Deposits at small U.S. banks dropped by a record amount following the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank on March 10, data released on Friday by the Federal Reserve showed. Deposits at small banks fell $119 billion to $5.46 trillion in the week ended March 15. That was more than twice the previous record drop and the biggest decline as a percent of overall deposits since the week ended March 16, 2007. Borrowings at small banks, defined as all but the biggest 25 commercial U.S. banks, increased by $253 billion to a record $669.6 billion, the Fed's weekly data showed.
"As a result, small banks had $97 billion more in cash on hand at the end of the week, suggesting that some of the borrowing was to build war chests as a precautionary measure in case depositors asked to redeem their money," Capital Economics' analyst Paul Ashworth wrote.
SVB collapsed after it was unable to meet a swift and massive run by depositors who took out tens of billions of dollars in a matter of hours. Deposits at large U.S. banks rose $67 billion in the week to $10.74 trillion, the Fed data showed. Overall U.S. bank deposits have been in decline after sharply rising in the wake of pandemic aid in 2020 and early 2021.
The reversal in the trend for large banks was notable.
The rise equates to about half as much as the deposit decline at
small banks, suggesting that some of the cash may have gone into
money market funds or other instruments.
Large banks also increased borrowings in the week, by $251 billion.
It was unclear if the shift in deposits out of small banks will persist.
"Deposit flows in the banking system have stabilized
over the last week," Fed Chair Jerome Powell said on Wednesday.
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(Reporting by Ann Saphir; Editing by Jonathan Oatis, Will
Dunham and David Gregorio)