Investing

Schwab’s $7 Trillion Empire Built on Low Rates Is Showing Cracks

  • Company faces pressure from bond losses and rising cash yields
  • Executives say business is misunderstood, has enough liquidity
Schwab’s $7 Trillion Empire Showing Cracks
Lock
This article is for subscribers only.

On the surface, Charles Schwab Corp. being swept up in the worst US banking crisis since 2008 makes little sense.

The firm, a half-century mainstay in the brokerage industry, isn’t overexposed to crypto like Silvergate Capital and Signature Bank, nor to startups and venture capital, which felled Silicon Valley Bank. Fewer than 20% of Schwab’s depositors exceed the FDIC’s $250,000 insurance cap, compared with about 90% at SVB. And with 34 million accounts, a phalanx of financial advisers and more than $7 trillion of assets across all of its businesses, it towers over regional institutions.