Sweetheart deal for JPM
  JPM CEO Says "System Is Very, Very Sound" After Second Largest US Bank Failure In History
  by Tyler Durden
  Monday, May 01, 2023 - 07:33 AM Update (0835ET):   After another massive bank failure - and taxpayer-funded bailout -  JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon told listeners on an investor call this morning  that "The system is very, very sound."
  Doesn't seem like it Jamie, old chap?
  But hey, whatever you say now as the CEO of a bank that holds over 10% of America's deposits.
  "We need large, successful banks in the largest economy," Dimon continued, proclaiming that "this is nothing like '08 or '09." 
  Well  he is right, in so much as this is far larger... and we really don't  know where the CRE holes on bank balance sheets are (even as Charlie  Munger warns they are everywhere).
  The good news, Dimon declares regarding bank failures, "this is getting near the end of it." Thought how he would know that is hard to comprehend?
  Finally, the too-biggest-to-fail bank CEO warned, "we are clearly gong to see some reduction in bank lending," implying JPMorgan will be doing "God's work" for The Fed by contracting credit without the need for rate-hikes.
  For now, it's clear what the market thinks of JPM's state-sponsored buyout of FRC assets...
 
  
  Dimon's  closing comments were the most prophetic, stating that they "support  community banks" and that "banks will consolidate." Of course they will,  once the banks are pushed into FDIC hands and assets scooped up by JPM  with govt bankstops...
 
  
  Translation: We  will wait for the bank run (thanks Fed for the hike to 5.25%) to  cripple them all, then buy them all for cents on the dollar with the  FDIC keeping the toxic crap.
  *  *  *
  Heading into the weekend, US regulators were facing a dilemma over the fate of First Republic Bank: either let  the insolvent California bank fail and bail-in some (or all) of the $30  billion in uninsured rescue deposits given to the bank by a consortium  of banks including JPMorgan, BofA, Goldman and others so as not to  appear like the Biden admin is bailing-out big, bad banks again a la 2008,  but in the process restarting the bank run panic as an impairment of  all bank depositors would reverse Janet Yellen's vow not to do just that  in the aftermath of the SVB collapse, or bail  out FRC including all of its depositors, both retail and institutional,  insured and uninsured, and spark a fresh political crisis where  republicans accuse democrats of rescuing Jamie Dimon and his banker  pals.
  In the end, early on Monday morning, the US unveiled a  hybrid solution - after all other attempts at a private rescue effort  failed - one where the FDIC would seize the insolvent First Republic,  the 14th largest US bank by assets, making it the second biggest bank failure in US history,  and immediately sell the bulk of its assets and all of its deposits to  JPMorgan after a sham but "highly competitive bidding process" had taken  place over the weekend (one in which virtually nobody wanted to  participate as nobody would buy FRC without explicit government  backstops, which in the end is precisely what they ended up getting on  FRC's IO and CRE loan portfolio) while keeping FRC's toxic Interest-only  mortgages to Hamptons' billionaires.
  According to the FDIC  announcement, JPMorgan would assume all of First Republic’s $92 billion  in deposits — insured and uninsured, including the $5 billion in  deposits gived by JPM to First Republic on March 16. It is also buying  most of the bank’s assets, including about $173 billion in loans and $30  billion in securities.
  As part of the agreement, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. will share losses with JPMorgan on First Republic’s loans. The  agency estimated that its insurance fund would take a hit of $13  billion in the deal, which is precisely the hole that prevented a  private sector solution from being reached. JPMorgan also said it would receive $50 billion in financing from the FDIC to consummate the deal.
  More importantly, the FDIC and JPMorgan also entered into a "loss-share transaction on single family, residential and commercial loans it purchased of the former First Republic Bank."  As part of this transaction, the FDIC as receiver and JPMorgan will share in the losses and potential recoveries on the loans covered by the loss-share agreement. 
  The  loss-share transaction, the FDIC said, is projected to maximize  recoveries on the assets by keeping them in the private sector, and "is  also expected to minimize disruptions for loan customers.  In addition,  JPMorgan Chase Bank, National Association, will assume all Qualified  Financial Contracts."
  The second largest US bank failure in  history become a fact after the San Francisco-based First Republic lost  $100 billion in deposits in a March run following the collapse of fellow  Bay Area lender Silicon Valley Bank, a testament to the catastrophic  supervision of the Mary Daly-led San Fran Fed, which was more worried  about rainbow flags and DEI than making sure banks in its regions were,  you know, solvent. It limped along for weeks  after a group of America’s biggest banks came to its rescue with a $30  billion deposit. Those deposits will be repaid after the deal closes,  JPMorgan said.
  And with the collapse of FRC, three of the four  largest-ever U.S. bank failures have occurred in the past two months.  First Republic, with some $233 billion in assets at the end of the first  quarter, ranks just behind the 2008 collapse of Washington Mutual.  Rounding out the top four are Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank, a  New York-based lender that also failed in March.
  Meanwhile, just  as we said a month ago when we joked that the regional bank crisis is  meant to make JPM even bigger and more systematically important than  ever, as it pays just 0.01% on its deposits as it remains the only truly  "safe" bank for US depositors, in effect collecting a $90 billion  annual subsidy courtesy of its TBTF status...
  JPM's  "Too Biggest To Never Fail" subsidy: if it paid 4% on its $2.3 trillion  in deposits, it would pay out $90BN per year. Instead it pays nothing  to fund its assets thanks to 0.01% deposit rates  pic.twitter.com/w7D4oCZ2HN
   — zerohedge (@zerohedge)  April 25, 2023...  both First Republic and Washington Mutual are now substantially owned  by JPMorgan. The nation’s largest bank, it has been known to step in  during banking crises. Chief Executive Officer Jamie Dimon was pivotal  in earlier efforts to rescue First Republic.
  “Our government invited us and others to step up, and we did,” Dimon said Monday.
  Following  the transaction, First Republic’s 84 branches will reopen as part of  JPMorgan Monday during normal business hours, and customers will have  full access to their deposits, the FDIC said.
  As the WSJ notes,  First Republic’s failure seems unlikely to spur another crisis of  confidence in the Main Street lenders that serve a large chunk of  America’s businesses and consumers. Regional lenders uniformly lost  deposits during the first quarter, but the declines were modest compared  with First Republic’s $100 billion outflow.
  “This is the last  stages of that initial panic. First Republic’s problems started as a  result of SVB and Signature,” said Steven Kelly, a senior researcher at  the Yale Program on Financial Stability. “This isn’t the story of 2008,  where one bank went down and investors focused on the next biggest bank,  which would wobble.”
  Actually, it is, because  only now does the solvency crisis courtesy of trillions in commercial  real estate on bank books start to manifest itself, as we also warned it  will. But it will take a while for that to trickle down to the rest of  the population.
  As for the immediate cause of First Republic’s  collapse, just like in the case of Silicon Valley Bank, was a  smartphone-enabled exodus of panicked depositors with big uninsured  balances, but the bank’s problems were rooted in a wrong-way bet on  interest rates. A focus on America’s coastal elite helped First Republic  become one of the most valuable U.S. banking franchises. Big deposits  from customers with lots of cash funded low-rate jumbo mortgages to  wealthy home buyers in both California and New York. Ultralow interest  rates and a pandemic savings boom supercharged the bank’s growth.
  When  the Fed began raising interest rates last year to cool inflation,  customers began demanding higher yields to keep their money at First  Republic. Rising rates also dented the value of loans the bank made when  rates were near zero.
  The chronic problem turned into an acute  one in March, when the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank sparked fears  about the overlooked risks lurking in the banking system. Investors and  customers were especially worried about banks, such as First Republic,  that relied heavily on uninsured deposits and had large unrealized  losses in their loan and securities portfolios due to rising rates.
  “It was a run on the business model,” Kelly said.
  First  Republic’s badly damaged balance sheet left it with few good options.   In a dismal quarterly-earnings report last week, the bank disclosed the  extent of the deposit run and said it had filled the hole on its balance  sheet with expensive loans from the Federal Reserve and Federal Home  Loan Bank. An untenable future, in which it earned less on its loans  than it paid on liabilities, appeared all but certain. The earnings  report sent the bank’s stock down nearly 50% in one day. First Republic  shares ended the week at $3.51. They closed at $115 on March 8, the day  before SVB’s disastrous run. They traded around $1.9 in the premarket  following news of the FDIC seizure which effectively wipes out the  equity.
 
  
  As  the WSJ notes, while some employees started jumping ship after SVB’s  collapse, many stayed and watched the bank’s stock crater last week and  frantically texted friends about how they feared the bank would go under  soon. Some said they wished management had provided clearer  communication about where the bank was headed.
  Business had grown  quieter since the banking turmoil started, current and former employees  said. First Republic bankers who previously focused on luring in  deposits found there was little they could do to reverse the tide when  customers started pulling cash. Pay took a hit too: Bankers were  compensated in part by how much in customer deposits they brought to the  bank.
  In a pair of emails late Friday and Saturday morning, CEO  Michael Roffler and Executive Chairman Jim Herbert thanked First  Republic employees for staying focused during the turmoil.
  “Throughout  our history and in these past weeks, we have done what we always  do—serve our clients, support our communities, and take care of one  another,” Roffler wrote. “When we come in next week, we will continue to  do the same.”
  Hoping that the bank crisis is over now that First  Republic has been tucked away, the US Treasury issued a statement on  Monday morning after the deal was announced, saying that the US banking  system remains sound, resilient, and with the ability “to fulfill its  essential function of providing credit to businesses and families." 
  The  good news is that we will very soon test just how resilient the banking  system is after the full extent of the CRE crisis become evident over  the coming year.
  As for the biggest winner from the FRC bank  failure and the regional banking crisis in general, it should be quite  clear to all who that is by now.
 
  
  In  a presentation published by JPMorgan laying out the transaction  details, the bank explained just how it would clean up the various odds  and ends from the failed March rescue: it will repay $25B of deposits from large U.S. banks and eliminate a $5B deposit from JPMorgan Chase on consolidation. It will also make a $10.6 billion payment to the FDIC, while the FDIC  will provide a new $50B five-year fixed-rate term financing to cover  the liability shortfall as a result of the bank's historic bank run.  To  be sure, there were some questions here with former Fed staffer Julia  Coronado trying to understand how the FDIC is lending directly to JP  Morgan: "Where will they get the money? What terms?" 
  I  am trying to understand this part of the First Republic deal. The FDIC  is lending directly to JP Morgan? Where will they get the money? What  terms?
   FDIC will provide a new $50B five-year fixed-rate term financing
   — Julia Coronado (@jc_econ)  May 1, 2023Additionally,  as noted above, the FDIC will provide loss share agreements with  respect to most acquired loans: Single family residential mortgages: 80%  loss coverage for seven years; Commercial loans, including CRE: 80%  loss coverage for five years.
 
  
  JPM also disclosed that it would take a one-time gain of $2.6B post-tax at closing, not  including expected restructuring costs of $2.0B over the course of 2023  and 2024; and perhaps more importantly the fair value marks on acquired  loans is ~$22B, with an average loan mark of 87%, while the FDIC's loss  sharing deal reduces risk weighting on covered loans, with an average  risk weighting of ~25%.
 
  
  As  for the deal rationale, well... JPM didn't have to include this slide -  after all the rationale was all about taxpayers getting stuck with  FRC's toxic sludge while JPM getting all the good assets at pennies on  the dollar - but it did anyway, so here you are: 20% IRR courtesy of taxpayers.
 
  
  Finally, all of FRC's high net worth clients in California and New York now belong to JPM.
 
  
  For those wondering, this is the reason why one month ago we changed JPMorgan's name to JPMega.
 
  
  The full JPM First Republic integration slideshow is below ( pdf link). |