Troubled First Republic Bank seized by regulators and sold to JPMorgan Chase
SAN FRANCISCO -- Regulators seized control of First Republic Bank early Monday, making it the third financial institution taken under government control this year, then promptly accepted a bid from JPMorgan Chase for virtually all of the lender's assets.
The state's Department of Financial Protection and Innovation (DFPI) said it had taken over San Francisco-based First Republic and appointed the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) as receiver. The DFPI also said the FDIC has "accepted a bid from JPMorgan Chase Bank, National Association, Columbus, Ohio, to assume all deposits, including all uninsured deposits, and substantially all assets of First Republic Bank."
"We had taken steps to remove our so-called uninsured balances," said Craig Mechling who, like many customers, either removed or reduced the amount of money they had in the bank as its financial position worsened over the past week.
The DFPI said it acted under California law regarding a financial entity the law describes as "conducting its business in an unsafe or unsound manner" and being in a "condition that … is unsafe or unsound" to carry out banking business.
Customers like Mechling said they tried to strike a balance between protecting their assets and preserving a relationship with the bank that they valued almost equally.
"We do have a very important banking relationship with First Republic. We love this bank. And we were hoping it could survive but obviously that was impossible," he said.
Federal officials from the FDIC, Treasury Department and Federal Reserve held private talks with other banks on Friday hoping to find a bailout plan for First Republic, Reuters reported, but no private rescue materialized. Takeover talks continued all weekend in the hope a deal could be struck before U.S. stock markets opened Monday.
Before entering receivership First Republic shares had lost 97% of their value since January, taking more than $21 billion off First Republic's market value.
JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon said in a statement on Monday that U.S. government officials had invited the company, the biggest U.S. bank with $3.7 trillion in assets, along with other lenders, to "step up, and we did."
"This acquisition modestly benefits our company overall, it is accretive to shareholders, it helps further advance our wealth strategy and it is complementary to our existing franchise," he said.
Second-biggest bank failure in U.S. history
First Republic has $229 billion in assets, making it the second-biggest bank to collapse in U.S. history after the 2008 failure of Washington Mutual, which at the time had roughly $309 billion. The FDIC estimated the cost to the Deposit Insurance Fund at about $13 billion.
"Treasury is encouraged that this institution was resolved with the least cost to the Deposit Insurance Fund, and in a manner that protected all depositors," A U.S. Treasury Department spokesman said in a statement. "The banking system remains sound and resilient, and Americans should feel confident in the safety of their deposits and the ability of the banking system to fulfill its essential function of providing credit to businesses and families.'
The move by regulators to assume control of First Republic came one week after First Republic revealed that customers had withdrawn more than $100 billion during a panic last month — a revelation that further fueled concerns the company couldn't survive on its own.
First Republic follows the March collapses of $210 billion Silicon Valley Bank and, only days later, of Signature Bank, both of which were seized by government regulators after experiencing bank runs. As with Silicon Valley, a significant share of First Republic's deposits were uninsured, which made it more prone to withdrawals from skittish customers.
In a rare move, 11 of the nation's largest financial institutions gave First Republic $30 billion in deposits last month to prop up the troubled bank, but the effort failed to assuage concerns about the bank's viability.
On the CBS News broadcast "Face the Nation" Sunday, Gary Cohn, a former Goldman Sachs president who served as former President Donald Trump's top economic adviser, was on-target, predicting that, "The FDIC would prefer to sell the bank in its entirety than the pieces. What will most likely happen is the FDIC will seize control and then simultaneously resell the asset to the successful bidder." Cohn is now IBM vice chairman.
The latest bank failure could cause other lenders to tighten credit and raise the cost of interbank loans, Tan Kai Xian, U.S. analyst for Gavekal Research, said in a report, a potential problem for smaller institutions.