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by laser
1182 days ago
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I’m confused by this-just as things were maybe starting to cool down a bit are they trying to start a bank run again? “All deposits assumed by First–Citizens Bank & Trust Company will continue to be insured by the FDIC up to the insurance limit.” So in other words they just pulled protection for assets over $250K in SVB accounts, transferring them to a small bank with less than half of the deposits of SVB when the run started? Who’s at the steering wheel at the FDIC and are they not coordinating with the Treasury or Fed? Am I missing something or does this seem recklessly premature given the train wreck that is still in the process of being avoided? Are they confident First-Citizens can withstand 25% of deposits getting pulled in a few days because they’re flush with cash and short term treasuries? “All transferred deposits will be separately insured from any accounts you may already have at First–Citizens Bank & Trust Company for at least six months after the failure of Silicon Valley Bank.” [1] Sounds like maybe this isn’t an issue but unclear if that’s just an extra $250K insurance in the event you had an existing account there. Maybe unrelated to insurance they're fine because First Citizens bought from SVB at discount/current FMV so they can liquidate assets if needed to meet withdrawals without risk of loss. [1] https://www.fdic.gov/resources/resolutions/bank-failures/fai... |
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I'd guess the tansferred assets are eligible for the new Bank Term Funding Program, so First-Citizens should be able to borrow cash to pay withdrawals in a way that SVB couldn't. I'd expect everyone involved to be aware of the danger of a bank run from this group of customers, and plan accordingly. Of course, expecting others to act sensibly is not always justified.