Wall Street’s worst fear got a name this week: cockroaches. That’s what Jamie Dimon, the CEO of JPMorgan Chase, called the unseen threats lurking in the US financial 0 Wednesday, during an earnings call, Jamie warned that when you find one, you should assume more are 1 exact words: “I shouldn’t say this, but when you see one cockroach, there’s probably 2 should be forewarned on this one.” That warning came as banks and investors were already dealing with fresh chaos linked to two ugly bankruptcies in September; Tricolor Holdings, a subprime auto lender, and First Brands, a big-name auto parts 3 two collapses triggered a disaster that’s now hammering mid-sized banks, investment firms, and their 4 and Western Alliance suffer from credit hits On Thursday, the fallout hit regional banks the hardest, dragging their stocks down 5 Bancorporation fell by 13%, while Western Alliance dropped by nearly 10%.
Those stock hits weren’t out of 6 Wednesday, Zions had revealed it had taken a $50 million charge-off, wiping out two unpaid business loans through its California Bank & Trust 7 bank said it discovered “legal actions initiated by several banks and other lenders” linked to the two 8 internal review flagged the issue, forcing the 9 other comment came from Zions, which ignored further press 10 Thursday, Western Alliance stepped into the 11 bank filed a lawsuit “alleging fraud by the borrower” over a revolving credit facility given to Cantor Group V 12 stressed that this had “no relation to First Brands or Tricolor” and called it “an isolated credit incident.” But even with that clarification, the market still 13 timing couldn’t be 14 disclosures landed on top of rising concern that credit conditions for commercial borrowers are 15 and traders are now scanning for the next weak 16 more companies go under, banks are getting hit with unpaid loans and questionable 17 saw enough in his own shop to sound the 18 Tuesday, JPMorgan confirmed it took a $170 million charge-off tied to its wholesale lending to 19 admitted to analysts: “It was not our finest moment.” Jefferies investment exposed to First Brands collapse While regional banks took visible hits, Jefferies Financial Group also got pulled into the mud.
A court filing showed one of its asset management funds is owed $715 million by customers tied to First 20 was enough to tank Jefferies stock more than 10% on 21 to put a cap on the damage, Jefferies CEO Richard Handler and President Brian Friedman sent a letter to 22 broke down their actual exposure: $43 million in receivables and $2 million in interest from First Brands 23 insisted the effect was “readily absorbable” and called the market’s reaction “meaningfully overdone.” Still, the drop didn’t 24 tensions already high, Jamie’s comment about cockroaches only made Wall Street more 25 spent the rest of the week pressing banks on how exposed they were to non-bank financial institutions, a sector that’s grown faster than any other in 26 Federal Reserve reports that non-bank lending is the leading driver of loan growth across the US banking system this 27 Thursday, KBW analysts wrote in a note that bank investors “are rightfully on high alert for any change in asset quality trends.” And David Chiaverini, a regional bank analyst at Jefferies, tried to offer a calmer 28 said these exposures “are getting attention,” but that “the way these loans are structured should protect the banks and lead to overall solid credit results.” Whether that’s true or not, the mood is clear; Wall Street’s nerves are 29 after everything that’s hit banks from every direction this month, no one’s brushing off Jamie when he says the cockroaches aren’t done crawling 30 you're reading this, you’re already 31 there with our newsletter .
Story Tags

Latest news and analysis from Cryptopolitan