Shares for First Republic Bank dropped in after-hours trading following the San Francisco-based regional bank’s first-quarter earnings report, which revealed the bank’s deposits dropped 40% amid the crisis that enveloped regional lenders following Silicon Valley Bank’s (SVB) collapse.
First Republic reported that its deposits totaled $104.5 billion at the end of March – down 35.5% year over year and a drop of 40.8% compared to Dec. 31, 2022. That figure includes the infusion of $30 billion in uninsured deposits from 11 of the largest U.S. banks that were provided to stabilize the bank amid the crisis in March.
First Republic shares dropped in after-hours trading following the release of its first-quarter results, falling as much as 20% before rebounding to about a 17% decline as of 5:30 p.m. Eastern. Earlier in the day, the stock had posted a gain of more than 12% before the closing bell.
The bank noted that it began “experiencing unprecedented deposit outflows” following Silicon Valley Bank’s collapse in March.
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SVB failed amid a bank run exacerbated by a large base of uninsured deposits in excess of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation’s $250,000 threshold and over-exposure to interest rate risk from long-term Treasury securities. Its implosion fueled concerns about other regional lenders, including First Republic, which prompted the deposit flight and steps to shore up its financial position.
In the wake of the turmoil, First Republic is moving to “increase insured deposits, reduce borrowings from the Federal Reserve Bank, and decrease loan balances to correspond with the reduced reliance on uninsured deposits.”
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As of March 31, First Republic had an estimated $19.8 billion in uninsured deposits, or 27% of total deposits, when excluding the $30 billion in uninsured deposits from other banks. When including the capital infusion from other banks, uninsured deposits represented about $49.8 billion of the $104.5 billion in total deposits, or about 48% of the deposit base.
At the end of last year, First Republic had about $118.8 billion in uninsured deposits, which made up about 67% of its total deposits. For comparison, Silicon Valley Bank had uninsured deposits that made up more than 93% of its total deposits at the end of 2022 before the bank run began.
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First Republic also said it “expects to reduce its workforce by approximately 20-25% in the second quarter” amid a cost-cutting push that has also featured “significant reductions” to executive officer compensation, condensing corporate office space and reducing non-essential activities. The company also suspended its dividends on common stock and noncumulative preferred stock.