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Regulators auction First Republic; deal expected by Sunday

Published 04/29/2023, 02:01 PM
Updated 04/30/2023, 09:35 AM
© Reuters. A security guard stands outside a First Republic Bank branch in San Francisco, California, U.S. April 28, 2023. REUTERS/Loren Elliott

By Chris Prentice, Saeed Azhar, Lananh Nguyen and Paritosh Bansal

(Reuters) - U.S. regulators are trying to clinch a sale of First Republic Bank (NYSE:FRC) over the weekend, with roughly half a dozen banks bidding, sources said on Saturday, in what is likely to be the third major U.S. bank to fail in two months.

Citizens Financial (NYSE:CFG) Group Inc, PNC Financial Services Group (NYSE:PNC) and JPMorgan Chase & Co (NYSE:JPM) are among bidders vying for First Republic in an auction process being run by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp, according to sources familiar with the matter. US Bancorp (NYSE:USB) was also among banks the FDIC had asked to submit a bid, according to Bloomberg.

Guggenheim Securities is advising the FDIC, two sources familiar with the matter said.

The FDIC process kicked off this week, three of the sources said. The bidders were asked to give non-binding offers by Friday and were studying First Republic's books over the weekend, one of the sources said.

A deal is expected to be announced on Sunday night before Asian markets open, with the regulator likely to say at the same time that it had seized the lender, three of the sources said. Bids are due by Sunday noon, one of the sources said.

Currently, the interested banks are evaluating options to see what they would like to bid for, one of the sources said, adding that it is likely that lenders will bid for all of FRC's deposits, a sizable chunk of its assets and some of its liabilities. 

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US Bancorp did not immediately respond to a request for comment. First Republic, the FDIC, Guggenheim and the other banks declined to comment.

Graphic: First Republic stock performance month-to-date - https://www.reuters.com/graphics/GLOBAL-BANKS/dwpkdqrzwvm/chart_eikon.jpg

DIFFICULT DEAL

A deal for First Republic would come less then two months after Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank (OTC:SBNY) failed amid a deposit flight from U.S. lenders, forcing the Federal Reserve to step in with emergency measures to stabilize markets.

While markets have since calmed, a deal for First Republic would be closely watched for the amount of support the government has to provide.

The FDIC officially insures deposits up to $250,000. But fearing further bank runs, regulators took the exceptional step of insuring all deposits at both Silicon Valley Bank and Signature.

It remains to be seen whether regulators would have to do so at First Republic as well. They would need approval by the Treasury secretary, the president and super-majorities of the boards of the Federal Reserve and the FDIC.

In trying to find a buyer before closing the bank, the FDIC is turning to some of the largest U.S. lenders. Large banks had been encouraged to bid for FRC's assets, one of the sources said.

JPMorgan already holds more than 10% of the nation’s total bank deposits and would need a special government waiver to add more.

"For a large bank to buy all or most of the bank could be healthier for First Republic customers because it could put them on a broader and more stable platform," said Eugene Flood, president of A Cappella Partners, who serves as an independent director at First Citizens BancShares and Janus Henderson and was speaking in a personal capacity. First Citizens agreed to buy failed Silicon Valley Bank last month.

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STUNNING FALL

First Republic was founded in 1985 by James "Jim" Herbert, son of a community banker in Ohio. Merrill Lynch acquired the bank in 2007, but it was listed in the stock market again in 2010 after being sold by Merrill's new owner, Bank of America Corp (NYSE:BAC), following the 2008 financial crisis.

For years, First Republic lured high-net-worth customers with preferential rates on mortgages and loans. This strategy made it more vulnerable than regional lenders with less-affluent customers. The bank had a high level of uninsured deposits, amounting to 68% of deposits.

The San Francisco-based lender saw more than $100 billion in deposits fleeing in the first quarter, leaving it scrambling to raise money.

Despite an initial $30 billion lifeline from 11 Wall Street banks in March, the efforts proved futile, in part because buyers balked at the prospect of having to realize large losses on its loan book.

A source familiar with the situation told Reuters on Friday that the FDIC decided the lender's position had deteriorated and there was no more time to pursue a rescue through the private sector.

By Friday, First Republic's market value had hit a low of $557 million, down from its peak of $40 billion in November 2021.

Shares of some other regional banks also fell on Friday, as it became clear that First Republic was headed for an FDIC receivership, with PacWest Bancorp down 2% after the bell and Western Alliance (NYSE:WAL) down 0.7%.

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Latest comments

FRC bribed wealthy customers with below-market mortgage rates for their persinal residences in order to secure their biz accounts. This was another case of the over-privileged, entitled class enriching themselves at the expense of everyone else. The shareholders left holding the bag were 99% retail investors who watch too much CNBC.True, JPow doesn’t give a shit about ordinary workers - he didn’t even know how many ppl would be thrown outta work w/ a 25 bps hike! But this was an especially aggregious instance of the coddled rich demanding more for themselves, country be damned.
As the gavel strikes the podium for the last time .... SOLD! One Dollar. Bring in the next Bank.
Asian markets opened already i think clocks ticking. Maybe they can't make a deal
In the FEDs relentless quest to kill middle class jobs they kill the middle banking system instead
What is plan B if the FED can't force a deal to get done before markets open? What overpaid bums they are
Incompetent Fed from top to bottom. SEC too for that matter
This just in Fed screws up again by not anticipating intrest rate risk when it should have been slapping them in the face. Instead they ignore and go at warp speed
they know this has been planned for a long time
"Shares of some other regional banks also fell on Friday,"  .... Lots more rides at the Carnival and the night is still young. Oh well.
Yup this could be just getting started with out aggressive rate cuts to adress paper losses on every banks balance sheet.
what other banks are at risk?
I am sure there is a list and every time one collapses the next one on the lest takes it place and depositors run. That's why they fed has to cut rates below 4% or this will keep snowballing
Hello rate cuts if the Fed wants the system to survive
Business Failed company should be bankrupted. That is market. US Authorities Do not manipulate market anymore. Disgusting.
I bet you wouldn't be so tough if your deposits were in there.
It sounds like moral hazard itself. Nobody forced to do that. Business is business. Failed business must be bankrupted.
How to save First Republic Bank? 1) The problem of First Republic Bank is because of lack of depositors less than USD 250K. 2) If you have money, you can open an account at First Republic Bank and deposits less than USD 250K (which is insured by FDIC). 3) Inflow of FDIC insured depositors will solve the cash issues. 4) With more cash, the bank can pay off the high interest deposits from large bank and high interest loan. This can improve the profits. 5) The paper loss of invested bonds is only paper loss, it can gain back its original value when it is matured. 6) If one person deposits USD 25,000, you only need 40,000 depositors to reach USD 1B. For USD 10B, you need 400K depositors. If USD 100B, you need 4M depositors. 7) Since the share price is low enough, you can start to invest into First Republic Bank share. The stock price will be back to normal level if problem solve, and you will have the GAIN. Hope it helps.
Ok, so start with 4M depositors who are willing to deposit 25k each now!
Fairytale
It must be bankrupt. No more moral hazard. US is not communism country and no more zambie company. Let them solve the problem not hand over bomb to innocent company.
2008 on Steroid is Brewing Live !
Anyone think the stock has a chance to recover Monday? Or is it toast? Not sure what happens in receivership?????
i don't think so if you look at svb or sbny
Previous SVB case, it was black monday.
I think the bond market or the stock market is cheating.
The collapse of the bank brings about a recession
The collapse of the bank brings about a recession
Maybe Wall Street will shrug this off as we head to all time highs.
I don't understand why people buy stock in a company with a dividend yield of less than 0.5%. in an era of high interest rates
1 year hardly makes an era
Now that the Fed is admitting fault for oversight failure maybe they will admit hiking rates to aggressively
How is this not the feds fault?How do you expect uninsured depositers to stay in the next bank on the bottom of the list after FBC is off? The only way to stop this from snowballing is significant rate cuts. If I can figure that out the 400 Phds at the fed should be able to as well.
They're trying to sweep this under the rug too.
The kind of uppity people who owned the preferred stock...got exactly what they deserved.lololol...
Why did they deserve it because they have more money then you? How do you know they were uppity? Why so passive aggressive?
Ouu Im in CFG hope they get it for pennies on the dollar. Also reassuring they are healthy enough to bid. All that and a 5.7% divi. Gotta love the markets
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