The Pak Banker

Best and worst-performing

- NEW YORK

A year ago this month, U.S. banks faced the biggest crisis since the Great Recession roughly 15 years earlier. Three major regional banks were dissolved and sold for parts as a result of the crisis. The fallout started on March 10, 2023 with the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank, which had been the 16th-largest bank in the country.

A few days later, the 29th-largest U.S. bank, Signature Bank of New York, failed, and a little more than one month after that, First Republic Bank, the 14th-largest bank in the U.S., also went under. However, it was Silvergate Bank’s March 8, 2023 liquidatio­n announceme­nt that triggered a domino effect that swept across the regional-banking industry. That announceme­nt followed the collapse of cryptocurr­ency exchange FTX, which sent the industry and the markets into a tailspin.

Customers quickly began to wonder if their money was safe and questioned the solvency of their banks. The federal government had to step in to provide a financial backstop, and large banks poured in billions of dollars to replenish the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.’s Deposit Insurance Fund.

Most bank stocks tanked during the crisis, even those of large banks with plenty of liquidity to handle that kind of shock. One year later, the industry has stabilized, but many banks are still struggling. Here are some of the best- and worst-performing big-bank stocks over the past 12 months.

Top performers: If you look at the performanc­e of the top 20 banks since March 8, 2023, the average big bank is down, according to the KBW Nasdaq Bank Index. The index, which tracks the performanc­e of the largest bank stocks, is down by about 2 percent since the crisis began. Thus, while most have struggled to overcome those steep losses last March, there are still a couple of clear winners.

The biggest winner by far has been First Citizens BancShares, which is up some 127 percent since March 8, trading at around $1,608 per share.

Raleigh, N.C.-based First Citizens basically doubled in size over the past year as it acquired most of Silicon Valley Bank’s assets from the FDIC. As of Dec. 31, it had $214 billion in assets and was the 16th-largest U.S. bank. The bank is cheap from a valuation standpoint with a forward priceto-earnings ratio of 9 and is a consensus buy among analysts with a price target of $1,850, which would be 15 percent higher than its current price.

The second-best large bank stock is JPMorgan Chase (NYSE:JPM), which is the largest bank in the country. Like First Citizens, JPMorgan Chase was a beneficiar­y of the crisis, in that it acquired the assets of the failed First Republic Bank. It brought in $229 billion in assets and $104 billion in deposits from First Republic, which helped build out its private banking business for high-net-worth clients. As of Dec. 31, JPMorgan Chase had almost $2.7 trillion in assets.

Since March 8, 2023, JPMorgan Chase has seen its stock price rise about 40 percent to its current price of $195 per share. For JPMorgan Chase, it is a case of the rich getting richer as it has long been the best-performing large bank. Over the past 10 years, it has posted an average annualized return of 12.3 percent. JPMorgan Chase has a forward P/E of 12 with a consensus price target of $196. That’s barely a blip over its current price, but JPMorgan Chase has long been the best-performing, most-stable, most-efficient, and best-diversifie­d bank. Thus, it’s one you can consider a long-term stalwart.

A few others worth mentioning are Ally Financial, up 33 percent, Capital One, up 32.5 percent, and Wells Fargo, up 28.5 percent since the crisis began. All are still relatively cheap, but analysts aren’t particular­ly bullish on any of them, nor are they bearish.

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