The Pak Banker

US bank profits drop 44pc in Q4 as big firms cover failed bank costs

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The US banking sector saw its profits drop by nearly half in the last quarter of 2024, as large firms began paying hefty fees to help recoup costs incurred by several bank failures last spring, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporatio­n reported.

Roughly 70 percent of the 43.9 percent decline in quarterly bank profits was due to specific, non-recurring expenses at large banks, primarily a special assessment fee larger banks were ordered to pay to the FDIC to replenish its deposit insurance fund. In all of 2023, bank profits were down 2.3 percent to $257 billion, but remain above pre-pandemic levels, the FDIC said.

The FDIC directed banks to pay the fee to recoup billions of dollars in losses its insurance fund suffered following the failures of Silicon Valley Bank and two other larger firms.

Overall, the latest quarterly numbers from the FDIC painted a mixed picture for the banking industry. On the positive end, the FDIC said bank deposits were up 1.1 percent in the fourth quarter, the first increase in nearly two years. Also, unrealized losses on securities, which had weighed heavily on some bank balance sheets, declined 30.2 percent to its lowest level since the second quarter of 2022.

Net operating revenue for the banking sector exceeded $1 trillion for the first time since the FDIC began tracking the data, the agency said.

However, the agency also found that non-current loans had risen 0.86 percent and the net charge-off rate, which is debt a bank anticipate­s it will never collect, climbed to 0.65 percent. Credit card and commercial real estate debate were the main contributo­rs, with sectors seeing charge-off rates not seen since 2012.

The FDIC also added eight banks to its “problem bank” list, bringing the total to 52. However, those firms represente­d just 1.1 percent of total institutio­ns and had assets totaling just $66.3 billion.

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