Banking Crisis
Big Banks Warn Staff Not To Poach Clients From Ailing Rivals – Report

An aspect of the banking problems on both sides of the Atlantic is the attitude of healthier rivals and their approach on whether – or not – to take clients fleeing from stressed firms.
US bulge-bracket banks including JP Morgan, Citigroup and Bank of America
have reportedly warned employees not to worsen matters by
poaching clients.
JP Morgan, the nation's largest bank, told all employees (source:
Reuters, 23 March) that they "should never give the
appearance of exploiting a situation of stress or uncertainty,"
according to a memo. "We do not make disparaging comments
regarding competitors."
On the same day, the leaders of its consumer and business banking
unit told branch employees: "We should refrain from soliciting
client business from an institution in stress," reports said.
The article, citing unnamed sources, said that Citigroup has also
given similar guidance to its business heads. The guidance
includes not speculating about other banks or market rumours.
WealthBriefing and its sister publications
understand that a recent memo went to Citi bankers to
“remind you that while we should always be proud of the services
we offer when seeking customer businesses, we should not discuss
the standing or condition of other banks as part of those
discussions.”
Top executives at Bank of America were also briefed that their
employees should not be going after the customers of distressed
firms or doing anything to exacerbate the situation, the report
quoted a source as saying.
The report also quoted Mary Mack, CEO of consumer and small
business banking at Wells Fargo, saying in a memo: "We should not
engage in any activity that could be perceived as taking
advantage of the current situation to the detriment of
others."
This publication has contacted the banks for comment
and may update this report in due course if or when the firms
respond.
There are concerns that because of bank runs that demolished
Silicon
Valley Bank and Signature, the second
and third largest lenders to fail in US history, customers have
shifted about half a trillion dollars of deposits from the "most
vulnerable" US banks to bigger institutions this month,
Reuters said, citing JP Morgan analysts led by Nikolaos
Panigirtzoglou.
In Europe, the collapse of Credit Suisse and its purchase by UBS
comes after the stricken lender
suffered more than $110 billion of net outflows in the last
quarter of 2022 alone. And while the UBS purchase – made at the
behest of the Swiss authorities – may stem some of the outflow,
it is not guaranteed to do so. (See related thoughts
here.)
One possibility of the drama is that it may encourage clients,
such as high net worth individuals, to completely re-think where
they deploy their investments and cash. The banks’ problems have
also turned a spotlight on the level of protection that
depositors can, or should, receive from the US taxpayer. A
decision by the US federal government to “backstop” all deposits
in SVB, for example, has drawn criticism that this will
fuel “moral hazard” across the system and add to US public
debt.