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  1. Hi there... Can you please quickly check to make sure your email address is up to date here? Just in case we need to reach out to you or you lose your password. Muchero thanks!

Silicon Valley Bank

Discussion in 'Too Hot for Swamp Gas' started by oragator1, Mar 10, 2023.

  1. G8R92

    G8R92 GC Hall of Fame

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    You referring to Market Cap or deposits?
     
  2. GatorWon

    GatorWon GC Hall of Fame

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  3. gator_lawyer

    gator_lawyer VIP Member

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  4. Sohogator

    Sohogator GC Hall of Fame

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    Which he is…
     
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  5. duchen

    duchen VIP Member

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    They were exposed to high interest rate risk. It will be interesting to see what the regulators reported over the last year or so.
     
    Last edited: Mar 12, 2023
  6. G8trGr8t

    G8trGr8t Premium Member

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  7. ncargat1

    ncargat1 VIP Member

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    But this is where I don't understand high finance. It is not like the institutions "lost money". I understand that against inflation, the interest rate is so low that the value of their dollar is diminished, but you only lose the principal if you sell a bond. Not every bank in the US needs to sell Treasury Bonds tomorrow to raise liquidity and distribute it to all account holders, so it is not like the system becomes insolvent over night. It is a big scary number, but is it really that abnormal??
     
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  8. duchen

    duchen VIP Member

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    They invested short term funds into long term investments. Very I sound banking practice and the interest rate spread out them at risk. My concern is with how many other banks are in a similar situation. The fed has been very aggressive taking is from historic lows interest rates back to a more historically normal environment. Financial institutions may be in trouble because if this rapid change.
     
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  9. oragator1

    oragator1 Hurricane Hunter Premium Member

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    it’s what I was mentioning above. It’s how they mark their assets.
    Let’s say you buy a bond, and you expect to eventually make from it is 100 dollars. If you have 90 dollars in deposits, you have enough capital reserves. But if you had to sell it today, because of interest rate hikes, that lower paying bond loses value, and may only be worth 80 dollars if you had to sell it. So now you don’t have enough capital to cover your deposits. Some folks saw the unrealized difference and started warning people, which became acute when they sold bonds last week and took a big loss.
    SVB was allowed to book it at the former when the latter is what they we’re really worth if there was a run. Which caused a run.
     
    Last edited: Mar 12, 2023
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  10. ncargat1

    ncargat1 VIP Member

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    OK, and I think I understand all of that, and remember some similar things from reading about the fall of Bear Stearns and the implosion of Enron. However, am I still right in my thinking that were it not for the bank run, driven by a couple of very, very calculated people, that SVB would still have been fine?
     
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  11. duchen

    duchen VIP Member

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    We never learn
     
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  12. duchen

    duchen VIP Member

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    Another reason he won’t sniff the presidency. This bank has loans all over the country and employee’s dependent on credit lines for their pay. And this is the kind of idiocy they get from DeSantis. Seems it is all he knows.
     
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  13. oragator1

    oragator1 Hurricane Hunter Premium Member

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    I know the bond/capital markets side far better than the banking regulatory side. But yeah, seems short of a run they were ok. I think it was regulatory requirements with quarter end coming that had them selling the bonds to meet their capital minimums. Not sure what their Q1 numbers would have shown.
     
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  14. gtr2x

    gtr2x GC Hall of Fame

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    That number sounds bad, but in reality most anybody (corporate or individual) that bought long term bonds in the past couple of years has a paper loss due to rising interest rates. Most all IRAs/401k's/etc investing in L/T bonds have lost value.

    From the little I've read tho, IMO there is no excuse for a bank to be in their desperate position. Banks have plenty of ways to mitigate interest rate risk exposure that the average investor does not. For some reason their chief risk officer resigned last April and they only recently replaced her. Maybe there was an interim risk review process, but on the face of it, the lack of a replacement sounds like financial malpractice.
     
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  15. RealGatorFan

    RealGatorFan Premium Member

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    Biden and Co just sealed their fate. About the dumbest move I've seen by any WH admin when it comes to economics. They just set a precedent by guaranteeing all $300+B deposits including all those not insured. The next bank or banks to fail will sue the WH if they don't also reciprocate and we don't have enough trees to print all the money Biden will guarantee if this becomes a contagion. Put it this way, there's $20T, yes with a T, in total depositor accounts if you include uninsured accounts. These 2 banks fell apart because of a run and all we need is slightly less than 1% of total bank runs to create a full panic.

     
  16. ncargat1

    ncargat1 VIP Member

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    Does not really seem like that dumb of an idea. The only entity that can temporarily eat the loss in value of the T-bonds is the US Government and/or the Federal Reserve Bank. Much the same way that they did in 2009. Since most of these transfers will actually be loans, just like in 2009 and beyond, in the end, the fed gains interest payments on the loans, do they not??

    US regulators say SVB customers will be made whole as second bank fails | CNN Business
     
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  17. oragator1

    oragator1 Hurricane Hunter Premium Member

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    I think everyone agrees that similar to ‘08 there aren’t any great options. But if we don’t back stop it, the entire regional bank sector is at risk. If contagion is your worry this is the only way to stop potentially stop it.
    And that’s before talking about all the effects on companies that do business with SVB, it would basically end the start up sector in the US if they are allowed to fail, which has been the brightest spot in the US economy now for two decades probably. Including a burgeoning tie with the US military that would be impacted. And all the companies that can’t make payroll shutting their doors…just can’t happen. Wouldn’t have mattered who was president, as soon as anyone with financial and industry knowledge got in the room with the decision makers the same decision was coming. Same as GWB when he had to do it (whose decision I also supported). Political idealism falls away to economic reality.
     
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  18. l_boy

    l_boy 5500

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    I figured this is what would happen. If the administration did what was needed to save the economy, take care of the depositors and beneficiaries of those depositors, such as employees, and save startups some of which can be of great future benefits, Republicans would complain and start the narrative of it being a bail out, blah blah blah. Of course if they didn’t do that, and let the situation expand and the whole house of cards crumble, they’d blame Biden for that too.

    Ultimately, what is the upside of depositors taking a haircut? What does that accomplish? Are we saying that depositors were making risky decisions by having operating liquidity in banks and we want to punish that? What exactly is the moral hazard that we are trying to minimize?
     
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  19. oragator1

    oragator1 Hurricane Hunter Premium Member

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    B3149984-6F16-4AB7-A579-18959BBA0B06.jpg
     
  20. 108

    108 Premium Member

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    “We” being mostly the GOP
     
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