SVB was started in the early 1980s in the Silicon Valley area of California. The key to it's growth throughout the 1990s....start-up businesses coming in and dumping their business into the 'pool'....along with management and technicians in the mix.
Around eight years ago, it controlled one-quarter of all banking in the valley area. It eventually moved out into Hong Kong, India, China, Israel, and UK.
Back in late 2008.....SVB got a $235 million investment deal from the US Treasury Department under the Troubled Asset Relief Program....to tide them over the banking industry collapse.
So they had a lot of loan deals going, and I would imagine the Covid era presented problems for some people to pay back the money.
Along the way....they attracted alot of VIPs. Some rumors today suggest that Oprah has a substantial amount of money tied up in their business. Another suggests that Prince Harry had some of his book profit money with them.
The interest rate changes in the past year....more weight/burden upon them.
So what is said....around 3-to-4 percent of the accounts will be covered by the FDIC $250,000 insurance. Remainder? Not covered. The little guys from the local area? They probably will get their accounts covered. The big clients...with a million to 500 million? I'd say they've got problems.
Will someone come up to buy the bank? They need a review and 'settlement' on the $250,000 business.
I would imagine court action to consume the next three years and no purchase of the bank is likely until spring/summer of 2024. Value? It's hard to imagine them or the audit people getting more than 10-percent of the value. Maybe I'm wrong, but this is a pretty harsh position to be in.
So here's the question.....are there other identical banks that went the route of SVB, and are they just a month or two away from failure as well?
Oh, and to note how much debt they are in the hole presently? 15-billion dollars. On the plus side....they hold around 90-billion dollars in fed bonds. That money is rock-hard safe.
The one odd factor? A bunch of Silicon Valley start-ups had their money there, and there is a fair amount of risk you can assign to the bank and the money still existing (maybe partially.....maybe fully).