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by tripletao
1180 days ago
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It's solvency risk, not liquidity risk. When interest rates are 4%, having $1000 ten years from now means I have 1000/1.04^10 = $676 now. If my current liabilities exceed that, I'm insolvent, not illiquid. Liquidity is about bid/ask spreads, disorderly markets in which the price becomes temporarily irrational. The SVB's problem was simply the time value of money, that the liquid and economically rational price of their long-term bond-like assets is lower than they wished it would be. This paper estimates that 190/4800 ~ 4% of banks would have deposits at risk if half of uninsured deposits were withdrawn. That means 96% of banks wouldn't. The SVB's situation wasn't completely unique, but it's far from the norm. https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=4387676 |
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