Editor’s note: Morning Money is a free version of POLITICO Pro Financial Services morning newsletter, which is delivered to our s each morning at 5:15 a.m. The POLITICO Pro platform combines the news you need with tools you can use to take action on the day’s biggest stories. Act on the news with POLITICO Pro. LOS ANGELES — Greetings from the City of Angels, where your host is enjoying the fruits of his native state (tacos, good donuts, In-N-Out, etc.) and mentally preparing to hear the takes of the political and financial elite at the Milken Institute's Global Conference in Beverly Hills. It is a very uncertain time for both the economy and markets. There’s a non-zero chance the U.S. defaults on its bonds later this summer. Regional banks are teetering. Deglobalization and onshoring have shaken up geopolitics and traditional alliances. The 2024 presidential campaign is now underway. All of this will be top of mind as power brokers descend on the Beverly Hilton to publicly opine and make small talk by the pool. But a lot of the chatter, at least on day one, will have to do with First Republic Bank. The FDIC early Monday morning announced JPMorgan Chase has purchased First Republic, which had limped along for weeks after being hit with the kind of massive deposit outflows that claimed two other regional lenders in March. Victoria Guida: Regulators had scrambled all weekend to complete a deal to sell the embattled San Francisco-based lender to head off any further market turmoil. California’s state bank regulator shut down the bank overnight and appointed the FDIC as receiver. That cleared the way for a sale to JPMorgan, which will take on all deposits and substantially all assets. First Republic’s demise is the latest fallout from the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank in March, which sparked runs at similar institutions, including Signature Bank, which failed the same weekend. The FDIC will share some of the losses from First Republic’s portfolio of residential mortgages and commercial loans, and provide $50 billion in financing for the buyer, according to a press release from JPMorgan. The agency said it expects a $13 billion hit to its deposit insurance fund, which is financed by fees from banks. In its release, JPMorgan said it has bought $173 billion in loans and $30 billion in securities. It will also assume $92 billion in deposits, “including $30 billion of large bank deposits, which will be repaid post-close or eliminated in consolidation.” The First Republic saga will also create fresh headaches for Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell. So far, Fed officials have presented a fairly united front when it came to raising rates over the last year. But with the financial sector now showing signs of strain, the Fed is under pressure to hit pause on pushing up borrowing costs. Will that happen? Probably not. CME’s FedWatch tool pegged the likelihood of a quarter point hike at about 85 percent as of Sunday night. And as Omair Sharif, president of Inflation Insights, pointed out after the release of the Employment Cost Index on Friday, the steady growth of private wages and salaries in the first quarter should be enough to convince any dovish FOMC members to support at least one more hike. If you’re bouncing around Los Angeles this week and have opinions about any of this, I’d love to hear them. Maybe by the pool. Maybe over donuts. Hell, I’d even spring for a drink. IT’S MONDAY — Zach and I are in LA all week. I’ll be flying solo on MM while Zach heads up Global Insider (read that here). Send tips, gossip and suggestions to Sam at ssutton@politico.com and Zach at zwarmbrodt@politico.com.
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