The pressure on NYCB isn't letting up

The pressure on NYCB isn't letting up

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Investors applied more pressure on New York Community Bank (NYCB) Thursday despite the lender’s efforts to shore up confidence.

The stock seesawed for much of Thursday morning and ended the day down 7%. The new volatility erased a rebound it experienced Wednesday after the bank announced the appointment of a new executive chairman, Alessandro "Sandro" DiNello, and held a call with analysts intended to shore up confidence.

"We have seen virtually no deposit outflow from our branches," DiNello told analysts Wednesday. The former bank examiner said "building confidence" with Wall Street about NYCB's deposits and liquidity would be the bank’s No. 1 priority going forward.

Most other large and midsized lender stocks rose Wednesday. A regional bank ETF (KRE) that holds NYCB was up slightly for the same period.

Some analysts cautioned that the situation remained fluid at the $116 billion lender despite their belief that the bank has the ability to get through this current crisis.

"It's still a little bit early to tell the ultimate impact these actions will have,” David Smith with Autonomous Research said on Yahoo Finance Live. "I think this is an issue of earnings rather than viability," he added.

The stock of New York Community Bank is down more than 50% since it surprised Wall Street on the morning of Jan. 31 by slashing its dividend and reporting a net quarterly loss of $252 million. The bank set aside $552 million for future loan losses, well above estimates, to account for weaknesses tied to office properties and rent-stabilized apartment complexes in New York City.

A sign is pictured above a branch of the New York Community Bank in Yonkers, New York, U.S., January 31, 2024. REUTERS/Mike Segar/File Photo
A New York Community Bank in Yonkers, N.Y. REUTERS/Mike Segar/File Photo · Reuters / Reuters

The turmoil at NYCB is also dragging down the value of other regional bank stocks and stoking new concerns about the industry's vulnerability to commercial real estate that is suddenly worth less due to high interest rates and shifting work patterns.

Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen told Senate lawmakers Thursday that "I hope and believe" commercial real estate weaknesses “will not end being a systemic risk to the banking system.” But "there may be smaller banks that are stressed by these developments."

Former FDIC Chair Sheila Bair told Yahoo Finance Thursday that there could be “a few more bank failures” if lenders have not reserved enough to absorb potential commercial real estate losses.

But "it’s nothing like what we saw in 2008," she added, referring to a real estate meltdown that eventually took down some big Wall Street financial institutions and hundreds of banks across the US.