Indaptus Therapeutics Inc
Change company Symbol lookup
Select an option...
INDP Indaptus Therapeutics Inc
FUSN Fusion Pharmaceuticals Inc
RDUS Schnitzer Steel Industries Inc
ALEC Alector Inc
LZM Lifezone Metals Ltd
LMRMF Lomiko Metals Inc
SOXL Direxion Daily Semiconductor Bull 3X Shares
OXSQ Oxford Square Capital Corp
BAER Bridger Aerospace Group Holdings Inc
CMRA Comera Life Sciences Holdings Inc
Go

Health Care : Biotechnology |
Company profile

Indaptus Therapeutics, Inc. is a clinical biotechnology company. The Company is focused on enhancing and expanding curative cancer immunotherapy for patients with unresectable or metastatic solid tumors and lymphomas. It designs its approach by targeting specific tumor or viral antigens. Its lead candidate, Decoy20, through pre-clinical development. Its platform is based on the hypothesis that require anti-tumor immunotherapy to activate both innate and adaptive cellular immunity in both tumors and immune organs. Its approach uses multi-targeted package of bacterial pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs), in the form of attenuated and killed, intact but non-pathogenic bacteria delivered intravenously. Its intravenous therapeutic candidates target the liver, spleen, and leaky vasculature of tumors, producing immune activation in an immune organ, as well as a common site for primary and metastatic cancer and hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection.

Price
Delayed
$2.50
Day's Change
-0.21 (-7.75%)
Bid
--
Ask
--
B/A Size
--
Day's High
2.85
Day's Low
2.40
Volume
(Below Average)

Today's volume of 26,890 shares is on pace to be lower than INDP's 10-day average volume of 40,136 shares.

26,890

Regional bank crisis may be far from over, experts warn

9:39 am ET May 26, 2023 (MarketWatch)
Print

By Chris Matthews

Regulators should stay vigilant as headwinds remain, say analysts

The stock-market panic over the regional banks has subsided for now, but experts say that regulators should remain focused on shoring up the stability of the sector amid economic headwinds that could persist for years to come.

Shares of regional banks like PacWest Bancorp Corp. (PACW) have rebounded in the past week following news that their deposit bases had stabilized, with the SPDR S&P Regional Banking ETF gaining nearly 15% from its early March lows.

Richard Portes, a London Business School economist and an expert on financial stability, said in an interview with MarketWatch that the same economic headwinds that helped catalyze the failure of Silicon Valley Bank and First Republic Bank remain.

"Funding costs for regional banks took a big jump a couple of months ago and they haven't come down," Portes said, noting that the spread between the interest rate regional banks must pay to borrow money in the debt markets and the rate large, diversified banks pay has widened significantly of late.

Meanwhile, banks of all sizes must increase the rates they pay depositors to compete with other savings vehicles like money market mutual funds. Deposits are typically a bank's cheapest form of funding, but they are proving to be less stable than in past eras, according to Portes.

"Regional banks own all these long-dated assets, whether they are mortgages or longtail securities that are not paying anywhere near those funding costs," he added. "That's a really big deal."

The chart above shows the average difference in yield between 10-year Treasury bonds and 10-year debt issued by major regional banks including Citizens Financial Group Inc. (CFG) Comerica Inc. (CMA) Fifth Third Bancorp. (FITB) PacWest and Western Alliance Bancorp. (WAL)

Borrowing costs for these banks rose sharply following the Silicon Valley Bank failure and again as First Republic Bank began showing signs of stress. They have come down from recent highs, but remain elevated compared to the start of the year and compared to large diversified banks perceived to be too-big-to-fail.

Several regional banks that have found themselves at the center of market skepticism towards the sector also have significant amounts of debt scheduled to mature in the next 1-3 years, which may put further pressure on the sector as it seeks to replace this funding.

Economistsestimate that the market assets of the U.S. banking system are worth more than $2 trillion less than the book value of those assets. Banks are allowed to value securities that they plan to hold to maturity at their face value rather than their market value, which can disguise losses in a rising-interest rate environment. Bonds issued during a period of low interest rates lose value as rates rise.

Such accounting rules help lessen volatility in bank earnings and can provide a more accurate picture of profitability during normal times, but Portes argued that regulators should be looking closely at the market value of bank assets during times of stress.

A new variable for regulators to consider is the speed with which runs on Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank occurred, according to Karen Petrou, co-founder of the banking advisory firm Federal Financial Analytics, Inc.

"The most radically new lesson of the recent crisis is the vulnerability of banks to viral runs," she said, noting that new technology has enabled panic to spread much faster than in previous eras, carving out a new terrain for regulators to navigate.

Researchers led by economist Luigi Zingales of the University of Chicago published an analysis in April that showed that banks with well-functioning mobile applications experienced greater deposit flight when the Federal Reserve began raising interest rates than those without those digital tools.

This new dynamic makes it ever more important that federal and state bank supervisors aggressively monitor bank liquidity and risk-management practices during periods when rising interest rates incentivize depositors to move their money from traditional banks to higher-yielding investments.

Banks began seeing a slow-moving drain on deposits as early as the second quarter of 2022, Zingales noted, which he labeled a "bank walk" in contrast to the rapid run on deposits that occurred at several banks earlier this year.

"It is clear that deposits have become much less sticky," he wrote. "This is not a problem if...banks do not have large losses in their held-to-maturity assets or in their loan portfolio. If they do, however, this mobility will slowly expose losses that the banks cannot face."

Petrou said that these new realities mean that Congress should increase deposit insurance for business transaction accounts and regulators must get serious about improving bank supervision and becoming much more assertive when they see behavior that could lead to worries about bank solvency.

"There were quite a lot of opportunities for regulators to step in and turn these failed banks around," she said. "We've got to have much better supervision."

-Chris Matthews

This content was created by MarketWatch, which is operated by Dow Jones & Co. MarketWatch is published independently from Dow Jones Newswires and The Wall Street Journal.

	

(END) Dow Jones Newswires

May 26, 2023 09:39 ET (13:39 GMT)

Copyright (c) 2023 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.

Earnings Calendar and Events Data provided by |Terms of Use| © 2023 Wall Street Horizon, Inc.

Market data accompanied by is delayed by at least 15 minutes for NASDAQ, NYSE MKT, NYSE, and options. Duration of the delay for other exchanges varies.
Market data and information provided by Morningstar.

Options are not suitable for all investors as the special risks inherent to options trading may expose investors to potentially rapid and substantial losses.
Please read Characteristics and Risks of Standard Options before investing in options.

Information and news provided by ,, , Computrade Systems, Inc., ,, and

Copyright © 2023. All rights reserved.