The banking turmoil of March, which saw the collapse of several regional U.S. lenders, will lead to a credit crunch for «small-town America,» according to veteran strategist David Roche.
The collapse of Silicon Valley Bank and two other small U.S. lenders last month triggered contagion fears that led to record outflows of deposits from smaller banks.
Earnings reports last week indicated that billions of dollars of deposit outflows from small and mid-sized lenders, executed amid the panic, were redirected to Wall Street giants — with JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo and Citigroup reporting massive inflows.
«I think we've learned that the big banks are seen as a safe haven, and the deposits which flow out of the small and regional banks flow into them (big banks), but we've got to remember in a lot of key sectors, the smaller banks account for over 50% of lending,» Roche, president of Independent Strategy, told CNBC's «Squawk Box Europe» on Thursday.
«So I think, on balance, the net result is going to be a further tightening of credit policy, of readiness to lend, and a contraction of credit to the economy, particularly to the real economy — things like services, hospitality, construction and indeed small and medium-sized enterprises — and we've got to remember that those sectors, the kind of small America, small-town America, account for 35 or 40% of output.»
The ripple effects of the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank were vast, setting in motion a chain of events that eventually led to the collapse of 167-year-old Swiss institution Credit Suisse, and its rescue by domestic rival UBS.
Central banks in Europe, the U.S. and the U.K. sprang into action to reassure that they would provide liquidity backstops, to prevent a domino
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