Bye, banks: Recent turmoil is spurring many to move their money (2024)

Bank stocks sank Friday over fresh fears that another European financial giant may be in trouble, compounding worries of a broader crisis that have led people to move hundreds of billions of dollars out of U.S. bank accounts.

Overall, deposits estimated at $550 billion have moved from smaller and regional banks to large banks and money market funds in the two weeks since Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank failed, according to an analysis by JPMorgan Chase.

“Turmoil in the markets always puts money in motion,” said Danielle Lucht, a financial adviser in Cape Coral, Fla., who is fielding twice as many calls from clients as she was a few weeks ago. “The big concern right now is: Is my money safe? How can I make it safer? People who have cash in simple savings accounts are using this as an opportunity to move their money.”

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Across the country, millions of Americans are making similar calculations, trying to figure out how to best allocate their money following the implosion of two U.S. banks and the emergency takeover of European banking giant Credit Suisse last weekend, which set off fears of a global financial crisis.

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On Friday, all three major stock indexes slipped about 0.3 percent in the first hour of trading, and bank shares in Europe were down sharply after Deutsche Bank said it would buy back some of its debt early in an attempt to bolster its balance sheet. Even though the broader stock market recovered its losses later in the day, shares in major Wall Street banks such as Citibank, JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo and Goldman Sachs closed the day lower.

Banking woes weigh on markets as Deutsche Bank stock slips

A broader crisis so far doesn’t seem to have come, and the U.S. government has taken great pains to reassure depositors that bank accounts are safe. But that hasn’t stopped people from shifting their money around. Americans are moving hundreds of billions of dollars out of banks — especially smaller regional banks — into larger institutions, as well as money market funds, government bonds, high-yield online savings accounts, even cryptocurrencies and gold.

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In the two weeks since SVB’s dramatic collapse, investments in money market funds, a type of mutual fund focused on low-risk securities, have ballooned by nearly $240 billion, according to the Investment Company Institute. Yields on two-year Treasury bonds have fallen more than 20 percent as a result of booming demand. Money market funds are not insured by the government in the way bank accounts less than $250,000 are. But even riskier investments are thriving: Bitcoin prices have risen 40 percent, and gold is up about 10 percent.

“Contagion comes from panic and fear; it marches from one bank to another,” said Quincy Krosby, chief global strategist at LPL Research. “When things get worrisome, people move their money first — they go into Treasurys, they go into gold — and ask questions later.”

In all, small and medium U.S. banks lost $120 billion in deposits, or 2 percent, in the week of SVB’s collapse, Federal Reserve data shows. (At least some of those deposits went directly to the country’s largest banks, which gained $66 billion in deposits during that period.)

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About 12 percent of Americans say they have taken money out from the bank “because of the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank,” and 18 percent say they are considering doing so, according to a Yahoo News/YouGov poll released Tuesday. (It is also worth noting, though, that most people — 55 percent — said they are confident the banking system is safe.)

Big banks may get bigger as crisis swamps ‘too big to fail’ worries

Dan Ushman is one of those people who have moved money this month — and he isn’t sure where he’ll end up stashing his company’s funds.

The start-up founder recently moved savings out of Silicon Valley Bank, whose spectacular collapse this month set off tremors across the financial industry, and parked it in accounts at Bank of America and Chase while he contemplates what’s next. The goal, he says, is to maximize interest while reducing exposure to what he thinks looks like growing levels of risk at small banks.

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“Having SVB collapse out from under us gave us a lot of pause,” said Ushman, 38, founder of a software firm in Chicago. “We’re thinking hard about how to spread our cash around. We want higher yields and safety.”

The recent shift builds on a trend that began a year ago, when the Fed began raising interest rates after years of keeping them near zero. Suddenly, regular bank accounts — that pay very little, if any, interest — became much less attractive than other investments offering higher returns.

That steady movement out of bank accounts took on a life of its own this month after fears of bank failures led customers at SVB and Signature Bank of New York to take out billions of dollars in cash in a matter of a few hours. The result was a bank run that triggered the collapse of both institutions.

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The Fed and other regulators were quick to step in with emergency measures aimed at stemming similar runs at other banks. But panic persists: This week, shares of PacWest Bancorp, a regional California institution, tumbled 17 percent after it said it had lost 20 percent of its deposits this year. Economists say that lack of confidence in a company’s stock can be self-fulfilling if it prompts customers to remove their money, leaving the bank in even worse shape.

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At First Republic Bank, not even a $30 billion rescue package from the nation’s biggest banks has been enough to keep people from taking out their money. In all, customers have withdrawn about $70 billion in recent weeks, or roughly 40 percent of the bank’s deposits, the Wall Street Journal reported this week.

“People are looking around and saying, ‘I really don’t want to be uninsured,’” said Itamar Drechsler, a finance professor at the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania. “They’re buying government bonds and going to bigger banks at the expense of regionals.”

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The federal government insures deposits of up to $250,000 in any given bank account, though there are looming questions about whether it might raise that cap or extend protection to all deposits as it did at SVB and Signature Bank of New York this month. Treasury Secretary Janet L. Yellen struggled to manage the fallout from remarks Wednesday over the extent to which the federal government could insure deposits over the limit at other banks if they failed; markets fell after she spoke, and she later amended her written testimony to stress that the government has “tools we could use again” and would be “prepared to take additional action if warranted.”

How the Fed’s inflation fight fueled banking turmoil, in 7 charts

Still, the recent panic has been enough to spook those with large sums piled into traditional bank accounts. Brenton Wickam, 53, a commercial real estate investor in Silicon Valley, hadn’t thought twice about keeping his personal savings in one bank account — until recently.

When SVB collapsed, Wickam got a barrage of text messages all saying the same thing: “First Republic’s next.” That was particularly troubling to Wickam, who had been banking there for years.

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Last week, he showed up at a local branch to begin moving his savings into new accounts, in $250,000 chunks so that they would be insured by the government. The leftover money he took to Wells Fargo, though he plans to invest it in money markets or Treasurys.

“I felt like the dumbest guy in the room, keeping all of my cash in one bank account,” Wickam said. “I’ve been around awhile — 2000, 2008, I’ve seen what a financial crisis looks like — but I was just being lazy.”

The exodus of deposits, particularly from smaller banks, is particularly worrisome because it could have a chilling effect on how much those institutions are able to loan. Nearly 70 percent of commercial real estate loans, for example, come from small and midsize banks, Fed data shows.

Banking news, stock market lurches got you jittery? Here’s some advice

“The consequence of this is manyfold,” said Torsten Slok, chief economist at Apollo Global Management. “The reality is, banks finance themselves through deposits.”

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A drop in deposits, he said, would mean banks have less money on hand to make loans. If someone walked in looking for a $40,000 car loan, for example, and a bank didn’t have much in deposits, it would have to borrow that money from wholesale markets, where interest rates have risen rapidly in the past year. As a result, borrowers could face higher interest rates and stricter standards, Slok said.

“If banks across the country suddenly say, ‘We’re going to tighten lending standards for anyone who would like to buy a car or a house or get a corporate loan’ — if they stop lending money out, you could have a sudden stop in the economy,” he said. “That begins to raise the risk of a recession.”

Fed Chair Jerome H. Powell pushed back against that fear this week, saying the banking system is “sound and resilient.”

“We took powerful actions with Treasury and the FDIC, which demonstrate that all depositor savings are safe and that the banking system is safe,” Powell said in a news conference on Wednesday. “Deposit flows in the banking system have stabilized over the last week.”

Federal Reserve keeps up inflation fight, betting bank crisis is over

Verbal assurances aside, the interventions of regulators have raised more questions than answers for many Americans. They’ve also prompted many people to stop and consider their investment habits, since interest rates are at their highest level in 16 years.

“The silver lining in this debacle is that it’s caused people to pause and ask, ‘Is my money okay at the bank?,’” said Rick Salmeron, a financial adviser in Dallas, who has seen a rush toward high-yield online savings accounts. “They’re realizing, ‘Wow, I have all of this cash making a paltry 0.01 percent interest in the bank when I could be getting 3.5 percent.’”

Steve Miller, 51, a stay-at-home dad in Orange County, Calif., recently moved his family’s savings from a large bank to a Vanguard federal money market account. It wasn’t so much panic over recent bank failures that prompted the move, he said, but rather the realization that he could be earning much higher interest on his money. Now he’s earning 4.65 percent interest.

“We have always kept our cash reserves parked in the bank, but this was a good trigger,” he said. “It made me realize we could be earning much more by being invested in Treasury bills.”

Jeff Stein contributed to this report.

Bye, banks: Recent turmoil is spurring many to move their money (2024)

FAQs

Bye, banks: Recent turmoil is spurring many to move their money? ›

Bye, banks: Recent turmoil is spurring many to move their money. Bank stocks sank Friday over fresh fears that another European financial giant may be in trouble, compounding worries of a broader crisis that have led people to move hundreds of billions of dollars out of U.S. bank accounts.

Can the US government take money from your bank account? ›

An IRS levy permits the legal seizure of your property to satisfy a tax debt. It can garnish wages, take money in your bank or other financial account, seize and sell your vehicle(s), real estate and other personal property.

Why are people pulling money out of banks? ›

Customers in bank runs typically withdraw money based on fears that the institution will become insolvent.

Should we move our money out of the bank? ›

Your money is safe in a bank with FDIC insurance. A bank account is typically the safest place for your cash, since banks can be insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. up to $250,000 per depositor, per insured institution, per ownership category.

Which banks are failing in 2024? ›

Republic First Bank reported unrealized securities losses in excess of its equity as early as June 2022. State regulators closed Republic First Bank in April 2024, marking the first bank failure of the year.

Can banks seize your money if the economy fails? ›

The short answer is no. Banks cannot take your money without your permission, at least not legally. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) insures deposits up to $250,000 per account holder, per bank. If the bank fails, you will return your money to the insured limit.

Can a bank refuse to give you your money? ›

Yes. Your bank may hold the funds according to its funds availability policy. Or it may have placed an exception hold on the deposit.

Can the government take money from your bank account in a crisis? ›

They are able to levy up to the total amount you owe in back taxes, and the bank must comply. For many individuals, this might mean seizing everything in their entire bank account. The only way you are able to release a levy due to hardship is if you make a satisfactory resolution.

Why do banks ask why you're withdrawing money? ›

Withdrawals over $10,000 may trigger Anti-Money Laundering and Terrorism Financing red flags and cause the bank to ask questions about your cash. These should be pretty easy to answer and leave with your money. For withdrawals under $10,000 there is less reason for the bank to want to know why you want your own cash.

Should I take my cash out of the bank? ›

It doesn't make sense to take all your money out of a bank, said Jay Hatfield, CEO at Infrastructure Capital Advisors and portfolio manager of the InfraCap Equity Income ETF. But make sure your bank is insured by the FDIC, which most large banks are.

How much cash can you keep at home legally in the US? ›

The government has no regulations on the amount of money you can legally keep in your house or even the amount of money you can legally own overall. Just, the problem with keeping so much money in one place (likely in the form of cash) — it's very vulnerable to being lost.

Which banks are the safest right now? ›

Summary: Safest Banks In The U.S. Of June 2024
BankForbes Advisor RatingFees
Bank of America4.2Monthly service, out-of-network ATM and overdraft fee
Wells Fargo Bank4.0Monthly service, out-of-network ATM and overdraft fees
Citi®4.0Monthly service and out-of-network ATM fees
Barclays3.4Non-sufficient funds fees
1 more row
May 20, 2024

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.

What US banks are in trouble? ›

About the FDIC:
Bank NameBankCityCityClosing DateClosing
Republic First Bank dba Republic BankPhiladelphiaApril 26, 2024
Citizens BankSac CityNovember 3, 2023
Heartland Tri-State BankElkhartJuly 28, 2023
First Republic BankSan FranciscoMay 1, 2023
55 more rows
Apr 26, 2024

Are credit unions safer than banks? ›

Credit unions are generally considered to be safer than banks during economic downturns due to their conservative approach to risk and their emphasis on financial robustness.

Which banks are riskiest? ›

How regulators look at risk concentration
#BankRCRE to T1+ALLL
1Dime Community Bank549.80%
2First Foundation Bank538.00%
3Provident Bank483.50%
4Valley National Bank472.70%
24 more rows
Mar 9, 2024

Can the US government look at my bank account? ›

The Short Answer: Yes. Share: The IRS probably already knows about many of your financial accounts, and the IRS can get information on how much is there. But, in reality, the IRS rarely digs deeper into your bank and financial accounts unless you're being audited or the IRS is collecting back taxes from you.

Can money be taken from my bank account without permission? ›

Both state and federal laws prohibit unauthorized withdrawals from being taken from your bank account or charges made to your credit card without your express consent having first been obtained for that to occur.

Can a bank legally take money out of your account? ›

The “right of offset” is a term that refers to the fact that both banks and credit unions are allowed to take money from an account holder's checking account, savings account, or certificate of deposit in order to pay off a debt on another account held at the same financial institution.

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