Silicon Valley Bank failure

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Edsl48

GIM2 Refugee
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What a surprise huh? I also read that 93% of the Baanks assets exceeded the FDIC insurance maximums...ouch


Silicon Valley Bank Chief Executive Officer Greg Becker sold $3.6 million of company stock under a trading plan less than two weeks before the firm disclosed extensive losses that led to its failure.
Silicon Valley Bank Chief Executive Officer Greg Becker sold $3.6 million of company stock under a trading plan less than two weeks before the firm disclosed extensive losses that led to its failure.
While Becker may not have anticipated the bank run on Jan. 26 when he adopted the plan, the capital raise is material,” said Dan Taylor, a professor at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School who studies corporate trading disclosures. “If they were in discussion for a capital raise at the time the plan was adopted, that is highly problematic.”

In December, the SEC finalized new rules that would mandate at least a 90-day cooling-off period for most executive trading plans, meaning that they can’t make trades on a new schedule for three months after they take hold.

Executives are required to start complying with those rules on April 1.
 
This story is big enough that it warrants it's own thread.

The Fed's rising rates set us up the bomb:

Mini bank run ensued making SVB balance sheet hole even worse:

This is a massive bank failure:



FDIC is on the case and has set up a bridge bank to ensure that insured deposits are made whole:

Unfortunately, a large percentage of SVB accounts are uninsured (above the $250K FDIC insurance limit):

SVB might just be the tip of the iceberg as the Fed's rising rates will pressure the balance sheets of small and regional banks:

Treasury Dept is concerned:
U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said Friday she’s tracking a number of banks as Silicon Valley Bank has faced major problems.
...

 
This could force the Fed to pause and/or pivot their rate policy. They walk a fine line now choosing whether to either fight inflation (raise rates) or save bank balance sheets (hold or lower rates).

There are also some contagion fears around the USDC stablecoin which held assets at SVB:
Circle’s USDC, the second-largest stablecoin, with $43 billion market capitalization, held an undisclosed part of its $9.8 billion cash reserves at failed Silicon Valley Bank.


If USDC lost significant money at SVB, they might be forced to sell a large tranche of Treasuries...

Aside from Circle/USDC, there are a lot of (non-financial sector) companies that are facing similar financial issues if they had all their eggs in the SVB basket (far exceeding the FDIC insurance limit).
 
Possible trading malfeasance issues...


Executives were selling personal holdings of SVB stock:
 
There is a possibility that man of the large depositor's might get a bit of a haircut on this...one the other hand the Government tends to consider those types with its too big to fail theory. I think many of us have held PMs with the thought that eventually the Government can not print enough fiat to bail out the big guys. This is a somewhat long and graphic loaded article posted at the link site

Folks times like this remind me if you have balances ar your broker, bank or other financial institution the insured limit is $250,000

Silicon Valley Bank Collapses, 93 Percent of Deposits Not Insured! What Now?​

Regulators shut down Silicon Valley Bank today following a run on deposits.

Deposits Not Insured

Part of what made SVB unique is its client base—the vast majority of its customer's accounts were too big for full FDIC insurance (though recent deposit flight probably reduced the share). Waiting on the FDIC to see how many uninsured deposits are left and if they can be made whole.

 
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I merged @Edsl48 thread from the politics forum with this one.
 

Silicon Valley Bank chief pressed Congress to weaken risk regulations​


Eight years before the second-largest bank failure in American history occurred this week, the bank’s president personally pressed Congress to reduce scrutiny of his financial institution, citing the “low risk profile of our activities and business model”, according to federal records reviewed by the Lever.

Three years later – after the bank spent more than half a million dollars on federal lobbying – lawmakers obliged.

On Friday, California regulators shut down the Silicon Valley Bank (SVB), a top lender to venture capital firms and tech startups, and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation took it over, following a bank run by its customers. The bank reportedly did not have a chief risk officer in the months leading up to the collapse, while more than 90% of its deposits were not insured.

Full article:

 
Oops! Should I care? The comments are comedy gold...

 
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Circle’s USDC instability causes domino effect on DAI, USDD stablecoins​

Other popular cryptocurrencies, such as USDT and BUSD, continue to maintain a 1:1 peg with the U.S. dollar.


By Arijit Sarkar
Mar 11, 2023 10:44 AM
View original

The stablecoin ecosystem felt an immediate effect as USD Coin (USDC) depegged from the U.S. dollar due to a subsequent sell-off after Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) did not process $3.3 billion of Circle’s $40 million transfer request. Given USDC’s collateral influence, major stablecoin ecosystems followed suit in depegging from the U.S. dollar.

Dai (DAI), a stablecoin issued by MakerDAO, lost 7.4% of its value due to USDC’s depegging. As of June 2022, $6.78 billion worth of DAI supply was collateralized by $8.52 billion worth of cryptocurrencies, confirms data from Statista.

DAI’s total crypto assets used for on-chain collateralization as of June 27, 2022. Source: Statista

more
 
One take away...........keep an emergency stash of cash. Ya never know.
 
Here's an interesting take on the situation. It's one man's opinion (typed up at a Starbucks) so take it fwiw and dyodd.

SVB Bailout Could Immediately Solve Global Security Problems​

What is the common denominator in the recent port congestion crisis and current Taiwan security crisis, global food crisis, global energy crisis, US military PACOM logistics crisis, the Silicon Valley Bank Crisis, Ukraine War? What’s at the core of China’s strength and power? Ships! In this raw, unedited (we apologize for the grammar and spelling) emergency editorial Captain John Konrad explains an immediate solution to all these seemingly unrelated problems: returning Silicon Valley (SV) to its shipbuilding and naval research roots.

By John Konrad (gCaptain) In recent discussions led by prominent Venture Capitalists (VCs) and influencers like David Sachs, there has been talk of Silicon Valley Bank’s (SVB) failure creating a financial contagion that could spread across the entire financial system. While some argue that SV startups are essential in America’s competition with China, others believe that these claims are being used to strengthen their case for a government bailout. However, it’s important to note that the nation doesn’t need another TikTok clone to compete with China, we need innovation in defense and logistics. Moreover, the possibility of a bailout engineered by tech billionaires seems likely, given their wealth and power. While this may seem cynical, there is a solution that can benefit the nation and public good: returning the valley to its roots. By doing so, we can engineer a bailout that benefits not just the tech elite, but strengthen the nation as a whole.

More:

 
Two huge risks to watch this week:

1. SVB business customers are unable to make payroll. Massive layoffs (estimated at 120,000).

2. Panic lines at SVB branches Monday morning trigger a loss of confidence nationwide in hundreds of mid-sized banks.
 

SVB’s 44-Hour Collapse Was Rooted in Treasury Bets During Pandemic​

(Bloomberg) -- Greg Becker sat in a red armchair at an invite-only conference in Los Angeles last week, legs crossed, one hand cutting through air. Most Read...
By Brian Chappatta
Mar 11, 2023

(Bloomberg) -- Greg Becker sat in a red armchair at an invite-only conference in Los Angeles last week, legs crossed, one hand cutting through air.

Most Read from Bloomberg
“We pride ourselves on being the best financial partner in the most challenging times,” SVB Financial Group’s chief executive officer told the Upfront Summit on March 1, a day before his firm was up for Bank of the Year honors at a London gala.

Just a week later, it all fell apart.

SVB’s collapse into Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. receivership came suddenly on Friday, following a frenetic 44 hours in which its long-established customer base of tech startups yanked deposits. But its fate was sealed years ago — during the height of the financial mania that swept across America when the pandemic hit.

US venture capital-backed companies raised $330 billion in 2021 — almost doubling the previous record a year before. Cathie Wood’s ETFs were surging and retail traders on Reddit were bullying hedge funds.

Crucially, the Federal Reserve pinned interest rates at unprecedented lows. And, in a radical shakeup of its framework, it promised to keep them there until it saw sustained inflation well above 2% — an outcome that no official forecast.

SVB took in tens of billions of dollars from its venture capital clients and then, confident that rates would stay steady, plowed that cash into longer-term bonds.

In doing so, it created — and walked straight into — a trap.

more
 
The bad news is after they sell bank assets the depositors might get 50 cents on the dollar.

The good news is each depositor gets to select between a new clock radio or a set of steak knives.
 

Short-sellers make $600m in one day on Silicon Valley Bank crisis​

Argonaut Capital CEO Barry Norris: 'Contagion will depend on how long it takes before the endgam​


Silicon Valley Bank’s share plunge has left European banking stocks reeling as Deutsche Bank and Societe Generale dropped by over 6% on 10 March. Getty Images

Friday March 10, 2023 1:41 pm

Short-sellers have made millions by betting big against Silicon Valley Bank after its parent company SVB Financial Group suffered a multi-billion dollar hit in securities sales.

SVB Financial Group launched a $1.8bn share sale on 8 March to cover a post-tax loss of $1.8bn caused by a larger-than-expected decline in deposits, which led to its stock plunging 60% on 9 March.
Silicon...


 
Somehow he LOOKS like a Club Fed inmate, already.

As for his "ask": IT'S A (expletive) JOB, YOU BUFFOON!

YOU were to make decisions on policy to keep the doors open. YOU BLEW IT.

MY job was to evaluate loan apps, or prepare weekly balance reports, or file papers, whatever.

Now you have no money to PAY ME.

C-YA!
 

If there are No SVB Bailouts, Will There Be Financial Armageddon?​

Bill Ackman wants bailouts of Silicon Valley Bank, theorizing massive repercussions if not. I expect some haircuts, then the world will go on.
Ackman's View

"The FDIC’s and OCC’s failure to do their jobs should not be allowed to cause the destruction of 1,000s of our nation’s highest potential and highest growth businesses (and the resulting losses of 10s of 1,000s of jobs for some of our most talented younger generation) while also permanently impairing our community and regional banks’ access to low-cost deposits. .... the unintended consequences of the gov’t’s failure to guarantee SVB deposits are vast and profound and need to be considered and addressed before Monday. Otherwise, watch out below."

No Bailout Proposals? Really?

Evans said no one was proposing a bailout. He was wrong.



 
Twitter post/thread is about 6 tweets long:


Bank run fear might be permeating the public consciousness now.
 
Twitter post/thread is about 6 tweets long:


Bank run fear might be permeating the public consciousness now.

How old is the FDIC again? They've never raised the amount that I can remember and nor do they have any money to raise the amount.
 
Ackerman is a 100% self interested asshole, but that doesn't necessarily mean he's wrong...

 
 
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