Las Vegas Review-Journal

Stocks climb as some bank fears ease

UBS purchase of troubled rival Credit Suisse props up industry

- By Stan Choe

NEW YORK — Stocks rose Monday on Wall Street after regulators pushed together two huge banks over the weekend and made other moves to build confidence in the struggling industry.

The S&P 500 climbed

34.93 points, or 0.9 percent, to 3,951.57. The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 382.60, or 1.2 percent, to 32,244.58, and the Nasdaq composite added 45.02, or 0.4 percent, to 11,675.54.

Much attention has been on banks because they may be cracking under the pressure of much higher interest rates. Swiss banking giant UBS said Sunday it would buy its troubled rival Credit Suisse for almost $3.25 billion in a deal quickly put together by regulators. Credit Suisse has been battling a unique set of problems for years, but they came to a head last week as its stock price tumbled to a record low.

A group of central banks stretching from the United States to Japan also announced coordinate­d moves on Sunday meant to ease strains in the financial system. They should allow banks more access to U.S. dollars if needed, in an echo to a practice widely used in prior crises.

The moves don’t mean the banking industry’s crisis is over, but “it’s taken one of the troublesom­e aspects off the table,” said Ryan Detrick, chief market strategist at Carson Group.

The late Sunday announceme­nts by regulators may be reminiscen­t of the 2007-08 financial crisis that wrecked the global economy, but many investors see big difference­s between then and now.

“The market is trying to digest: Is this just a few bad financial companies that have really made some bad decisions, or is the whole thing a house of cards?” Detrick said. “We’re optimistic that it’s multiple banks in a bad situation but not the entire system.”

In the U.S., most of the attention has been on smaller and midsized banks on fears that falling trust could push their depositors to pull their money all at once. That’s what’s called a bank run, and such a move could topple them.

First Republic Bank has been at the center of investors’ crosshairs in the hunt for the industry’s next victim following the second- and third-largest U.S. bank failures in history. Its shares fell 47.1 percent after S&P Global Ratings cut its credit rating for a second time since Wednesday.

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