Silicon Valley Bank collapses [and First Republic Bank]

First Republic Bank’s 2022 10-K annual report (page 16) says that “As of December 31, 2022, 63% of our total deposits were from business clients and 37% of our total deposits were from consumer clients.” Some more notes are on page 78-79.

First Republic Bank’s call report, Schedule RC-O, says that it had 754,340 non-retirement deposit accounts of $250,000 or less, and 84,680 non-retirement deposit accounts of more than $250,000. However, the large accounts had a total of about four times as much money as the fully insured accounts, and the uninsured amount was about 85% of the total amount of money in the large accounts.

It is not entirely obvious from the available information how much of the uninsured deposits is in business versus personal accounts.

That is not an issue. Congress sets the amount that they see fit. If Congress says $250k is the max exposure, why should the fed/FDIC/Treasury change it unilaterally.

That said, perhaps banks should be required to inform customers when any account goes over $250k that they are no longer insured above that limit.

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How does a company open numerous FDIC insured accounts at one bank that total more than $250,000? Does it create different corporate subsidiaries to qualify as different account owners that qualify for separate FDIC insurance on their accounts?

It should grow over time because our economy grows over time and that way the protection fdic deposit insurance provides maintains its relative influence in securing faith in US banks.

If insured deposit amounts are only raised by Congress during a crisis, then the act of raising the limit becomes a confirmation that there is a crisis.

But if protection grew with the economy, those changes would be expected and normalized.

If the thought was that $250k was good in 2008, and it grew with time, what would it be today? $500k? $1M? If so, I don’t think it would matter for SVB customers as many were saying they had more than $5m in one account.

I don’t think the FDIC limit is ever going to $5M or $10M.

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The investments were not “risky”, they were in US Treasury bonds. If they’re held to maturity everything is fine. The problem is that inflation caused the those bonds to be worth less when the bank was forced to sell them prior to maturity. If the banks aren’t marking those securities to market on a more regular basis because they aren’t required to would Dodd-Frank in any iteration have caught this problem?

It doesn’t seem so because quite a few banks seem to have a similar problem on their current balance sheets.

While the investments themselves were not risky, the strategy chosen was not prudent, to say the least.

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Duration risk is real risk. It is not correct to say that the instruments are not risky. There is a duration mismatch between assets and liabilities.

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I look at business wealth differently than personal wealth. If someone with personal wealth didn’t know better, shame on them. For businesses, esp start ups, trying to keep costs down, it makes more sense. Someone wealthy taking a hit is no big deal to the overall economy. Several businesses not being able to make payroll most definitely is a big deal.

My overall concern (having no finances at all involved) is keeping the US economy going strong. It amazes me that it’s not everyone’s concern, but going more on that would have to be written on the political thread.

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I think we are on the same page. See “strategy.”

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https://www.bls.gov/data/inflation_calculator.htm says that $250,000 in September 2008 is CPI inflation adjusted to $343.765.28 in February 2023.

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I do t think the feds bailed out SVB to help out their supporters, or to help out the rich. The only reason they did it was to avoid a run on the banking system. They did it to try to protect our already fragile economy.

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From The Economist:

How deep is the rot in America’s banking industry? | The Economist

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I meant that even if congress raised the FDIC covered amount to $500k or $1M, it still wouldn’t be enough to cover every depositor in every account. If they pick an amount today and then index it with inflation, it’s still not going to cover every account.

It was never meant to cover every business account, every risk.

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As long as banks are in the intermediary business of borrowing short (deposits) and lending (or investing) long (with longer term uncallable loans or bonds or loans repackaged as securities), they will always have to consider interest rate risk.

The problem is that many, if not most, of them don’t. If their interest rate sensitive assets are deemed by their accountants to be “held to maturity”, there is little incentive to hedge. As The Economist puts it, “doing so is expensive and banks are unlikely to have done much of it”.

Some banks are apparently buying greater amounts of FDIC insurance per depositor. I received an email from one bank which claims to have increased its FDIC insurance to $2m per depositor in individual accounts and $4m in joint accounts. I’m not sure it is because they are worried about losing depositors or just want to attract new depositors.

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Are they buying the additional deposit insurance from the FDIC or from private insurers?

Could be both.

They increased their FDIC coverage so it must be from FDIC.

https://www.cnn.com/2023/03/17/business/svb-financial-bankruptcy/index.html