“Stay calm.”
That’s what Silicon Valley bank CEO Greg Baker told clients Thursday morning in a hastily convened conference call to reassure them that the Santa Clara institution was confident it would face a liquidity crunch.
By the end of the day, when prominent venture capital firms urged their portfolio companies to get their money out, the bank had seen $42 billion in withdrawals. It was a full-blown bank run, a coup against one of the tech industry’s central foundations sparked by some of its strongest backers. The second largest banking failure in US history after the collapse Washington Mutual In 2008 it raised the specter of widespread layoffs in start-up companies and broader instability in the US financial system.
The tech company’s founder, Sarah Moskoff, was almost certainly a part of this rush for exits. By the time she tried to transfer a small amount of money from her account on Thursday, the bank had closed for the day. The deal was pending on Friday morning, when the California Department of Financial Protection and Innovation close svb and placed its assets into receivership with Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.
“I didn’t expect it at all,” Moscov said.
Countless companies across the country have finances intertwined with SVB in some way, including loans and cash sweep accounts. The bank, which caters to technology, venture capital and private equity firms, had about $209 billion in assets at the end of last year, according to the Federal Reserve, making it the 16th largest in the United States.
Now those companies must wait anxiously to see if and when they will be able to get a refund of the more than $250,000 that the FDIC guarantees, a scenario that could require more government intervention.
Mauskopf, the founder of babysitting startup Winnie, said she has dealt with SVB since founding her company in 2016. She is unable to access the funds needed to operate her business, including setting up payroll.
“When you can’t guarantee that employees will get paid on time, it really affects people,” Moskov said.
Even companies that do not directly bank SVB can face employee pay hurdles as a result of their failure. Human resource management firm Rippling used the bank to operate its payroll services, CEO Parker Conrad writes Twitter. Conrad said he has since switched to JPMorgan Chase & Co., but that payments that began earlier in the week could be delayed.
SVB’s problems stem from a sharp rise in interest rates that began last year and has undermined the profitability of its huge bond position. The acute phase of its crisis began on Wednesday when it sold a large portion of its securities at a loss of about $1.8 billion after taxes to make sure it could cover deposit withdrawals and start raising $2.25 billion in capital. As stocks fell in response to the news, clients smelled the scent of financial weakness and began withdrawing their funds to avoid being trapped in losses.
The FDIC said all depositors will have full access to their insured deposits no later than Monday. But only 12.5% of its $173.1 billion in deposits are insured through the end of 2022, according to the bank’s annual report.
Jessica Mah, who founded the accounting software company DeNiro, said she has several clients with SVB accounts, including one with no more than $100 million in deposits there. Mah said some business owners personally consider payroll financing if they don’t have access to the capital by then.
Uninsured depositors will receive a custodial certificate for the remaining amount of their uninsured funds, which may be repaid in the future as the FDIC liquidates SVB assets.
It is possible that the federal government, worried about possible infection of other banks, will step in before then to guarantee all SVB deposits. Mauskopf said it was not a matter of whether he was a “rich capitalist”. [venture capital] Money is worth some sort of bailout,” but about whether companies can pay their bills with the money they’ve earned.
“I just want to make sure people understand that this has a real impact on real people who aren’t wealthy,” she said.
Some of the financial services companies that cater to startups, including Stripe and Brex, provide funds to companies like Mauskopf’s.
Mauskopf said Brex is offering an emergency bridge line of credit to SVB clients funded by third-party equity, and Stripe is offering a cash advance on future revenue.
One Los Angeles-based tech founder said he wasted no time moving money out of SVB once he heard about the stock plunge and was able to recover 85% of his company’s money, even though his company still had several million dollars left in SVB.
He also invests in startups through AngelList, a major platform for launching investment funds. Because AngelList banks with SVB, the capital he has through him is also frozen.
While many observers agree that SVB would likely have been able to weather its liquidity crisis had customers not attempted to withdraw deposits all at once, the tech founder said there was no incentive for people to show patience.
“There’s no reason to keep your money there because the downside risk, even if it’s 0.1%… is that you lose all your money,” he said. “I just don’t want to be a part of the last standing.”
William Hsu is the co-founder of Los Angeles-based venture capital firm Mucker Capital, which has hundreds of companies in its banking portfolio with SVB. Hsu said he worries about the potential repercussions of the bank’s collapse for all areas of venture capital, technology and startups in the coming weeks and months.
“I’m very worried about my portfolio companies and how they’re going to make payroll. I’m very worried about the employees that work for my company,” he said.
There are also legal ramifications for not paying employees, which can lead to mass layoffs because companies inadvertently let workers go.
Hsu is looking for other non-SVB-related sources of capital to connect his companies to the next payroll.
Hsu said Friday’s events are likely to paralyze the venture industry for months as the companies that back it struggle to stay afloat.
“That’s a lot of capital that stops coming into the economy,” he said.
Times staff writer Lindsey Blakely contributed to this report.