SVB execs sold millions in company shares just 2 weeks before collapse
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THAT is the problem. This tiny elite just screwed up big time. And putting “Humpty Dumpty” — the network of mutual trust that is ultimately at the heart of the capitalist system — back together now, especially given all the other fiscal problems we face, will require creative leadership and international cooperation. Not a lot of that going around these days.
There is no shortage of “liquidity” per se here. There is a loss of confidence in some key financial institutions and uncertainty about what regulators will do. This is threatening to escalate into more “bank runs” and spread to larger, more international institutions.
The next few days will be crucial. More non-SIB banks may face withdrawals. More than half of all tech companies that were listed on stock exchanges for the first time in 2022 banked with Silicon Valley Bank, which cratered on Friday. Many large fintech companies, like Circle + Payoneer and BlockFI, (see list below) had huge deposits that were not covered by the FDIC.
As of March 12, according to The Kobeissi Letter, a leading Silicon Valley watchdog, the following tech companies have fessed up to exposure to Silicon Valley Bank’s Friday foreclosure beyond the $250,000 per account/institution insured.
- Circle: $3.3 billion
- Bill․com: $670 million
- Roku: $487 million
- BlockFi: $227 million
- Roblox: $150 million
- Sunrun: $80 million
- Ginkgo Bio: $74 million
- iRhythm: $55 million
- Rocket Lab: $38 million
- Sangamo Thera: $34 million
- Lending Club: $21 million
- Huuuge Inc: $24 million
- Payoneer: $20 million
- Ambarella: $17 million
- Protagonist Thera: $13 million
- Oncorus: $10 million
- Eiger Bio: $8 million
- Repare Thera: $7 million
So how should the
US government respond to this crisis? Right now it appears to be
divided — and Secretary Yellen’s Sunday morning statement indicated
that the Biden Admin is in no mood to expand fed borrowing or tax dollars to
bail out this happy few.
Many Republicans
also want the US Government to step aside and let these high tech companies and
high tech banks feel the consequences of their own risky behavior.
Clearly the industry’s own risky behavior has not helped it win much sympathy. It is not the case that the institutions involved were just innocent victims of the Fed’s recent interest rate hikes. The uninsured deposits of banks like Silvergate Capital, SVB, and Signature Bank soared last year.
In SVB’s case, we
know it used these increased deposits to buy US Treasuries and issue long term
loans at low interest rates. It failed to hedge this portfolio; it reportedly
did not even have a risk officer last year. And before the crisis hit, it was
lobbying key members of the US Congress and Senate for looser bank regulation —
leading fundraisers in California for Senators from Virginia!
It has also now
emerged that key SVB execs sold significant blocks of shares in their company
as early as Feb 27 (CEO sold 11%/$5.3 million). They also paid big bonuses to
all key staff on Friday, before the FDIC took over. (!!!) Now they have all
become good socialists, begging for government bailouts or purchases by more
tightly-regulated banking giants like JP Morgan or Bank of America.
A key Silicon
Valley Bank board member, Mary Miller, had reportedly been a senior Obama
Treasury official. And its CEO Greg Becker, had been “Pelosied” onto the
San Francisco Fed Board! When insiders like this screw up AND FAIL TO
HEDGE or EVEN HIRE a RISK MANAGER ALL LAST YEAR, you know the “barbarians at
the gate” are not your only problem.
So, yes, this is an artificial crisis almost entirely of Silicon Valley’s making. But our response to it cannot be dictated by previous crises, or by knee-jerk posturing. It cries out for decisive government action — it is a good “teachable moment” for Silicon/Wall Street libertarians.
With great respect to Secretary
Yellen, she had never worked for a non-university/non-government
entrepreneurial day job since high school. Right now there are thousands of the
country’s most highly skilled workers who don’t know where their next paycheck
will come from.
So by all means
punish the senior banksters, investors, and execs and their friends in D.C. who
created this fiasco — do not repeat the mistake of the 2008-2009 financial
crisis and simply put them back in charge.
But please do
figure out before Monday’s Asian stock markets open at 10 pm Eastern this
evening a way to clean up this mess and at least provide payday loans for all
these skilled workers and let them go back to work designing the future.
James S. Henry is an
American economist, lawyer, and investigative journalist. He is an Edward R.
Murrow Fellow at Tufts University's Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy and an
INSPIRE Fellow at its Institute for Global Leadership. Henry has written extensively
on the problems of tax justice and development finance.