Despite the Fed and the FDIC stepping in quickly and decisively to contain the damage, making customers of failed SVB and Signature Bank whole and promising additional liquidity to other banks struggling to keep up with withdrawal requests, the deposit flight from U.S. banks continued the following week, as Credit Suisse’s collapse further rattled confidence in the banking sector. According to the Fed, U.S. commercial banks lost $172 billion in deposits in the week ended March 22, as large, small and non-U.S. banks saw deposits decline by $90, $40 and $42 billion that week, respectively.
Since then, things have calmed down notably though, and, in the absence of further bank failures, confidence in the financial system is slowly returning. As the following chart shows, small banks have managed to stop the bleeding in recent weeks, with deposits even increasing in two of the past three weeks. There remain some doubts about the banking system’s health, however, as U.S. banks still sit on a large pile of unrealized losses that could come back to haunt them if they ran into liquidity issues in the future.

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