As the smoke clears and financial markets return to an uneasy calm, it has become clear that the crisis could easily have been more severe
The collapse of SVB was the largest bank failure since the Global Financial Crisis of 2007/08.
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On Friday morning of March 10, state financial regulators marched into the offices of Silicon Valley Bank (SVB), a hitherto obscure (except perhaps to techie types) financial institution. Just two days prior, SVB was a going concern, albeit facing some cash crunch issues. But a combination of urging by certain prominent venture capital executives—amplified by social media chatter—sparked a massive run by depositors, and by Thursday evening, the bank was effectively insolvent. The collapse of SVB was the largest bank failure since the Global Financial Crisis of 2007/08.
The SVB incident was but one of a number of bank failures in March. Two banks with significant exposure to cryptocurrency assets—Signature and Silvergate—were also wound down, and First Republic—a fairly sizable regional bank with operations in 11 states—also had to be bailed out (ironically, by having larger banks extend credit to it, and thereby “bailing in” the rest of the U.S. banking system). Beyond American shores, investment bank UBS had to be arm-twisted into acquiring its longsuffering Swiss competitor, Credit Suisse, and the stock prices of banks in Europe and Japan also suffered significant hits.
The troubled banks faced the loss of confidence from their depositors and investors because they either managed balance sheet risk poorly (as was the case for SVB and Credit Suisse), or were insufficiently diversified (Signature and Silvergate). There may also have been some lapses by regulators; these so-called “non-systemic” banks saw more regulatory forbearance, and on hindsight, stress tests did not appear to cater to the possibility of aggressive increases in interest rates. Still, the overall reason for why now is simply that the rate hike cycle—which is entirely necessary to address inflation, and for which everyone has well been aware of—is clearly the source of challenges for banking systems worldwide. A rising tide tends to lift all boats, but when it recedes, there is a chance of seeing who has been swimming naked.
As the smoke clears and financial markets return to an uneasy calm, it has become clear that the crisis could easily have been more severe. The decisive action by authorities worldwide was necessary to prevent contagion; had the loss of confidence infected markets more broadly, it would have induced financial stresses that would have become a self-fulfilling prophecy. The financial lifelines organized—along with the orderly restructuring of beleaguered banks—was necessary to stem the downturn in sentiment. The Federal Reserve even played the role of responsible global citizen, by extending dollar liquidity facilities to central banks in several other jurisdictions.
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