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Explainer | Why First Republic failed. Are other US banks to follow?

  • US authorities seized control of First Republic Bank on Monday before selling most of the assets to JPMorgan Chase
  • The collapse represented the second biggest US bank failure ever and raised questions about what bank – or banks – are next

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A First Republic Bank office in San Francisco, California. Federal Regulators seized the troubled lender and sold all of its deposits and most of its assets to JPMorgan Chase. File photo: AFP
Associated Press
First Republic Bank has become the second large US regional bank with assets over US$200 billion to fail in just a few weeks.

US authorities seized control of the troubled lender on Monday before selling most of the assets to JPMorgan Chase.

The largest bank failure since the 2007-2008 financial crisis, it comes on the heels of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank’s demise in March which sent shock waves through markets and sparked contagion worries.

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Here are some things to know about the collapse of First Republic Bank.

Why did First Republic fail?

First Republic grew rapidly through deposits from wealthy individuals and companies. It used those deposits to make large loans, including jumbo mortgages, when interest rates were at historically low levels in hopes of then convincing customers to expand into more profitable products like wealth management.

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