Regulators Shut Down SVB

Regulators Shut Down SVB

Estimated reading time: 2 minutes

Financial regulators responded to Silicon Valley Bank’s (SVB) recent collapse by announcing that they have shut the bank down. The decision was made by the California Department of Financial Protection and Innovation, which announced the news on March 10. Those regulators have named the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) as receiver.

In a press release published on Friday, the FDIC confirmed that it has created the Deposit Insurance National Bank of Santa Clara (DINB) to ensure the protection of insured depositors. The FDIC also tried to reassure those insured depositors by announcing that they will regain access to their insured deposits by “no later than Monday morning, March 13, 2023.” In addition:

“The FDIC will pay uninsured depositors an advance dividend within the next week. Uninsured depositors will receive a receivership certificate for the remaining amount of their uninsured funds. As the FDIC sells the assets of Silicon Valley Bank, future dividend payments may be made to uninsured depositors.”

The collapse of SVB

The regulatory move to shut down SVB caps a tumultuous week for the bank. On Wednesday, news broke that SVB was attempting to raise roughly $2 billion in capital, citing client cash burn. According to some reports, the bank’s tech-industry client firms have drawn down their deposits as rising interest rates and a slowing initial public offering environment have inhibited their ability to raise cash.

The bank also revealed on Wednesday that it had suffered a $1.8 billion loss in a $21 billion securities sale conducted as part of an effort to raise capital and adjust its balance sheet. The repositioning attempt was designed to move toward short-term assets that would be less impacted by additional interest rate hikes.

Markets responded to the news by selling off SVB shares on Thursday, causing shares to drop by 60%. That drop was followed by another 60% decline on Friday, in premarket trading which was soon suspended.

Silicon Valley Bank reported total assets of about $209 billion at the end of 2022. It held more than $175 billion in deposits for its customers. Its failure makes it the first FDIC-insured financial institution to fail since October 2020, and the largest bank to fail since 2008.

Learn more on this topic

Related Insights

FDIC Issues New Draft Guidance for Bank Merger Scrutiny

FDIC Issues New Draft Guidance for Bank Merger Scrutiny

This week, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation issued draft guidance that would increase bank merger scrutiny. According to Reuters, the proposed guidance would be the first change to the FDIC’s merger principles in 16 years. The regulators’ board of directors...

Powell: Growing Fed Confidence for Rate Cuts

Powell: Growing Fed Confidence for Rate Cuts

On Thursday, Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell testified before the Senate Banking Committee. During that testimony, he suggested that the central bank is becoming more confident that the nation’s inflation rate is moving in the right direction. If that trend...

Capital One Announces $35B Megamerger with Discover

Capital One Announces $35B Megamerger with Discover

Capital One recently confirmed its intent to purchase Discover Financial for $35.3 billion. Regulators will still need to approve the megamerger before the sale can proceed. If that approval happens, Capital One would become the nation’s largest credit card issuer,...