Fed blames oversight, management for Silicon Valley Bank collapse
The autopsy attempts to explain how federal regulators failed to prevent the second-largest bank collapse in
"Following
SVB failed to manage risk
That left the bank "acutely exposed to the specific combination of rising interest rates and slowing activity in the technology sector," the Fed wrote in its report.
When the Fed hiked interest rates, SVB's long-term treasury bond holdings lost value, leaving the bank with huge unrealized losses. That made it difficult for SVB to deal with a slowdown in deposits driven by the tech sector's troubles.
When SVB's tech-dominated depositors got wind of the bank's struggles, they coordinated the first online bank run, withdrawing
"
Supervisors didn't act quickly enough
The report found that SVB got strong ratings from supervisors even as its balance sheet ballooned from
Supervisors identified SVB's "interest rate risk deficiencies" as far back as 2020. But they didn't issue a finding on it until
Fed regulations were too weak
Former
Under the law, the Fed had the ability to implement stronger standards on banks like SVB, but it did not.
"While higher supervisory and regulatory requirements may not have prevented the firm's failure, they would likely have bolstered the resilience of
The report noted that around the same time, Fed policy "placed a greater emphasis on reducing burden on firms" by heightening the burden of proof on supervisors to go after banks.
"Although the stated intention of these policy changes was to improve the effectiveness of supervision, in some cases, the changes also led to slower action by supervisory staff and a reluctance to escalate issues," the Fed wrote.
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