Why NYCB's troubles may not be over

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It's been another tumultuous week for New York Community Bancorp (NYCB): after reporting it raised $1 billion in capital from private investors — including former Secretary of the Treasury Steve Mnuchin's firm Liberty Strategic Capital — the regional bank disclosed it lost $7.8 billion, or 7%, of deposits over the past month.

Arch Indices Co-Founder and CEO Yang Tang joins Yahoo Finance in-studio what NYCB's latest developments could mean for the greater US banking industry and the commercial real estate market.

"I actually think [NYCB's situation] is worse — the incremental cost of funding right now is extremely high. They were asked on the call today 'what is the marginal cost of deposits?', [they] avoided the question," Tang says. "The Fed funds rate is 5.5%. So if you go to the Federal Home Loan Banks and you get a loan, you're going to be looking at 6%. The average yield on the loan right now is 5.72%. So every dollar they have to replace is negative it on the net interest margin."

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

SEANA SMITH: Troubles at New York Community Bancorp are escalating. The bank announcing it's lost 7% of its deposits this month. The regional lender also slashing its dividend this morning to $0.01, that's from $0.05. And before that, down from $0.17.

Now this all comes after NYCB announced a new CEO and $1 billion rescue plan on Wednesday. Shares moving higher this morning, up just about 1%. That slight edge up coming after a massive day of mid-day declines at least yesterday on a report that NYCB was looking for investors. Official announcement of that $1 billion infusion pushing shares back into the green.

Here with more, we want to bring in Yang Tang, he's the Co-Founder and CEO of Arch Indices. Yang, it's great to have you here on set. So just talk to us about this $1 billion infusion. It's looking to reassure, regain maybe the confidence of investors out there that NYCB is going to be OK. Is it enough?

YANG TANG: I don't think so. And I think, let's look at NYCB holistically. It's $115, $117 billion in assets. It's actually got a loan-to-deposit ratio of over 100%. So if you actually factor in the 7% deposit outflow, you're probably closer to $110, $115, which is a very problematic place for a bank.

Secondly, NYCB has $13 billion in commercial real estate and $37 billion multifamily housing. And this is where the problems arose. If you think about what has happened to property prices, interest rates started going up. The cap rates have yet to readjust to the new environment of property prices.