Banking concerns almost in 'same place' as 2023: Sheila Bair

In This Article:

New York Community Bancorp's (NYCB) string of bad luck continues as its stock moves lower after reporting troubling earnings results and suffering a credit downgrade by Moody's. Nearly a year after 2023's regional banking crisis, what is NYCB signaling for the financial sector and commercial real estate?

Former Chair of the FDIC Sheila Bair highlights what another round of regional banking turmoil could look like and what the Biden administration and regulators should be watching closely.

"We saw... runs on uninsured deposits after we had the three failures last spring, even with the so-called systemic risk determination and the government saying they were going to protect uninsured, you still saw a run," Bair, who is also a senior fellow at the Center for Financial Stability and former Assistant Secretary for Financial Institutions of the US Treasury Department, tells Yahoo Finance. "So that instability... is still there, there's less reliance now among these mid-sized banks on uninsured. It's still significant, but I don't for the life of me understand why the Biden administration has not asked Congress to reinstate the FDIC's authority to provide temporary emergency expanded deposit guarantees."

For more expert insight and the latest market action, click here to watch this full episode of Yahoo Finance Live.

Editor's note: This article was written by Luke Carberry Mogan.

Video Transcript

BRAD SMITH: Continuing on with this conversation as we're continuing to be on $5,000 watch, we'll step away from that for a hot second, and go back to New York Community Bancorp, as we've been tracking that throughout this week. It's on shaky ground as it attempts to reassure investors of its deposits, liquidity, and governance.

Now this comes after the regional bank suffered a week-long plunge in its stock plus a credit downgrade from Moody's. The turmoil stoking concerns about the industry's vulnerability to commercial real estate troubles. Here to discuss where this leaves the banking sector at large, we've got Sheila Bair, who is the former chair of the FDIC and author of children's financial literacy books, "Daisy Bubble" and "Money Wizards." Personal favorite there.

Sheila, thanks so much for taking the time here on the day. First and foremost, I think a lot of people who have been tracking shares of NYCB are just wondering, is this a canary in the coal mine or something larger for the CRE market?

SHEILA BAIR: Yeah, so we've known commercial real estate was going to be a problem-- is a problem. And it's going to be a worsening problem. So yeah, it's going to-- a lot of banks that have heavy exposures to certain categories of commercial real estate-- it's important to understand that's a big group. We're really talking about urban office, some urban retail, and some multifamily-- most multifamily housing, which is included in the commercial real estate definition, is actually that's a good place to be. But in certain pockets, and particularly New York, where you have some pretty restrictive rent control laws, you're seeing some distress.