Silicon Valley Bank, 4

 
 

Vocabulary

 

bonus employee bank of choice
fail employer unemployment
line up retrieve ultimately
funds flow (2) chose/chose/chosen
sector hardship appear (2)
startup venture investment
speed unravel angel investors
CEO collapse venture capital
expect disaster all of the sudden
set commit come to an end
crystal stage (2) catch by surprise
shiny combine set the stage
cash optimistic improvement
vault struggle crystal ball
fuel (2) withdraw current (3)
decide in theory account (3)
access customer hand back
borrow treasury treasury bond
debt treasure pay back (2)
choice stock (2) customer
satisfy discount sell/sold/sold
supply bond (2) supply and demand
sell off cash out announce
worth share (3) balance (2)
rate option (2) mutual (2)
price imagine cripple (2)
prefer customer choose/chose/chosen
hope reignite ride out the storm
idiotic backfired transparent (2)
extent hike (2) anonymous
panic bank run forthrightness
assure all at once phenomenon
crisis mortgage confidence
sector spread (2) regulator
deny crypto (2) significant
cite common confidence
pale surprise pale in comparison
size subprime spread like wildfire
quell prevent sound/sounder/soundest
insure afloat (2) guarantee
exceed available great/greater/greatest
eligible prevent emergency
blame hedge (2) hedge fund
skip (2) intervene enormous
blame stunning aggressive
trouble inflation slow down
tame criticize undertow (2)
doubt supervise modest (2)
borrow term (3) short-term
way interest investment
asset damage interest rate
woke focus (2) diversity (2)
imply opinion inclusion (2)
avoid taxpayer distracted
mess bailout column (2)
willing election deposit (2)
urge approach alternative
assert memory take office
fear priority paralyze (2)
retreat convert go under (2)
wise angel (2) advance (2)
ignore counsel interest (2)
decline combine inauguration
push crash (2) quarter (2)
pull justified sink/sank/sunk (2)
brink bring up institution
fine average beat/beat/beaten (2)
qualify legend (2) break/broke/broken
profit return a profit

 
 
 
 

Video

 

 
 
 
 

Transcript

 

March 10 was bonus day for the 8,000 employees of Silicon Valley Bank.

They got their bonus that Friday.

Hours later, the bank failed.

On Monday, customers could be seen lining up to try to retrieve their funds.

.     .     .     .     .     .     .     .

Silicon Valley Bank was the bank of choice for thousands of companies in the tech sector — many of them startups fueled by angel investors.

Almost half of all venture capital funding in the United States flowed through the bank at one time or another.

And then, suddenly . . . it all came to an end.

.     .     .     .     .     .     .     .

The speed at which things unraveled caught many by surprise — even the bank’s CEO. A few weeks before the collapse, CEO Greg Becker told CNBC that the future looked good.

Greg Becker, CEO, Silicon Valley Bank: “What we are expecting to see in 2023, first half, actually in venture capital, actually a little bit more of a decline even than what we saw in the fourth quarter.

But the second half was going to kind of create that modest improvement and really set the stage for a better 2024.

So, we’re optimistic because our crystal ball is a little clearer than it was in the third quarter last year.”

Perhaps his crystal ball wasn’t shiny enough to predict the future: startups struggled to raise additional venture capital due to the current economic environment.

.     .     .     .     .     .     .     .

So, they began withdrawing more and more of their cash from their SVB accounts. The bank had the money — in theory — but it wasn’t sitting in a vault waiting to be handed back to its customers.

Bank Depositor-Customer in an old movie: “You’re thinking of this all wrong as if I had the money back in the safe.

The money’s not here!”

The bank had invested the money in Treasury bonds, a type of government debt, in which the government borrows money and pays it back with interest.

When customers started pulling their money out of the bank, SVB had no choice but to start selling the bonds at a discount so they could get enough cash to satisfy customer demand.

Becker decided to publicly announce that the bank had sold off $21 billion in bonds.

But those bonds weren’t worth as much as they used to be because the Fed kept raising interest rates.

When interest rates go up, bond prices usually go down.

This is because new bonds have higher interest rates, so people prefer them over older bonds.

Think of it like this: Imagine you have a candy store and sell a candy for $1. This candy gives the buyer a little 10-cent surprise each year.

If another store sells a similar candy for the same price but offers a 15-cent surprise each year, people would choose to buy candy from the other store instead.

So the bank had to sell its older bonds at lower prices, which ultimately led to a loss of $1.8 billion.

While Becker hoped to raise more than that in new capital, he said he still had not found anyone willing to help the bank ride out the storm.

Perhaps he was looking to be transparent, but it backfired.

Big time.

CNN quotes an anonymous bank employee as saying: “That was absolutely idiotic . . . their transparency and forthrightness did them in.”

.     .     .     .     .     .     .     .

The extent of the bank’s financial troubles panicked customers, leading to a phenomenon called a bank run, where everyone starts taking their money out of the bank all at once.

The next day, customers withdrew $42 billion from their accounts, leaving SVB with a negative cash balance of $958 million.

And, public filings show Becker himself cashed out personal shares and options worth $2 million dollars just before the collapse!

The day the bank failed, Becker told employees, “I’m not making the decisions anymore.”

.     .     .     .     .     .     .     .

This is the second largest bank failure in US history, behind only the collapse of Washington Mutual at the height of the subprime mortgage crisis in 2008.

And then, the third largest bank failure in U.S. history happened on SVB’s heels: Two days later, on March 12, regulators shut down Signature Bank in New York to prevent the crisis from spreading through the entire financial system.

A quarter of Signature Bank’s deposits came from the cryptocurrency sector.

But, regulators denied it closed the bank because of its large hand in crypto and, rather, cited what it called “a significant crisis of confidence in the bank’s leadership”.

.     .     .     .     .     .     .     .

The question now is: are there more bank failures to come?

They are more common than people think. Few people are old enough to remember the 2,293 banks that collapsed in 1931, a development that led to the Great Depression.

But there have been more than 500 since the collapse of Washington Mutual in 2008, although most pale in comparison to the size of SVBs.

Mark Williams, a former bank examiner for the Federal Reserve, told Boston University’s daily news website BU Today, “If not quelled, bank runs can spread like wildfire, crippling even the soundest of banks.”

To quell further panic, President Biden quickly assured Americans.

Joe Biden, President of the US (2021-2024) “Americans can have confidence that the banking system is safe. Your deposits will be there when you need them.”

In the U.S., deposits in a bank are insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation or FDIC — up to $250,000.

However, over 90% of deposits at SVB exceeded that amount.

The federal government then jumped in to guarantee deposits greater than $250,000. And, the Federal Reserve also said it would make additional emergency funds available to eligible financial institutions to prevent similar problems in the future.

Billionaire hedge fund investor, Bill Ackman, made a point of saying: “Had U.S. regulators not intervened today, we would have had a 1930s bank run continuing first thing Monday causing enormous economic damage and hardship to millions.”

However, Ackman also warned: “More banks will likely fail despite the intervention”.

.     .     .     .     .     .     .     .

There’s little doubt that the Fed is partly to blame for SVB’s stunning collapse.

Over the past year, the Federal Reserve has been aggressively hiking interest rates to tame inflation by making borrowing more expensive, which slows down spending and keeps prices from rising too quickly.

And in the process, SVB got caught in the undertow.

Former U.S. Treasury Secretary Larry Summers criticized regulators and also the bank’s management.
Larry Summers, Former U.S. Treasury Secretary: “And I have to say that it doesn’t appear on current facts that a very good job was done about regulating and supervising Silicon Valley Bank.

It had committed kind of the most elementary errors, of borrowing money in a very short term way and then investing it in a long-term way, and then when interest rates went up, those assets lost their value.”

.     .     .     .     .     .     .     .

Some are blaming wokeness for the bank’s demise, implying that the collapse was related to the company’s focus on diversity and inclusion.

A Wall Street Journal opinion columnist wrote: “I’m not saying 12 white men would have avoided this mess, but the company may have been distracted by diversity demands”

The best outcome for the failed bank is for U.S. officials to find a buyer. There will be no bailout…which typically uses taxpayer dollars to keep the bank afloat.

Biden does not want to reignite the anger from the 2008 Wall Street bailouts that were funded by taxpayers, especially with a presidential election approaching.

.     .     .     .     .     .     .     .

The collapse of Silicon Valley Bank brings up memories of another President who took office in 1933 when banks were going under almost daily.

During his inaugural address, President Franklin D. Roosevelt famously urged people not to panic.

“Let me assert my firm belief that the only thing we have to fear is fear itself — nameless, unreasoning, unjustified terror which paralyzes needed efforts to convert retreat into advance.”

It appears that 90 years later, Roosevelt’s wise counsel has been largely ignored.

Financial stocks have now lost a combined $465 billion in just one weekend.

But will it be the last disaster?

This crash was caused in part by the Fed raising rates — which they may still be committed to.

JP Morgan says the SP 500 could sink another 20% as the economy is pushed to the brink.

So big institutions like them are going big into alternative assets. One alternative asset rose an average of 29% last year, handily beating stocks: fine art.

Masterworks offers fully investible art from legends like Picasso, which are qualified with the SEC, and broken into shares – so you don’t need millions of dollars to invest.

In fact, each of their 11 exits to date has returned a profit. As a result, paintings have sold out in hours, not days.

But right now you can get priority access to skip the wait list below.

*     *     *     *     *     *     *


 

Questions

 

Bank. Silicon Valley Bank’s decline and insolvency (bankruptcy) was a very slow, gradual process. True or false?

Financial Institution. Was most of the money in Silicon Valley Bank from working class and middle class people?

Wall Street. Before the collapse of SVB, was Greg Becker the CEO optimistic, pessimistic, in the middle, both, or neither?

Stock Market, Stocks, Shares. What precipitated the crash? Did more customers deposit more money into Silicon Valley Bank?

Investment. What role did securities, US treasury bonds, and interest rates play?

Deposit, Withdrawal. The bank run by Silicon Valley Bank customers was because of distrust due to the bank’s opacity (lack of transparency). Is this right or wrong?

Loan, Borrow. Following SVB’s collapse, was there a contagion, or a “domino effect”?

Credit, Debt. The government did nothing. Is this correct or incorrect?

Bankruptcy. Was the collapse of SVB unique in history? Were there any precedents?

Default, Foreclosure. The narrator suggest that people invest in property, gold and silver. Yes or no?
 
 
 
Interest Rate. Are you familiar with other banking crises or scandals?

Treasury Bonds. Why were there banking crises? What caused the banking crisis?

Mortgage. What have you been told or taught about money and banks by your parents, teachers, the media, self-help, motivational and success coaches and gurus?

Monthly Installments. What might happen in the future?

Bank Statement. What could or should people, businesses, governments, banks do?
 
 
 
 
 
 

Comments are closed.