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Exclusive-U.S. officials assessing possible 'manipulation' on banking shares -source

Published 05/04/2023, 02:18 PM
Updated 05/04/2023, 10:40 PM
© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: A general view of Pacific Western Bank in Huntington Beach, California, U.S., March 22, 2023. REUTERS/Mike Blake
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By Chris Prentice, Trevor Hunnicutt and Andrea Shalal

NEW YORK (Reuters) - U.S. federal and state officials are assessing whether "market manipulation" caused the recent volatility in banking shares, a source familiar with the matter said on Thursday, as the White House vowed to monitor "short-selling pressures on healthy banks."

Shares of regional banks resumed their slide this week after the collapse of First Republic Bank (OTC:FRCB), the third U.S. mid-sized lender to fail in two months. Short sellers raked in $378.9 million in paper profits on Thursday alone from betting against certain regional banks, according to analytics firm Ortex.

Increased short-selling activity and volatility in shares have drawn increasing scrutiny by federal and state officials and regulators in recent days, given strong fundamentals in the sector and sufficient capital levels, said the source, who was not authorized to speak publicly.

"State and federal regulators and officials are increasingly attentive to the possibility of market manipulation regarding banking equities," the source said.

White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said the Biden administration was closely watching on the situation, but any possible action would be taken by the Securities and Exchange Commission.

"The administration is going to closely monitor the market developments, including the short-selling pressures on healthy banks," Jean-Pierre told a White House briefing.

The American Bankers Association on Thursday called on the SEC to investigate significant short sales of banking shares and social media engagement that it said appeared to be "disconnected from the underlying financial realities."

"We urge the SEC to consider all its existing tools and to take measures to reduce the avenues for abusive trading practices and restore investor confidence," the group said.

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SEC Chair Gary Gensler on Thursday said the agency would go after any form of misconduct that might threaten investors or markets.

"As I’ve said, in times of increased volatility and uncertainty, the SEC is particularly focused on identifying and prosecuting any form of misconduct that might threaten investors, capital formation, or the markets more broadly,” he said in a written statement.

Consumer Bankers Association President and CEO Lindsey Johnson stressed the banking industry remained strong and urged policymakers to call out "unethical behavior by activist investors" who were taking advantage of market volatility.

"This volatility is being fueled by emotion and misinformation that does not reflect the strong underlying fundamentals of our banks," Johnson said in a statement.

"These institutions remain resilient and well-capitalized, and Americans can rest assured their deposits are safe."

The S&P 600 bank index dropped over 3% on Thursday. PacWest Bancorp shares tumbled over 50% after it confirmed it was exploring strategic options.

Western Alliance (NYSE:WAL) Bancorp denied a report from the Financial Times that said it was exploring a potential sale, and said it was exploring legal options. Its shares plummeted more than 38%, with trading in the stock halted multiple times.

Share price swings did not reflect the fact that many regional banks outperformed on first quarter earnings and had sound fundamentals, including stable deposits, sufficient capital, and decreased uninsured deposits, the source said.

The source gave no details on specific cases that had drawn the attention of federal or state regulators.

The California Department of Financial Protection and Innovation said it could not confirm investigations or whether it was aware of any particular marketplace activity. But it said it was focused on "identifying, stopping, and remedying any unlawful practices in our markets" that violate state law.

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Short selling, in which investors sell borrowed securities and aim to buy them back at a lower price to pocket the difference, is not illegal and considered part of a healthy market. But manipulating stock prices, which the SEC defines as the 'intentional or willful conduct designed to deceive or defraud investors by controlling or artificially affecting" stock prices, is illegal. 

The increased short-selling activity has triggered calls for a temporary ban, but an SEC official said on Wednesday the agency was "not currently contemplating" such a move.

The SEC first warned investors in March, during a period of high market volatility surrounding the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank (OTC:SBNY), that it was carefully monitoring market stability and would prosecute any form of misconduct.

 

 

Latest comments

Short selling is legal and well regulated. Without it, there will be no stock market and no counter party to our trades. So what misconduct ware they talking about? If I have 1k or 1bn dollars and I want to short any stock, then it is up to a broker to set the price and I pay the fees, and I do it. Any talk of illegal blah blah is just ridiculous.
Powell and his dementia induced activity is the one shop stop for as to who is responsible for the woes of the banking system in the US.
The CEO’s should be fired!!
"given strong fundamentals in the sector and sufficient capital levels..." LOL! You mean, like how all these regional banks are HEAVILY invested in commercial real estate as that sector crashes due to skyrocketing interest rates?? I love how people are trying to blame this crisis on short sellers, instead of blaming the real culprits at the FED.
Or, maybe, regulators should look into why it was that regional bank executives were selling off their own shares in their company weeks before the crisis started?
Shortshellers are vultures praying on people fear. If shortsellers can make a perfectly sound bank appear weak by shortselling stock and spread rumors they can make millions of dollars but what about the bank and their employees they are currently left defenceless without any help from anyone
Yes, Yes. No "manipulation" of the markets. You know, like releasing millions of barrels of oil from the SPR in order to drive down gas prices before the midterm elections. That kind of "manipulation."
Only manipulation is to the value of their collateral because of an unprecedented rocketing of interest rates.
But it seems perfectly okay for banks and other mega corps to manipulate their share price by buying back $Billions in their own shares.  Dump the bank shares let them buy their own stock till they run out of cash!
LMAO!!! Look no further...
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