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First Republic’s market value plunges below $1bn from $40bn peak | Business and Economy News


Reports show US govt may not intervene in rescue process and regulators may downgrade bank’s score, adding to the stress it faces.

First Republic Bank’s market value plunged below $1bn for the first time ever on Wednesday after a report said the United States government was unwilling to intervene in the rescue process, hammering the lender’s stock.

After a brutal selloff, the bank’s market capitalization was about $886m at its lowest on Wednesday, a far cry from its peak of more than $40bn in November 2021.

US government officials are currently unwilling to intervene in the First Republic rescue process, CNBC reported, citing sources.

In further stress for the bank, senior officials at the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp are mulling whether to downgrade their scoring of the firm’s condition, including its so-called CAMEL rating, Bloomberg News reported Wednesday, citing people familiar with the matter. Such a move, should it happen, would likely limit the bank’s use of the Fed’s discount window and an emergency facility launched last month, the report said.

The bank has been looking at several options, such as selling assets or the creation of a “bad bank”, a source familiar with the matter told Reuters on Tuesday.

The bad bank possibility is a crisis-type method of isolating financial assets that have problems.

Trading in First Republic’s shares was halted multiple times. The stock was last down nearly 30 percent at $5.66.

First Republic’s advisers have already lined up potential purchasers of new stock in the lender if they can fix the bank’s balance sheet, a report earlier on Wednesday said.

However, analysts have highlighted several roadblocks that could complicate rescue efforts for the San Francisco-based lender as it looks to emerge out of the crisis sparked by an outflow of more than $100bn in deposits in the first quarter.

“The [First Republic] assets will be sold, but it may take some time and could be sold at a pretty severe discount to par,” David Wagner, portfolio manager at Aptus Capital Advisors, said.

At least three brokerages have cut their price targets on First Republic’s shares since it reported first-quarter earnings on Monday.

“First Republic’s problems are likely idiosyncratic … and they obviously have a painful path in front of them,” said Art Hogan, chief market strategist at B Riley Wealth in Boston.

A string of earnings reports from regional banks last week had reassured investors, but the banking sector has come under renewed pressure following First Republic’s results.

The KBW Regional Banking index has lost 4.4 percent so far this week.



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