
By Liz Moyer
Investing.com -- U.S. stocks shook off earlier losses and climbed on Monday despite a sell-off in bank stocks amid fear of contagion from the collapse of SVB Financial Group (NASDAQ:SIVB).
At 11:46 ET (15:46 GMT), the Dow Jones Industrial Average was up 211 points or 0.7%, while the S&P 500 was up 0.7% and the NASDAQ Composite was up 1.3%.
Regulators shut down Silicon Valley Bank on Friday and New York-based Signature Bank (NASDAQ:SBNY) on Sunday. They also announced a number of steps to shore up confidence in the banking system, offering a new bank facility and relaxing access to the Federal Reserve’s discount window to help banks reposition after rapidly rising interest rates.
Depositors of both Silicon Valley Bank and Signature will get their money back, regardless of whether it was insured. Uninsured deposits in limbo could have rippled through the economy, especially the venture capital and startup world SVB catered to. Many small companies with deposits there spent the weekend worrying about making payroll.
Whether the actions will ease broader concerns about banks remains to be seen. Shares of First Republic Bank (NYSE:FRC) were down 75% and were halted, reaching a new 52-week low. First Republic over the weekend said it had added available funding through the Fed and JPMorgan.
Shares of PacWest Bancorp (NASDAQ:PACW) were down 44% and halted briefly. KeyCorp (NYSE:KEY) shares were down 19%, reclaiming some ground, while Comerica Inc (NYSE:CMA) fell 14%, also off its lows. Even shares of big banks were down, with JPMorgan Chase&Co (NYSE:JPM) falling 1% and Bank of America Corp (NYSE:BAC) down 2.2%.
Tuesday brings the consumer price index reading for February, something the Fed is likely to take into consideration when it meets to discuss interest rates later this month. Before the weekend bank crisis erupted, expectations had risen that the Fed would raise interest rates by a half-percentage point. Now, futures traders are putting a 76% chance of no rate hike.
Those expectations were reinforced by Goldman Sachs analysts, who said they no longer expect the Fed to raise rates by a quarter of a percentage point this month.
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