Beleaguered regional banks struggle as consumer sentiment sours

.

Piggy Bank
Piggy bank with dollars banknotes. (iStock)

Beleaguered regional banks struggle as consumer sentiment sours

Video Embed

Regional banks are struggling to regain their footing amid continued banking sector turmoil.

Regional bank stocks were mixed on Friday as investors weighed whether the worst of the banking woes are in the rearview mirror. Regional banks have been facing intense pressure for weeks following the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank.

SAVINGS RATE: AFTER A SLEW OF BANK FAILURES, IS THE WORST TURMOIL IN THE INDUSTRY BEHIND US?

PacWest Bancorp was up very slightly on Friday but was treading water. It is down a whopping 37% in the past five days alone and 82% in the past six months. While the stock was trading near $30 per share in February prior to SVB’s collapse, as of Friday, a share was valued at about $4.70.

This week PacWest reported that customers had yanked about 9.5% of their total deposits out of the bank amid the uncertainty, which caused shares to tank. PacWest, which has about $44 billion in assets, is said to be exploring “all options,” including a possible sale.

First Horizon Bank’s stock was down about 1.4% on Friday and is down 46% in the past month. Western Alliance stock was up slightly, and Zions Bancorp was down 1.7%.

The SPDR S&P Regional Banking ETF, which tracks the performance of regional banks, was down about 0.5% on Friday.

The most recent bank to fail was First Republic Bank. This month, it was announced that First Republic was being taken over by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and sold to JPMorgan Chase.

The stock market more broadly was in the red on Friday following news that consumer sentiment has fallen.

The University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index plunged to 57.7 in May, down from 63.5 in April, according to preliminary numbers released Friday. The drop represents a weighty 9.1% decline from last month and about a 1.2% dip from a year ago.

“Long-run expectations slid by 16% as well, indicating that consumers are worried that any economic downturn will not be brief,” said Joanne Hsu, director of the survey, in a statement. “Throughout the current inflationary episode, consumers have shown resilience under strong labor markets, but their anticipation of a recession will lead them to pull back when signs of weakness emerge.”

The banking chaos comes as lawmakers work to craft a deal to raise the debt ceiling in what is sorting out to be the most consequential battle over the federal debt limit in more than a decade.

The so-called X-date, the point at which the Treasury will not be able to make payments on incoming bills on time and in full, is fast approaching — possibly as soon as next month. Republicans are hoping to score big concessions on spending, but Democrats say they want to lift the limit without any spending reforms.

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER

The situation has hurt the economic outlook. The debt ceiling woes, coupled with the banking sector turmoil and the Federal Reserve’s repeated interest rate hikes, have made a recession more likely.

Former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers recently suggested the odds of a recession are at 70% in the next year, the Conference Board’s Leading Economic Index predicts a recession will hit sometime in the middle of the year, and the Fed’s probability modeling indicates about a 68% chance of a recession in the next 12 months.

© 2023 Washington Examiner

Related Content