Business

US banks rally to support First Republic Bank amid crunch

A consortium of large US banks pumped $30 billion to prevent First Republic Bank from going under. Fear over a looming financial crisis has been high since two US mid-sized lenders collapsed last week

A group of US banking giants joined forces on Thursday to support First Republic Bank amid growing worldwide concern regarding the resilience of the banking system and the possibility of a financial crisis.

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US private banks, including JPMorgan Chase & Co, Citigroup Inc, Bank of America Corp, Wells Fargo & Co, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley, were involved in the bailout.

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The banks injected $30 billion (roughly €28.2 billion) to support First Republic Bank as the lender struggled with high interest rates imposed last year to avoid a recession amid high inflation. The regional bank's shares had tumbled 70% in the last nine trading sessions.

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US regulators praised the move as a testament to the banking system's resilience.

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The rescue announcement was credited for uplifting Wall Street indexes on Thursday.

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What do we know about the rescue plan?

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The consortium of 11 US private banks said in a Thursday statement that their move "reflects their confidence in First Republic and in banks of all sizes."

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In a statement, First Republic founder Jim Herbert and CEO Mike Roffler said the "collective support strengthens our liquidity position... and is a vote of confidence for First Republic and the entire US banking system."

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First Republic Bank is the 14th largest bank in the US, with $212 billion in assets at the end of 2022. Founded in 1985, the bank is headquartered in San Francisco.

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Known for private banking and wealth management, First Republic was wary its clients would flee to bigger banks amid the ongoing turbulence in the banking sector.

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What is happening to the banking sector?

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The US banking sector was significantly shaken last week by the collapse of two mid-sized lenders.

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US regulators pulled the plug on Silicon Valley Bank in the largest bank failure since the 2008/2009 financial crisis after a sudden run on deposits. New York's Signature Bank followed suit two days later, as the US Federal Reserve took steps to shore up systemic confidence.

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US authorities were quick to pledge support to other lenders and depositors as fears over a looming financial crisis grew. The move slightly reassured investors, but shares in several US banks were hammered on fears of a run by customers.

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The aftershock traveled to Europe on Thursday, with Switzerland-based global bank Credit Suisse AG saying it would borrow 50 billion Swiss francs (€50.7 billion, $54 billion) from the country's central bank to strengthen its liquidity and deposit reserves.

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rmt/sms (AFP, Reuters)

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