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by mrkurt 1192 days ago
There's no bailout. SVB is dead. People are pushing for depositors to get their money back. Which is, I think, reasonable.

Putting your company money in a bank account should be safe. We should regulate banks like SVB to make it more safe. We should also make sure when the regulations fail the people who use a bank, they can continue doing business.

3 comments

It is a bailout for any amount over $250,000
$10mm of deposits at SVB is worth way more than $250k. We don't know exactly how much though. That money didn't just vanish, it got tied up in ways that make it hard for depositors to withdraw it.

So no, it's not a depositor bailout for everything greater than $250k.

It’s really not. They have assets.
depositors are only entitled to what is left over after resolution of the assets, nothing more! dont make this situation worse by advocating for something unethical and which is bad for the entire system
Of course, that is likely what they're getting. People with sub-$250k will be taken care of by the FDIC as expected and the $250k+ depositors will be made whole from the proceeds of asset sales (bonds, securities, et al) held by Silicon Valley Bank. I really don't think the U.S. government will step in to provide additional funds.

It's also possible that the FDIC might sell the remnants of Silicon Valley Bank to a larger bank that will assume all deposits.

> I really don't think the U.S. government will step in to provide additional funds.

If it was some small bank that was only impacting “regular people”, then probably the government would not do anything.

But that is not the case here. The depositors of SVB are very wealthy and powerful. Also the standard process of selling assets is too slow, and that delay could create a catastrophic domino effect. Famous investors are already calling for the government to fix the issue within 48hrs.

Maybe the government will step in as a temporary lender, letting depositors borrow against their deposits, which they will eventually get back.

Why does FDIC insurance exist at all?
To provide safe haven for the vast majority of people/orgs whose cash assets can fit in that bucket, since there's some scale at which you can't afford the overhead of privately managed risk management (diversification, private insurance, etc). It provides stability on the low end, especially for naive and casual wealth, so that their naivite doesn't cause problems for everyone else.

But above that bucket, people/orgs are expected to know and appropriately manage the risks that they're taking with their money or have the float to pay someone who does.

Experienced money doesn't see large bank deposits as safe by nature because they never have been. It's only people new to wealth and chronically blind to tail risk (hello startup industry!) that assume a $5M portfolio can be treated as casually as their personal checking account.

In the general case, it acts to prevent bank runs triggered by individual depositors.

SVB is a special case -- a bank focused on commercial customer base.

Every bank account in the United States is insured up to $250,000 by the FDIC. I have zero sympathy for these depositors who decided it would be "too costly" or "too much hassle" to split their deposits into multiple accounts.

If you've got $25,000,000 dollars at SVB, you need 100 accounts. This is not rocket science. I really hope that they find a buyer to make depositors whole but if one cannot be found why should the public reimburse depositors for more than 250K simply because they were too cheap to hire a couple of accountants to manage it?

Incorrect.

Every depositor has 1 account per account type per institution insured up to 250k.

If you had 100 accounts of the same type at the same institution, you're still only getting 250k back from the FDIC.

To do what you're proposing, you'd have to have 100 accounts at different FDIC insured institutions. The logistics there is vastly different, but meshes quite well with designing for fault tolerance/resilience.

Brex offers a product to do this for you IIRC?
I don't expect everyone to essentially game FDIC insurance. And not sure if that is even possible or wanted.

But doesn't mean it is unreasonable to expect people with this level of cash funds not to have more than one egg basket. Split it in two, three or four. One goes down, you still have money locked up but can use other accounts to take care daily operations and possibly mitigate some of the issues.