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After bank failures, raising deposit insurance has benefits – and risks

Over the weekend, First Republic Bank, based in San Francisco, collapsed and was subject to a hastily orchestrated restructuring. JPMorgan Chase announced Monday that it had acquired most of First Republic’s assets from the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. and that branches would open as usual.

While the immediate drama has ended, FDIC insurance itself is under scrutiny. With three banks now felled by bank runs in the past two months, regulators are looking anew at the program that was created 90 years ago to discourage panic behavior by depositors. In fact, regulators have created a potentially big problem for themselves.

Why We Wrote This

Recent bank failures in the United States have raised questions about whether a wider safety net of deposit insurance is needed – but also about how regulators can incentivize prudent behavior by banks.

By using a loophole in March to guarantee all deposits at the first two failed banks, regulators may be hard-pressed to walk back such a commitment in future bank failures. Up to now, the FDIC has only guaranteed bank depositors up $250,000 per single account and $500,000 for a joint account. Many economists worry unlimited insurance will foster apathy among depositors – and thus encourage risky behavior by banks.

The FDIC on Monday released a report recommending a new “targeted” system where business accounts would receive higher insurance than individual accounts – rather than either insuring all deposits or sticking with the $250,000 cap.

Sue Hackney had heard the news, of course. When reports surfaced in March that First Republic Bank might be in trouble, the Boston-area marketing professional and her husband debated whether to pull their money out. But “their customer service is so good,” she says, so the couple waited.

Then last week, the San Francisco-based bank released its quarterly earnings, which showed it had lost more than a third of its deposits. Its shares, already deeply discounted, plunged again – in all, a stunning 97% fall in value in three months.

Busy at work and two days away from a trip out West, Ms. Hackney felt in no position to suddenly find a new bank. “We also figured the FDIC insurance is there,” she says. On Monday, JPMorgan Chase – the nation’s largest bank – validated her optimism. It announced it had acquired the substantial majority of First Republic’s assets from the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. and that First Republic’s branches would open as usual on Monday.

Why We Wrote This

Recent bank failures in the United States have raised questions about whether a wider safety net of deposit insurance is needed – but also about how regulators can incentivize prudent behavior by banks.

While the immediate drama has ended, easing fears about U.S. banks’ stability, FDIC insurance itself is under scrutiny. With three banks now felled by bank runs in the past two months, regulators are looking anew at the program that was created 90 years ago to discourage bank runs. On Monday, the FDIC released a report outlining three options. The problem is that its actions to calm markets may have foreclosed all but one of those options.

The FDIC report takes a detailed look at the pros and cons of keeping the status quo, moving to unlimited deposit insurance, or using what it calls targeted insurance. It recommends targeted insurance, where business payment accounts would receive significantly higher coverage than individual consumer accounts.

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