Why Do Banks Fail and What’s Next? 2023 Lessons and Predictions (2024)

Why Banks Fail

Banks can fail for many reasons, the majority of which fall into one of three broad categories:

  1. A run on deposits (leaving the bank without the cash to pay customer withdrawals).
  2. Too many bad loans/assets that fall sharply in value (eroding the bank’s capital reserves).
  3. A mismatch between what the bank can earn on its assets (primarily loans) and what it has to pay on its liabilities (primarily deposits).

Often bank failure is the result of more than one of these conditions occurring at the same time.

2023 Bank Failures

At Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) for example, its large holdings of government bonds lost value as the Federal Reserve rapidly hiked interest rates. The Fed raised the Effective Federal Funds Rate from 0.09% at the beginning of 2022 to 5.09% by mid-July 2023 and the value of those bonds plummeted. At the same time, as the tech industry slowed and funding for startups became less available, more SVB customers needed to withdraw their money.

The monoline nature of SVB’s business exacerbated the bank’s risk. Its tech-heavy customers were in highly correlated businesses focused on an inherently risky business sector. It is estimated that only about $5 billion of SVB’s $180 billion deposits were fully insured, an unusually low percentage, which revealed its unusually high dependence on corporate rather than retail deposits.

In the weeks before its collapse, SVB took extraordinary steps to shore up its balance sheet by selling its entire bond portfolio at a $1.8 billion loss and simultaneously announcing it would sell $2.25 billion worth of new shares. Anxious depositors took the cue and accelerated their withdrawals. On Thursday, March 9, depositors withdrew $42 billion from SVB. On March 10, SVB’s stock declined 60% and on Monday, March 13, 2023, SVB failed and the FDIC transferred all the deposits of Silicon Valley Bank to Silicon Valley Bridge Bank, N.A., a full-service bridge bank operated by the FDIC.

SVB’s collapse was only a few days after multiple other bank failures: the crypto bank Silvergate, the presaged failure of Signature Bank in New York, and the forced rescue of First Republic Bank on May 1 (in what used to be known as “a Jamie deal” in honor of J.P. Morgan Chase’s chairman and his sweetheart acquisition of Bear Stearns in 2008). Although FDIC insurance has been at $250,000 per depositor since 2020, corporate deposits were well above that, especially at SVB, causing depositors to flee.

Central Banking and the Diamond-Dybvig Model

Although central banking has been around since Sweden’s Riksbank opened in 1609, a thorough understanding of it was lacking until the latter nineteenth century. In 1873, Walter Bagehot, the British polymath, wrote clearly and extensively about the appropriate functions of a central bank, notably as a lender of last resort. His many dictums include “lending freely against good collateral at a very high rate,” maintenance of sufficient liquidity reserves and management that prioritizes a bank’s welfare before its own financial interests. Sound advice. But sound advice for more normal market conditions. The extenuating circ*mstances in Q1 2023 mentioned earlier prompted the U.S. Government to take drastic action, including President Biden declaring that no depositor will lose money.

More recently, a deep analysis of bank runs and failures was conducted by 2022 Nobel-winning economists, Douglas Diamond, Philip Dybvig and Ben Bernanke who produced extensive research and the now famous Diamond-Dybvig Model (1983). The D-D model dug deeply into the fact that banks have a natural maturity mismatch and therefore liquidity risk. Bank loans tend to have long maturities to match borrowers’ project needs while depositors prefer quick, easy access to their funds. Long-term assets funded by short-term liquid liabilities can result in high liquidity risk!

With adequate cash reserves and careful management, this is a manageable risk. In fact, this intermediation is the essential value service of banks. And this service allows banks to charge higher interest on loans than it pays to depositors. D-D assumes that, in general, savers’ needs for cash are random, but if deposits are diversified, redemptions are usually predictable and therefore manageable unless there is a disturbance in the market. But when there is a market event, the normal “low beta” for deposits (∂deposits/∂interest rates) can disappear quickly as it did at Silvergate, Signature, SVB and First Republic.

Even with granite columns and solid stone floors, banks are especially risky businesses. To illustrate, the debt/equity ratio for the S&P 500 is approximately 1X, whereas banks are closer to 10X. Despite deposit insurance, many depositors, especially corporate depositors, don’t want to be “the last one out the door.” Phrased differently, banks can find themselves in a Nash Equilibrium situation. If depositors do not panic and withdraw funds, the bank has a chance to work out of its liquidity difficulties. But if one depositor defects and withdraws, it is logical for other depositors to head for the exit too. Depositors at these four banks withdrew their funds swiftly, triggering the banks’ demise.

What’s next?

The government’s fast, high-profile, robust rescue of depositors in Q1 2023 was intended to provide confidence to retail depositors. It also gave corporate depositors time to adjust where and how much they deposit. The losers, of course, are the equity holders of the failed banks and the midsized bank sector in general. The KRE (SPDR S&P Regional Banking ETF) dropped by almost 33% in March 2023 and has not recovered. At this price level, the sector seems primed for consolidation, especially with supportive comments from U.S. Treasury Secretary Yellen in this regard. The Senate Banking Committee held a hearing on July 12, 2023, on the issue of bank industry consolidation in light of the four bank failures in the spring. Secretary Yellen has suggested more mergers could strengthen the banking system while Senator Elizabeth Warren, the committee’s Democratic chair, is skeptical of the argument.

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Why Do Banks Fail and What’s Next? 2023 Lessons and Predictions (2024)

FAQs

What is the cause of bank failure in 2023? ›

Bank collapse during the Banking Crisis

The banking crisis of 2023 in the United States began with rising interest rates which unmasked hidden vulnerabilities linked to (i) poor investment strategy of some banks, (ii) failure to manage interest rate risk, and (iii) investor pessimism during the banking crisis.

Why are all these banks failing? ›

Economic Factors: Higher interest rates also often lead to slower economic growth, meaning people are spending less money. Inflation, recessions, and housing market crashes can all cause banks to shut down.

What are the banking issues in 2023? ›

During the March 2023 banking crisis, company executives had to calm panicked customers, shore up liquidity and reassure investors after two other regionals failed. Key decisions during a critical seven-day window likely averted disaster.

What 3 major banks collapsed in 2023? ›

Earlier last year Silicon Valley Bank failed March 10, 2023, and then Signature Bank failed two days later, ending the unusual streak of more than 800 days without a bank failure. Before Citizens Bank failed in November 2023, Heartland Tri-State Bank failed July 28, 2023 and First Republic Bank failed May 1, 2023.

Are American banks in trouble? ›

Consulting firm Klaros Group analyzed about 4,000 U.S. banks and found 282 banks face the dual threat of commercial real estate loans and potential losses tied to higher interest rates. The majority of those banks are smaller lenders with less than $10 billion in assets.

Why are banks shutting down in 2023? ›

While larger banks top the list of financial institutions that have trimmed their physical presences in 2023 , banks big and small are closing branches to reduce expenses and reinvest some of the resulting savings in their digital capabilities.

Why are so many US banks closing? ›

Banks often pursue acquisitions of competitors to cut expenses on overlapping staff, services and facilities. The savings support profits. In recent years, closing branches has often proven integral to deal-related cost-cutting.

What happens to your money if a bank closes? ›

For the most part, if you keep your money at an institution that's FDIC-insured, your money is safe — at least up to $250,000 in accounts at the failing institution. You're guaranteed that $250,000, and if the bank is acquired, even amounts over the limit may be smoothly transferred to the new bank.

Which banks are most likely to fail? ›

Historically, small banks are more likely to fail than large banks because they concentrate on regional lending, have fewer revenue streams to diversify risk and possess less capital to absorb losses. However, robust regulatory oversight and FDIC insurance help mitigate the risk to depositors.

Are credit unions safer than banks? ›

Generally, credit unions are viewed as safer than banks, although deposits at both types of financial institutions are usually insured at the same dollar amounts. The FDIC insures deposits at most banks, and the NCUA insures deposits at most credit unions.

Is bank of America in financial trouble? ›

Bank of America's Financial Health

In recent years, Bank of America's financial performance has been relatively stable. In 2022, the bank reported a net income of $20.4 billion, a decrease from the previous year's $27.4 billion. However, its revenue increased from $91.2 billion in 2021 to $95.2 billion in 2022.

Are banks collapsing in 2024? ›

The news: Last Friday, Pennsylvania financial regulators seized and shut down Philadelphia-based Republic First Bank in the first FDIC-insured bank failure of 2024. The deposit insurance fund is expected to pay out $667 million to cover the bank's failure.

Which is the safest bank? ›

JPMorgan Chase, the financial institution that owns Chase Bank, topped our experts' list because it's designated as the world's most systemically important bank on the 2023 G-SIB list. This designation means it has the highest loss absorbency requirements of any bank, providing more protection against financial crisis.

Why are US banks collapsing? ›

Most US banks were similarly exposed to customer withdrawals and underwater bond portfolios, while the Credit Suisse collapse demonstrated the potential for contagion. The Fed's BTFP stopped the panic by allowing US banks to borrow from the central bank using their bonds as collateral.

What banks are going under? ›

About the FDIC:
Bank NameBankCityCityClosing DateClosing
Heartland Tri-State BankElkhartJuly 28, 2023
First Republic BankSan FranciscoMay 1, 2023
Signature BankNew YorkMarch 12, 2023
Silicon Valley BankSanta ClaraMarch 10, 2023
55 more rows
Apr 26, 2024

What is the bank scandal 2023? ›

The year also brought the demise of crypto-friendly Silvergate Bank — in what was a voluntary self-liquidation rather than a failure — and the failure of Heartland Tri-State Bank after its CEO reportedly fell victim to a crypto scam . In all, five banks failed, the most in a single year since 2017.

What caused the last banking crisis? ›

Silicon Valley Bank was the bank of Silicon Valley, as the name indicates. As they got new deposits during the tech boom, they put that money into long-term Treasury bonds. Tech's collapse combined with losses on their bonds created serious questions about the continuing viability of the bank.

Is Citizens Bank in trouble in 2023? ›

On Friday, November 3, 2023, Citizens Bank was closed by the Iowa Division of Banking.

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