Having seen The Fed's QT appear to stall in February, as Reverse Repo liquidity withdrawal accelerates, all eyes are once again back on the situation on bank's balance sheets and how deposits are standing up ('adjusted' by The Fed's magical seasonals).
Source: Bloomberg
And after the prior week's miraculous surge in deposits (again, according to The Fed), last week saw total bank deposits (seasonally-adjusted) drop $57BN - the biggest weekly drop since October...
Source: Bloomberg
This data is from the week when Regional bank shares shit the bed thanks to NYCB...
Source: Bloomberg
Interestingly, on a non-seasonally-adjusted basis, total bank deposits declined about the same as SA -$58BN (and are down $180BN YTD)...
Source: Bloomberg
And, excluding foreign banks, domestic deposits dropped $52BN SA (Large Banks -$40BN, Small Banks -$12BN), and tumbled $65BN NSA (Large Banks -$57BN, Small Banks -$$8BN)
Source: Bloomberg
As the chart above shows, on an NSA basis, domestic banks have only seen one week of inflows in 2024.
As one might expect, loan volumes shrank during that week by just over $9BN (Large banks -$4.6BN, Small banks -$4.4BN)...
Source: Bloomberg
And finally, as a reminder - despite the rebound off the lows again this week in regional bank shares, which must mean everything is awesome, right? - the regional bank crisis is still very much alive as evidenced by the red line below (without The Fed's imminently expiring BTFP facility)...
Source: Bloomberg
...what else are big banks (green line) going to do with all that cash burning a hole in their pockets?
The bottom line is - this looks a lot like a 'Small Bank' crisis. The last time this happened, the crisis sparked a sudden $300BN 'run' in small bank deposits...
Source: Bloomberg
Is The Fed 'hoping' for a controlled bank-run this time - so as many small bank deposits are drained voluntarily, before they are drained all at once in a panic (and the Reverse Repo facility is empty, unable to provide any cushion)?