Bank stocks tumbled on Monday amid a wider market sell-off as investors were concerned that inflation could lead to higher borrowing costs for companies.
The KBW Nasdaq Bank Index fell 4.91% on Monday. Its components include the largest U.S. banks and regionals such as People’s United Financial and Zions Bancorp.
Wells Fargo shares dropped almost 10% to $57.70. The Federal Reserve slapped the San Francisco bank with an enforcement action last week that bars the company from growing larger; four Wells directors will also be replaced. The sanctions were punishment for Wells Fargo’s fake-accounts scandal and other problems.
In other notable bank stocks, Bank of America fell 5.5% to $30.21; PNC Financial Services Group dropped 4.9% to $150.21; and Capital One Financial fell 4.5% to $96.99.
More than $1 trillion of market capitalization across all sectors was erased on Monday as many investors worried that the market had become overvalued.
“I think sentiment was a little too optimistic," Brad McMillan, chief investment officer for Commonwealth Financial Network, told Bloomberg.
Stocks' performance last week was the worst for markets since 2016, according to Yahoo Finance. The trend continued apace on Monday on extremely high trading volume.
The Dow average fell 1,175 points on Monday, the largest single-day point decline in history, the Wall Street Journal reported. The Dow’s 4.6% slide was its biggest drop since 2011, according to Bloomberg. Earlier in the trading day on Monday, the Dow had dropped as much as 1,500 points. The Dow closed at 24,345.
The S&P 500 Index declined 4.1% in its steepest drop since August 2011. Bitcoin fell more than 20%, sliding below $7,000.
Neel Kashkari, president of the Minneapolis Fed, said in a Monday interview that wage growth has not accelerated enough to support faster rate hikes this year.
The Jackson, Mississippi, company will use proceeds from the sale of its Fisher Brown Bottrell Insurance unit to restructure its investment portfolio, moving $1.6 billion of low-yield securities off the balance sheet.
The store-branded card issuer is raising annual percentage rates and adding fees for paper statements to compensate for lost revenue. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's new regulation is scheduled to take effect on May 14.
At the banks' annual meetings, shareholders at both companies struck down proposals that would have split the board chair and CEO roles. Two other proposals also failed to win shareholder support, one concerning energy financing and another on pay gap analysis.
Congressional Review Act resolutions are ramping up ahead of the 2024 election cycle. Experts say that, although none are likely to become law, the resolutions are still powerful messaging and political tools.
The ABA is testing an information-exchange network to allow banks to share their fraud data with each other. Companies including Baselayer are also building solutions.
Republicans on the House and Senate Small Business committees are accusing the SBA of being irresponsible in granting Funding Circle permission to participate in its flagship loan-guarantee program.