(New York) First Republic was under the spotlight on Wall Street on Thursday, its stock jumping after reports suggested that major US banks were ready to come to its rescue to prevent it from becoming the next institution to fail.
The day had started badly for the bank, its title losing up to 36% after a Bloomberg report claiming that First Republic was exploring “strategic options” for its future, including a possible sale. He had already lost 21% the day before and 73% since March 8.
But the title began to regain ground following information from the wall street journal that JPMorgan Chase, Morgan Stanley and other major banks are trying to come to First Republic’s aid and are discussing various alternatives, including a capital raise.
And it went back into the green when the CNBC chain clarified that banks were ready to put 20 billion dollars on the table.
Contacted by AFP, the bank declined to comment.
First Republic, founded in 1985 and based in San Francisco, is the 14e US bank by asset size.
It provides retail and corporate private banking and wealth management services, with offices primarily in California, but also on the East Coast (New York, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Florida), in the States of Oregon, Washington and Wyoming.
In short, it has “an affluent clientele concentrated in coastal urban areas,” described Eric Compton, an analyst for Morningstar, in a note.
Risk of leakage of deposits
Led until mid-2021 solely by its founder Jim Herbert – who left his place as CEO to Mike Roffler while retaining the position of Chairman of the Board of Directors –, it recorded “remarkably high organic growth year after year”, notes Eric Compton: it went from 22 billion dollars in assets at the end of 2010 to 212 billion at the end of 2022.
But the profile of its clientele has recently become a weakness after the close failures of Silicon Valley Bank, Signature Bank and Silvergate, banks which had bet on particular sectors of activity, the world of tech for SVB or that of cryptocurrencies for Signature Bank and Silvergate.
According to the S&P Global Ratings agency, 68% of deposits at First Republic are in accounts exceeding $250,000, the limit usually guaranteed by the authorities.
Even though the customers come from diverse economic sectors, some fear that many of them prefer to move their money to bigger banks that present no a priori risk of failure, because they are too big for regulators to let them close.
Already closely watched for a few days, the bank had indicated on Sunday that it had “strengthened and diversified its liquidity” and had 70 billion dollars thanks to the facilities offered by the American central bank and JPMorgan Chase.
Insufficient in the eyes of the rating agencies S&P Global Ratings and Fitch, which on Wednesday lowered the rating they give to the debt of the company in the category of speculative investments.
“We believe the risk of deposit flight is high at First Republic Bank despite the actions taken by banking regulators and the fact that the bank is actively increasing its borrowing capacity to mitigate the risk associated with last week’s bank failures” , justifies S&P in a note.