At 6:15 this evening, Secretary of the Treasury Janet L. Yellen, Federal Reserve Board Chair Jerome H. Powell, and Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) Chairman Martin J. Gruenberg announced that Secretary Yellen has signed off on measures to enable the FDIC to fully protect everyone who had money in Silicon Valley Bank, Santa Clara, California, and Signature Bank, New York. They will have access to all of
their money starting Monday, March 13. None of the losses associated with this resolution, the
statement said, “will be borne by the taxpayer.” But, it continued, “Shareholders and certain unsecured
debtholders will not be protected. Senior management has also been removed.
Any losses to the Deposit Insurance Fund to support uninsured depositors will
be recovered by a special assessment on banks, as required by law.” The statement ended by assuring Americans that “the U.S.
banking system remains resilient and on a solid foundation, in large part due
to reforms that were made after the financial crisis that ensured better
safeguards for the banking industry. Those reforms combined with today's actions demonstrate
our commitment to take the necessary steps to ensure that depositors' savings
remain safe.” It’s been quite a weekend. On Friday, Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) failed in the largest bank failure since 2008. At the end of December 2022, SVB appears to have had about $209 billion in total assets and about $175 billion in deposits. This made SVB the sixteenth largest bank in the U.S., big in its sector but small compared with the more than $3 trillion JPMorgan Chase. This is the first bank failure of the Biden
presidency (while Donald Trump Jr. tweeted that he had not heard of any bank
failures during his father’s presidency, there were sixteen, eight of which
happened before the pandemic). In fact, generally, a few banks fail every
year; it is an oddity that none failed in 2021 or 2022. The failure of SVB created shock waves for three reasons.
First, SVB was the major bank for technology start-ups, so it involved much
of a single sector of the economy. Second, only about $8 billion of the $173
billion worth of deposits in SVB were greater than the $250,000 that the FDIC
insures, meaning that the companies who had made those deposits might not get
their money back quickly and thus might not be able to make payrolls,
sparking a larger crisis. Third, there was concern that the problems that
plagued SVB might cause other banks to fail, as well. What seems to have happened, though, appears to be
specific to SVB. Bloomberg’s Matt Levine explained it most
clearly: As the bank for start-ups, which have a lot of cash from investors and the initial public offering of stock, SVB had lots of deposits. But start-up companies don’t need much in the way of loans because they’ve just gotten so much cash and they don’t yet have fixed assets. So, rather
than balancing deposits with loans that fluctuate with interest rates and
thus keep a bank on an even keel, SVB’s directors took a gamble that the
Federal Reserve would not raise interest rates. They invested in long-term
Treasury bonds that paid better interest rates than short-term securities.
But when, in fact, interest rates went up, the value of those long-term bonds
sank. For most banks, higher interest rates are good news
because they can charge more for loans. But for SVB, they hurt. Then, because SVB concentrated on start-ups, they had another problem. Start-ups are also hurt by rising interest rates because they tend to promise to deliver returns in the long term, which is fine so long as interest rates stay steadily low, as they have been now for years. But as interest rates go up, investors tend to like faster returns than most
start-ups can deliver. They take their money to places that are going to see
returns sooner. For SVB, that meant their depositors began to need some of
that money they had dumped into the bank and started to withdraw their
deposits. So SVB sold securities at a loss to cover those deposits.
Other investors panicked as they saw SVB selling at a loss and losing
deposits, and they, too, started yanking their money out of the bank,
collapsing it. Banks that have a more diverse client base are less
likely to lose everyone all at once. The FDIC took control of the bank on Friday. On Sunday, regulators also shut
down Signature Bank, based in New York, which was a major bank for the
cryptocurrency industry. Another crypto-friendly bank, Silvergate, failed
last week. Congress created the FDIC under the Banking Act of 1933 to restore trust in the American banking system after more than a third of U.S. banks failed after the Great Crash of 1929, sparking runs on banks as depositors rushed to take out their money whenever rumors suggested a bank was in trouble, thus causing more failures. The FDIC is an independent agency
that insures deposits, examines and supervises banks to make sure they’re
healthy, and manages the fallout when they’re not. The FDIC is backed by the
full faith and credit of the government, but it is not funded by the
government. Member banks pay insurance dues to cover bank failures, and when
that isn’t enough money, the FDIC can borrow from the federal government or
issue debt. Over the weekend, the crisis at SVB became a larger
argument over the role of government in the protection of the economy. Tech
leaders took to social media to insist that the government must cover all the
deposits in the failed bank, not just the ones covered under FDIC. They
warned that the companies whose deposits were uninsured would fail, taking
down the rest of the economy with them. Others noted that the very men who were arguing the government should protect all the depositors’ money, not just that protected under the FDIC, have been vocal in opposing both government regulation of their industry and government relief for student loan debt, suggesting that they hate government action…except for themselves. They also pointed out that
in 2018, under Trump, Congress weakened government regulations for banks like
SVB and that SVB’s president had been a leading advocate for weakening those
regulations. Had those regulations been in place, they argue, SVB would have
remained solvent. It appears that Yellen, Powell, and Gruenberg, in consultation with the president (as required), concluded that the collapse of SVB and Signature Bank was a systemic threat to the nation’s whole financial system, or perhaps they concluded that the panic over that collapse—which is a different thing than the collapse itself—was a threat to the nation’s financial system. They apparently decided to backstop the banks to prevent
more damage. But they are eager to remind people that they are not using
taxpayer money to shore up a poorly managed bank. Right now, this appears to leave us with two takeaways.
The Biden administration had been considering tightening the banking
regulations that were loosened under Trump, and it seems likely that the need
for the federal government to step in to protect the depositors at SVB and
Signature Bank will make it much harder for those opposed to regulation to
keep that from happening. There will likely be increased pressure on the
Biden administration to guard against helping out the wealthy and
corporations rather than ordinary Americans. And, perhaps even more important, the weekend of panic
and fear over the collapse of just one major bank should make it clear that
the Republicans’ threat to default on the U.S. debt, thus pulling the rug out
from under the entire U.S. economy unless they get their way, is simply
unthinkable. —Heather Cox Richardson Notes: https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/pressreleases/monetary20230312b.htm https://www.fdic.gov/bank/historical/bank/ https://www.fdic.gov/news/press-releases/2023/pr23016.html https://www.axios.com/2023/03/12/signature-bank-shut-regulators https://www.nytimes.com/2023/03/10/business/svb-silicon-valley-bank-explainer.html https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2023-03-10/startup-bank-had-a-startup-bank-run |
"...Large US banks – Bank of America, Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan and others – have joined forces to inject $30bn into First Republic, which has had customers withdraw their money after the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) and fears that First Republic could be next.
ReplyDelete"Despite the rescue, First Republic shares tumbled 17% in extended trading on Thursday after it said it was suspending its dividend.
"Cash-strapped banks have borrowed about $300bn from the Federal Reserve in the past week. Nearly half the money – $143bn – went to holding companies for two major banks that failed in recent days, SVB and Signature Bank, triggering widespread alarm in financial markets. The Fed did not identify the banks that received the other half of the funding or say how many of them did so..." The Guardian