US Deposit Outflows Accelerated Last Week, Led By Small Banks
After yesterday’s continuing surge on flows INTO money market funds and increase in the use of The Fed’s bank bailout facilities, expectations were for more deposit outflows from US commercial banks (despite Western Alliance’s comments which sparked a melt-up in regional bank shares this week.
However, Treasury Secretary Yellen spoiled the party somewhat today by warning (reportedly) that the market should expect ‘more bank mergers’ (i.e. failures)…
And so, according to the latest H8 report from The Fed, on a seasonally-adjusted basis, total US Commercial Bank deposits fell by $26.4 billion during the week ended 5/10 – the third straight week…
Source: Bloomberg
On a seasonally adjusted basis, US commercial bank deposits (ex-large time deposits) decreased $20.8bn last week (during the week-ending 5/10), for the fifth straight weekly outflow. That is the lowest since March 2021…
Source: Bloomberg
On a non-seasonally-adjusted basis, US commercial bank deposits (ex-large time deposits) dropped $50.26 billion (after jumping $63.8 billion) the prior week.
And judging by yesterday’s money market inflows, the deposit outflows continued this week (remember, deposit data is lagged a week to money market and Fed balance sheet data), despite reassurances from WAL…
Source: Bloomberg
On a seasonally-adjusted basis, Large, Small, and Foreign banks all saw outflows last week. Small bank deposits are at their lowest since May 2021…
Source: Bloomberg
This is the 5th straight week of Small Bank outflows and Small Banks saw the largest outflows…
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Large Banks -$7.49 billion SA (-$36.5 billion NSA)
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Small Banks -$8.742 billion SA (-$12.5 billion NSA)
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Foreign Banks -$4.627 billion SA (-$1.2 billion NSA)
Source: Bloomberg
Finally, after adjusting for all the revisions (which are now an every week occurrence), what sticks out to us is that the last 5 weeks have seen $379 billion in NSA bank outflows, while SA the number is an outflow of only $171 billion.
Source: Bloomberg
So the Fed is claiming there are still over $200 billion in tax-payment related deposits expected to return to banks.
The Fed’s report showed residential real estate loans declined a seasonally adjusted $2.6 billion, while lending for commercial properties rose slightly. Consumer loans also ticked up from the prior week, while commercial and industrial loans fell $3.5 billion.
On the other side of the ledger, Commercial bank lending was little changed in the week ended May 10th, according to seasonally adjusted data. Large bank loans dropped $6.159 billion while Small Bank loans actually rose by $6.85 billion (despite significant deposit outflows)…
Source: Bloomberg
And all of this happened a week before WAL claimed its deposits are rising.
Tyler Durden
Fri, 05/19/2023 – 16:43
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