First Republic Bank customers pulled over $100bn from their accounts

By IANS | Published: April 25, 2023 11:15 AM2023-04-25T11:15:03+5:302023-04-25T11:25:08+5:30

Washington, April 25 Customers of the First Republic Bank in the US pulled more than $100 billion from ...

First Republic Bank customers pulled over $100bn from their accounts | First Republic Bank customers pulled over $100bn from their accounts

First Republic Bank customers pulled over $100bn from their accounts

Washington, April 25 Customers of the First Republic Bank in the US pulled more than $100 billion from their accounts in the first three months of the year amid concerns about the health of the global banking system.

The US bank says its deposits fell by over 40 per cent since the end of December 2022, the BBC reported.

It comes after Swiss banking giant Credit Suisse on Monday revealed the scale of the bank run that triggered its state-backed rescue last month,.

A series of bank collapses have raised fears of a crisis in the sector.

"With the closure of several banks in March, we experienced unprecedented deposit outflows," First Republic's chief financial officer, Neal Holland, said.

"We are working to restructure our balance sheet and reduce our expenses and short-term borrowings," he added.

First Republic also said it planned to cut costs by shedding 20 per cent to 25 per cent of its workforce in the coming months.

Shares in the bank fell by more than 20 per cent in extended trading in New York after it made the announcement, the BBC reported.

Last month, a group of major US banks injected $30 billion into First Republic, which had been seen as at risk of failure.

US regulators called the move "most welcome" while the banks, led by JP Morgan and Citigroup, said the action reflected their "confidence".

Problems in the banking sector surfaced in the US earlier last month when Silicon Valley Bank, which was the country's 16th-largest lender, collapsed in the biggest failure of a US bank since 2008, the BBC reported.

That was followed two days later by the failure of New York's Signature Bank.

Authorities stepped in to guarantee deposits beyond typical limits in an effort to head off further runs on bank deposits.

On Monday, European banking giant Credit Suisse said $69 billion had left the bank in the first three months of the year, the BBC reported.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

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