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Signs of success, trouble for property lender Signature Bank

Modifications rise to 7.1% of New York–based firm’s loan book

Signature Bank CEO Joseph DePaolo (Getty, Google Maps, iStock)
Signature Bank CEO Joseph DePaolo (Getty, Google Maps, iStock)

Signature Bank saw record earnings and deposit growth last quarter, but also some red flags.

Loan modifications related to Covid-19 rose to 7.1 percent of its loan book, up from 6.6 percent in the fourth quarter, Crain’s New York reported.

It’s a sign that the property lender’s borrowers are struggling as the pandemic continues. Signature held $3 billion of troublesome loans rated “special mention” or “substandard,” compared to $1 billion as of Sept. 30, the publication said.

Commercial property and apartment loans make up more than half of the company’s $50 billion portfolio, according to Crain’s. Signature Bank defines modified loans as those where interest but not principal is paid, and they aren’t classified as deferred.

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Signature Bank president Joseph DePaolo (DePaolo by  Owen Hoffmann/Patrick McMullan via Getty Images)
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The ominous signs loom as the bank celebrates what chief executive Joseph DePaolo called an “unbelievable quarter” with record earnings and deposit growth, the publication reported.

The bank is involved in the cryptocurrency market, with financial technology company Circle saying that Signature bank would hold billions in deposits related to USD Coin, the report added.

Signature Bank’s stock price jumped 12 percent when the quarterly earnings were reported and has nearly tripled in the past 12 months.

[Crain’s New York] — Cordilia James

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