FDIC

SVB was more interested in virtue-signaling than sound banking

Even by the standards of bank runs, the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank was remarkable. In February, Forbes magazine had put it on its Best 100 Banks list. Yet on Thursday, depositors withdrew $48 billion. That’s $14 million a second. Lines formed outside the bank’s various branches, reminiscent of the Great Depression. California banking authorities shut it down and turned it over to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) for sale or liquidation. So what happened? Silicon Valley Bank had grown very quickly over the past few years, In early 2020, it had a deposit base of $55 billion. A mere two years later, its deposits had reached $220 billion. But that was more money than it could put into lending to its narrow base.

svb silicon valley