Gary is currently on CNBC giving a pretty good interview. He's actively pitching for government intervention and bailout. I'm torn on this stance, why should taxpayers bail out banks who continue to make poor decisions, but as a small business owner and former SVB customer I completely sympathize with the plight of the founders. They did nothing wrong, they followed the rules, they thought they were being responsible using SVB, and here we are the small companies, founders, and potential employees pay the price.
Ultimately I am sick and tired of my hard earned money going to the government for them to redistribute it, whether it be bailouts, stimulus payments, student loan forgiveness.
Why bail out what are essentially high risk ventures? Seems like the money would be much better spent with the aforementioned loan forgiveness to people who are actually hurting rather than 20-something YC founders who will easily land on their feet.
> He’s actively pitching for government intervention and bailout.
FDIC takeover is a government intervention and bailout. One systematically programmed and under rules laid out in advance, but an intervention and bailout nonetheless.
>> They did nothing wrong, they followed the rules, ...
Most people are willing to follow the rules for what is essentially 'free money'.
If the reason things don't work out for them is beyond their control that still does not mean they should be bailed out by the 99% of people who would never have used their product in the first place.
what about people losing their housing, financial security and destroyed their lives during the great recession?
they also played by the rules. Why did they not receive a bailout, but SVB somehow does?
It was a known unknown you could hedge. You know your account is not insured above $250k so you make sure you prevent the loss in the unlikely event that...
They wouldn't be bailing out the bank here.. at least not in any normal sense of the word. People who owned the bank (equity holders) are going to be zeroed out, people who lent money to the bank (creditors) are going to be nuked too. The people being bailed out are individuals and companies who had deposits with them.
If the government can make all of the depositors whole, take the associated amount of capital off their balance sheet and hold onto it until it matures, thus costing the taxpayers $0, that seems mostly okay to me? There's the opportunity cost of money blah blah but total increase to the deficit would be $0 and all of these companies would be able to continue operating.
What's the point of a Federal gov / lender of last resort if they can't keep depositors in solvent banks whole?
There is a reason why the FDIC limit is $250k and not a infinity symbol. The Fed's job is not to bail out every single entity that knowingly held assets in a risky manner.
Seems super short sighted - there’s no real world benefit into forcing companies to spread their checking accounts over hundreds or thousands of banks. Also seems like a good way to ensure that all of the business concentrates with the biggest banks.
The only people doing anything risky were the executives at SVB, and they’re going to be wiped out completely. Its a terrible idea to punish depositors for the crime of leaving their funds in a checking account at one of the top 20 largest banks in the country.
I suspect we’ll see a “Fannie Mae” for checking accounts in the future and that seems like a good idea.
If you are risk averse have your money at a big global systemic bank with a big customer base and therefore deposit base, not a bank focused on holding money for high-risk ventures.
There’s nothing unique about SVB - and their customer makeup was only obliquely related to this failure. The “high risk” nature of their customers had nothing to do with why the bank failed. Letting depositors lose money here would send a signal that any bank smaller than something like B of A is at risk.
Funny you mention BofA. They have $116 billion in unrealized losses. What all these banks are doing is very typical. If you've ever worked in the industry, you would know that.
I work in treasury and need to find a safe place for $150M in cash… there’s no universe in which I’ll spread that across $250k tranches in hundreds of other banks, so in your vast experience in the matter that’s evident from your confidence here, what would you recommend we do?
When did I ever say that you should do that? We know that the government will backstop BofA. They aren't going to backstop SVB. FDIC is only intended for regular people as you imply.
There kind of is - formerly called CDARS, but it goes by IntraFi now. You establish a “home” bank and they dump your balance into their network and they set up the hundreds or thousands of other accounts. It’s dumb and expensive and shouldn’t be necessary..
>They did nothing wrong, they followed the rules, they thought they were being responsible using SVB, and here we are the small companies, founders, and potential employees pay the price.
The rules are FDIC insurance up to $250k. That's the world where the game is played. This is real life and life isn't fair.
Ultimately I am sick and tired of my hard earned money going to the government for them to redistribute it, whether it be bailouts, stimulus payments, student loan forgiveness.