The Collapse Of SVB Portends Real Dangers

Authored by Jeffrey Tucker via The Epoch Times,

Thus far in this 3-year fiasco of mismanagement and corruption, we’ve avoided a financial crisis. That’s for specific reasons. We just had not traveled there in the trajectory of the inevitable. Are we there yet? Maybe. In any case, the speed of change is accelerating. All that awaits is to observe the extent of the contagion.

The failure of the Silicon Valley Bank (SVB), $212 billion in assets until only recently, is a huge mess and a possible foreshadowing. Its fixed-rate bond holdings declined rapidly in market valuation due to changed market conditions. Its portfolio crashed further due to a depositor run. And it all happened in less than a few days.

It’s all an extension of Fed policy to curb inflation, reversing a 13-year zero-rate policy. This of course pushed up rates in the middle and right side of the yield curve, devaluing existing bond holdings locked into older rate patterns. Investors noticed and then depositors too. The high-flying institution that specialized in providing liquidity in industries that have lost their luster suddenly found itself very vulnerable.

In addition, the bank was exposed with a portfolio of collateralized mortgage obligations and mortgage-backed securities. But with rates rising, those are coming under stress too as high leverage in housing and real estate become untenable amidst falling valuations. Borrowers are finding themselves under water and that in turn adds to stress on lenders.

And where did SVB, and the entire banking industry, get the funds to bulk up their portfolios with such debt holdings? You guessed it: stimulus payments. Billions flooded in and it had to be parked somewhere making some return. At the time it seemed like a good deal, until Fed policy changed.

A house of cards comes to mind. But perhaps a better metaphor is a game of billiards in which every move introduces a cascade of new issues. Lockdowns prompted immense government spending which produced debt that was quickly monetized and eventually caused inflation, prompting the Fed to reverse course with the largest/fastest rate increases in history.

This destabilized (or restabilized) production structures away from the right side of the yield curve toward the left, shifting capital in search of return to the consumer-goods sector. Labor has begun to follow, thus creating a surplus of resources in information tech and a shortage in retails.

It was always naïve to think that this shift would take place without touching the banking institutions that shoveled leverage in the direction of industries that thrived during lockdowns but are cutting back massively now.

These banks are exposed in speculative ventures from which capital is fleeing. Their asset portfolios were tied, as usual, to a continuation of the status quo that stopped continuing, so investors and depositors are fleeing to safety.

Could the Fed have anticipated this? Probably. But what choice did it have? Again, this entire mess traces first to lockdowns and second to Ben Bernanke’s preposterous policies as Fed Chair in 2008. He imagined that he would fix a financial crisis by abolishing a natural force like interest rates on bonds. Then he pulled a fancy trick of keeping his “quantitative easing” off the streets by having the Fed pay more for deposits than the same money could earn in markets.

What was the problem? The problem was that capital is never still. It is always on the hunt for return. It found it in Big Tech and internet media, bolstered by seemingly infinite resources for advertising and hiring. This further caused an absolute gutting of normal rates of saving simply because there was no money in it. This situation persisted for a good 13 years.

Jerome Powell took over the Fed with the determination to put an end to the nonsense. He hoped for a soft landing. But then came the pandemic lockdowns. He was called upon to provide funding for the idiocy of a panicked Congress that spent many trillions as fast as possible, which only perpetuated lockdowns.

Everything seemed fine for a while, as it always does, but by January 2021, the bill came due in the form of roaring price inflation. The Fed had to reverse course dramatically. Starting at zero, it had to get federal funds rates to equal or exceed price increases (the terminal rate). It is not there yet so it has no choice but to barrel ahead.

The rate increases of course drew capital out of the industries that thrived over the lockdown period and back to retail and consumer goods. But meanwhile, the yield curve responded, as it must. From 30 days to 30 years, every bond offering was repriced, causing institutions holding old bonds to look like chumps. This is where SVB found itself, with a suddenly declining market valuation.

The coup de grâce was depositor behavior. In the search for safety, cash has found the return on short-term Treasuries far more attractive than speculative ventures. The flight to safety doomed the bank and its many partners in the financial industry. It’s a huge wake-up call for the whole of markets. No one in the industry is sitting comfortably today.

My concern here is that people will look at all these disasters in isolation. They are not isolated. They trace to the catastrophic decision in 2020 to lock down and fund those policies with money that did not exist until it was created.

That decision doomed the Fed’s plans to unravel its previous stupid policies and thus set us on the course toward calamity.

At this point, I’m sorry to report, no one is in a position to stop anything. Markets can be ferocious under these conditions. Markets are not all knowing but once they lose trust, there is no stopping the stampede of incredulity. There is no one at the Fed who can stop it and no wise managers at the top who can patch things up.

Take note of the collapse of bank stocks only hours after regulators took over SVB. My friends, we could be in for a wild ride. Stay safe.

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31 Comments
TN Patriot
TN Patriot
March 12, 2023 10:43 am

Monetizing your debt is never a good idea, especially when your money is worthless.

James
James
  TN Patriot
March 12, 2023 10:45 am

Time to go long on OSB?

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TN Patriot
TN Patriot
  James
March 12, 2023 11:00 am

It might be a good investment. As the mills start shutting down, people will be looking for something to build their shanties with.

James
James
  TN Patriot
March 12, 2023 11:17 am

Eh,rather let in bracing and true 1 by under siding/felt covered/old school rules!

That said,these trying times do make me wonder about me lack of OSB for some reason….,actually not,been sober9probably too long!).

Really am doing a physical/mental check,found 2 empty 5 gallon jugs yesterday(WTF!),got that taken care of but made me realize a more thorough inventory again in order.

To the new preppers,you can at moment ready yourselves a bit and folks here glad to help you out idea wise ect.,get at it!

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Chuck
Chuck
  TN Patriot
March 13, 2023 4:21 am

Is cardboard now in short supply?

Steve
Steve
  Chuck
March 13, 2023 6:04 am

Wheelbarrows soon will be

VOWG
VOWG
  Steve
March 13, 2023 6:36 am

Wheelbarrows will not be needed as digital “currency” has an upward unlimited potential. That million dollar jug of milk will just be 1 s and zeros to infinity if need be.

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
  VOWG
March 13, 2023 10:16 am

All you will need is that QR code tattoo on your right hand or forehead.

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
  Chuck
March 13, 2023 10:15 am

Cardboard houses only work in deserts. It rains too much around here for cardboard to last more than a few days. At least OSB will last for a few months when exposed to the sun and rain.

anon a moos
anon a moos
  TN Patriot
March 13, 2023 10:32 am

Plastic sheeting will help secure that spacious cardboard domicile.

The Central Scrutinizer
The Central Scrutinizer
  TN Patriot
March 12, 2023 11:07 am

Monetizing your debt is never a good idea, especially when your money is worthless.

…and your labor force is decimated, demoralized and apathetic.

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
  The Central Scrutinizer
March 12, 2023 11:11 am

But we do have 30 – 40 million poor illegal aliens who are just looking to better themselves.

The Central Scrutinizer
The Central Scrutinizer
  TN Patriot
March 12, 2023 1:32 pm

…at our expense. Not sure I can afford that sort of help.

Anthony Aaron
Anthony Aaron
  TN Patriot
March 12, 2023 5:50 pm

… by destroying US …

Raymond
Raymond
  Anthony Aaron
March 13, 2023 4:23 am

Hey, them illegals do the work us ‘mericans won’t do-or so goes the argument of people who never worked a day in their life.

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
  Raymond
March 13, 2023 10:17 am

illegals do the work us ‘mericans won’t do for much lower wages – FIFY

James
James
March 12, 2023 10:43 am

Is this the first domino to fall and will it lead to collapse/a reality check in regards to economy?

Prepper Cat is triple checking supplies while also enjoying the day.

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I am a little worried about the tune he is listening to though:

Francis Marion
Francis Marion
March 12, 2023 10:51 am

Couldn’t hurt…

Aunt Acid
Aunt Acid
March 12, 2023 10:52 am

Wait! What? How could anything “high-tech” related fail? Were not state and federal regulators tasked with ensuring that banks were solvent?

Doesn’t artificial intelligence and all that computer crap save humanity in the end? Isn’t this all so confusing? /s

Let the financial collapse and shit-firestorm commence.

(What did the fucking imbeciles think was going to happen from a totally “fugazee” financial system?)

The Central Scrutinizer
The Central Scrutinizer
  Aunt Acid
March 12, 2023 11:09 am

I been sayin’ this for the last 30 years…nobody does their fucking JOBS any more!

B_MC
B_MC
  The Central Scrutinizer
March 12, 2023 11:44 am

Don’t forget the so-called ratings agencies….

SVB Financial had Investment-Grade Credit Ratings (Moody’s, S&P) up to Collapse. Got Slashed in One Fell Swoop to Default

Let me just divert your attention for a moment from the collapse of SVB Financial and what it might and might not mean for the financial system or the startup bubble or whatever, to another troubling aspect of SVB Financial that shows that no one has learned anything since the Financial Crisis, least of all the credit rating agencies.

So you know what is coming: The solid investment-grade rating on a company – SVB Financial – that then collapsed with its investment-grade rating, taking investors down with it.

On Wednesday March 8, Moody’s still had an A3 rating on SVB Financial, owner of the now defunct Silicon Valley Bank, as it was already collapsing for all to see. Four notches into investment grade – a very respectable rating!

SVB Financial had Investment-Grade Credit Ratings (Moody’s, S&P) up to Collapse. Got Slashed in One Fell Swoop to Default

Aunt Acid
Aunt Acid
  B_MC
March 12, 2023 12:44 pm

The disgusting, totalitarian-loving, Tel Avision shill for all things “financial” on CNBC loved SVB up until just recently. mmmm

It is all part of the operation to mock, swindle plus humiliate the Murkin public while pillaging and destroying the system.

anon a moos
anon a moos
  Aunt Acid
March 12, 2023 1:04 pm

NO… you conspiracy theory person you.

WilbursHuman
WilbursHuman
  Aunt Acid
March 12, 2023 1:31 pm

“It is all part of the operation to mock, swindle plus humiliate the Murkin public while pillaging and destroying the system”…………………………………

While Being Completely Oblivious………………………
To the BIG, Red, White and Blue Dick………………
being Jammed Right up their Ass !
George Carlin.

Uturn
Uturn
  The Central Scrutinizer
March 13, 2023 12:34 pm

No one knows HOW to do their jobs anymore- DEI forever!

Dangerous Variant
Dangerous Variant
  Aunt Acid
March 12, 2023 1:07 pm

Smartest guys in the world whose entire job is to identify and price risk bank their VC casino lines with risky bank knowingly storing cash beyond the FDIC limits just to scrape +30bps over market yield on those deposits because apparently the QE spigot wasn’t enough lube to pull another pets.com out of the currypot sweatshops in the valley.

Of course they will be getting bailed out. Yellen “wont bail out SVB”, because SVB is just residual paper equity and some branding. The depositors, really co-investors, in the debt ponzi and zero-reserve banking casino for VC money laundering will be made whole because we can’t anger the “tech” gods.

The first thing they teach you at HBS: All risk in the casino is public. All profit is private. Don’t be a public. Now bring a goat to the next meeting along with that powerpoint pitch deck.

Celtic Tiger
Celtic Tiger
  Dangerous Variant
March 12, 2023 2:15 pm

No, it’s we cannot anger Democrat donors.

Steve
Steve
  Aunt Acid
March 13, 2023 6:06 am

This shit will only end when we tattoo the following message on the heads of all bankers: “There will be no bailouts if your bank fails. You and you alone are personally responsible for any bank failure.”

Klaus Schwab
Klaus Schwab
March 12, 2023 2:46 pm

On Tuesday, you will have nothing. By Friday you will be eating ze bugs. Happy?

James
James
  Klaus Schwab
March 12, 2023 6:04 pm

On Friday,we will dine on Kauus and his ilks corpses.

The living will envy and eat the dead……,good times/good times!

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Vektor
Vektor
March 12, 2023 6:24 pm

Maybe Zelenskyy could send some of those billions back to bail out SVB? Or maybe not.