square Capital Management CEO called on the US government to put in place a systemwide deposit guarantee to prevent more bank failures, saying that “the regional banking system is at risk.”

Banking, he added, is a “confidence game” and “at this rate, no regional bank can survive bad news or bad data as a stock price plunge inevitably follows, insured and uninsured deposits are withdrawn and ‘pursuing strategic alternatives’ means an FDIC shutdown over the coming weekend.”

William Ackman, whose hedge fund holds a large stake in Valeant and controls two seats on its board of directors, testifies on Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday, April 27, 2016, before a Senate Special Committee on Aging hearing on drastic price hikes by Valeant and a handful of other drugmakers that have stoked outrage from patients, physicians and politicians nationwide. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)

William Ackman said Wednesday night that “the regional banking system is at risk.” (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)

Attempts to restore calm

The two names most in focus this week, PacWest and Western Alliance, were among the financial institutions that came under intense scrutiny following the March 10 and March 12 failures of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank.

Both lenders, like First Republic, lost a sizable amount of deposits during the first quarter as customers sought the perceived safety of larger banks or higher yields being offered by money market funds. PacWest, a lender based in Beverly Hills, Calif., lost 17% of its deposits and Phoenix-based Western Alliance lost 11%. First Republic lost 41%.

Short sellers have increased their bets against regional bank stocks by more than $440 million over the last 30 days, according to data from S3 Partners. Since Friday, short interest in PacWest rose to more than 18% of shares, making it the second most shorted regional bank stock for the same period.

On Wednesday night and early Thursday morning, PacWest and Western Alliance both scrambled to reassure investors with new statements about their deposits. Both, in fact, used nearly the exact same language to describe how their customers reacted to this week’s First Republic announcement.

PacWest said “the bank has not experienced out-of-the-ordinary deposit flows following the sale of First Republic Bank and other news” while Western Alliance said it “has not experienced unusual deposit flows” following the First Republic sale.

PacWest also confirmed in its press release issued at 12:30 AM ET that it had explored asset sales and been approached recently “by several potential partners and investors.” Those discussions, it said, “are ongoing.”

Western Alliance Bank signage is displayed on the Western Alliance Bancorp Headquarters in downtown Phoenix, Arizona, on April 27, 2023. - Shares in leading US banks, including JPMorgan Chase, were down in late morning trading in New York on Tuesday. Meanwhile those in regional banks suffered huge declines. Shares of PacWest Bancorp sank around 35 percent, while Comerica lost 13.6 percent. (Photo by Patrick T. Fallon / AFP) (Photo by PATRICK T. FALLON/AFP via Getty Images)

Western Alliance headquarters in Phoenix (Photo by PATRICK T. FALLON/AFP via Getty Images)

Both PacWest and Western Alliance are considerably smaller than First Republic. PacWest, founded in 1999, was the nation’s 53rd-largest bank as of Dec. 31. Western Alliance, founded in 1994, was 40th-largest as of that same period.

It was just two weeks ago that Western Alliance’s CEO, Ken Vecchione, told analysts that “we’ve returned to a lot more calm” after acknowledging his institution had lost $6 billion in deposits amid the chaos that roiled the banking world in the first quarter.

He predicted deposits would grow $2 billion a quarter, guidance the bank reinforced in its statement Wednesday night, and told analysts his bank had proved it was now in a different category than First Republic.

“There was a point where whatever happened to them affected us. But I think we’ve now separated ourselves.”

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Source: finance.yahoo.com