Nothing more than a big gamble, if it paid off then celebrations otherwise just accept the loss as that is business.
The venture capitalist just placed their bets on the wrong horses, how many startup companies go to the wall in their first year, so they knew the score.
I've now got the horrid vision of Katie Price sealing round the bath using a ****.Either sealants or breast implants...
This is the most accurate summary I've seen here but it's still inaccurate.My understanding is that the SVB was set up to hold the deposits of start-up companies who were funded by venture capital and their deposits had tripled in the last year.
As start-ups, the companies had a lot of cash (from the venture capitalists) but no revenue.
All banks make the money to run their operation (and make a profit) by lending the funds on deposit at a higher interest rate than they pay the depositors. Most banks lend to their client base, but SVB's client base had little or no revenue, meaning they weren't in a position to borrow, so to fund their operation and pay interest on deposits SVB put a proportion of the deposits they couldn't lend into bonds.
However, bonds are a long-term fixed-yield investment and when interest rates started to rise SVB's depositors found they could get better rates from other banks, so started to withdraw their deposits causing a run on the bank.
Whilst on paper SVB had sufficient assets to more than cover deposits, if they sold the bonds they held before their mature date SVB would take a significant loss on them and not have enough funds to pay depositors.
Again, as I understand it, the failure of SVB was not due to mal-administration "shenanigans", but due to their having a narrow focus on a relatively few large depositors who were suddenly offered better interest rates elsewhere.
I doubt that many banks could withstand a significant run on deposits, hence the UK Government (who can just print money) protecting personal deposits up to £85,000.
I don't think this is anything like the 2008 banking crisis where banks were buying worthless debts (promises to pay by people with no means to do so) from each other for full value.
Just my understanding.
You should have put a content warning on that, not sure I will be able to rid myself of that image nowI've now got the horrid vision of Katie Price sealing round the bath using a ****.
It might just be me, but as an engineer you are trained to look at risk assessment, what happens if questions.
So it's a "virtue" to have a leadership team composed of superficial fools and incompetent villains? That's lucky - it's exactly what we have now....Never - probably as it’s not a virtue whereas having a senior leadership team that is representative of the population is.
No, of course it's not a virtue and that's not what my comment said if you read it in the context of the post it responded to.So it's a "virtue" to have a leadership team composed of superficial fools and incompetent villains? That's lucky - it's exactly what we have now....
I'd say that both the context and the meaning of what you wrote were perfectly clear. There may have been a disconnect between what you wrote and what you wished to convey, but expecting someone to guess your meaning isn't much of a way of getting a point across...No, of course it's not a virtue and that's not what my comment said if you read it in the context of the post it responded to.
Sorry. I didn't realise I'd wandered into the Oxford Union. I mistakenly thought it was a woodworking forum where a bunch of blokes were having a discussion. I'll aspire to your high standards in future.I'd say that both the context and the meaning of what you wrote were perfectly clear. There may have been a disconnect between what you wrote and what you wished to convey, but expecting someone to guess your meaning isn't much of a way of getting a point across...
In fairness to the SVP management, they didn't have a lot of options. There was a huge rise in venture capital investment generally and SVB's deposits for the year increased by over 100%. They had too much cash on deposit to lend it all, but they still had to pay the depositors interest. They decided to put some of the funds into Government bonds expecting that as part of a mix of investments they would keep the money "safe".It might just be me, but as an engineer you are trained to look at risk assessment, what happens if questions. Now, for a bank to invest such huge amounts in government bonds on the assumption that interest rates would stay at abnormal low levels were either stupid or completely incompetent in my view. Nobody, and I absolutely mean nobody who had taken even the slightest interest in what happens over time to interest rates could not have considered it a relatively high risk that the bonds would devalue significantly due to a sudden increase in interest rates. What has happened to SVP was both highly probably, absolutely predictable and down right criminal that it occurred. Having said all that, the junk products that brought the financial system to its knees in 2008 are still being traded, sub prime mortgages are still bundled and sold.
Maybe they have a case against the lender for giving out doubtful financial advice causing the run....?!In fairness to the SVP management, they didn't have a lot of options. There was a huge rise in venture capital investment generally and SVB's deposits for the year increased by over 100%. They had too much cash on deposit to lend it all, but they still had to pay the depositors interest. They decided to put some of the funds into Government bonds expecting that as part of a mix of investments they would keep the money "safe".
Then one of the big venture capital funders put out a missive to the start-ups they had invested in with a recommendation to move their deposits somewhere else to get more interest. That caused the run, and suddenly SVB needed to sell the bonds to give deposits back.
My understanding is that SVB's main problem was their narrow client base. They had less than 40,000 clients (miniscule in banking terms) but each had a large positive balance, so it only took a relatively small number of clients to withdraw all their funds to start a significant run. Once the word was out that the bank was in trouble, everybody wanted their money back and no bank can withstand that. In fact SVB had more than enough funds on paper to cover their deposits, but no bank keeps everything in liquid assets.
I do agree that the lessons of 2008 have not been learned by the banking sector, but I don't believe SVB's failure is due to mal-administration or incompetence.
I may be biased in my opinion as I’m on the Risk Committee of a major financial institution and on the Investment Committee of a large pension scheme. I struggle to see how incompetence was not at the heart of this - both with the board of SVB and the US regulator.In fairness to the SVP management, they didn't have a lot of options. There was a huge rise in venture capital investment generally and SVB's deposits for the year increased by over 100%. They had too much cash on deposit to lend it all, but they still had to pay the depositors interest. They decided to put some of the funds into Government bonds expecting that as part of a mix of investments they would keep the money "safe".
Then one of the big venture capital funders put out a missive to the start-ups they had invested in with a recommendation to move their deposits somewhere else to get more interest. That caused the run, and suddenly SVB needed to sell the bonds to give deposits back.
My understanding is that SVB's main problem was their narrow client base. They had less than 40,000 clients (miniscule in banking terms) but each had a large positive balance, so it only took a relatively small number of clients to withdraw all their funds to start a significant run. Once the word was out that the bank was in trouble, everybody wanted their money back and no bank can withstand that. In fact SVB had more than enough funds on paper to cover their deposits, but no bank keeps everything in liquid assets.
I do agree that the lessons of 2008 have not been learned by the banking sector, but I don't believe SVB's failure is due to mal-administration or incompetence.
They could hedge against rising interest rates and actually did up until the end of last year, but then changed their focus, believing (correctly) that interest rates had probably topped out, so dramatically reduced their hedging and crystalised the profit from those instruments they closed out. Entering 2023, SVB had very little hedging on their investment portfolios. This was a bad call because they had relatively few but mostly high worth depositors, so a change in sentiment that led to just a few customers withdrawing their funds created a cash flow issue which led to the run - any institution known to be in a fire sale is vulnerable. For a bank with a more "normal" customer base - millions of relatively low value investors - SVB's hedging strategy would have been fine... except they weren't a "normal" bank...I may be biased in my opinion as I’m on the Risk Committee of a major financial institution and on the Investment Committee of a large pension scheme. I struggle to see how incompetence was not at the heart of this - both with the board of SVB and the US regulator.
The UK banks are subject to stringent stress tests that would have flagged up the issue.
@deema is correct. If they couldn’t hedge they shouldn’t have taken the deposits.
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