November 25, 2024
Two top officials of Silicon Valley Bank allegedly planned massive sell-offs of their stock in the bank in late January, weeks before the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation took control of the bank at the behest of California state regulators. According to the UK Daily Mail, CEO Greg Becker sold 12,451...

Two top officials of Silicon Valley Bank allegedly planned massive sell-offs of their stock in the bank in late January, weeks before the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation took control of the bank at the behest of California state regulators.

According to the UK Daily Mail, CEO Greg Becker sold 12,451 shares at an average price of $287.42 on Feb. 27. That deal netted him $3.57 million. The deal to make the sale was set up on Jan. 26.

Daniel Beck, the bank’s chief financial officer, sold 2,000 shares at $287.59 per share on Feb. 27 as well, making $575,000. His plan to sell was set up on Jan. 24.

The Mail noted no allegations of impropriety have been made regarding those sales.

The bank’s collapse on Friday came as the end result of a long chain of events, according to The New York Times.

Trending:

Biden Admin Slaps Women in the Face by Giving ‘International Women of Courage Award’ to a Man

Earlier this week, to cover the demands of depositors for their money, it began to sell off assets.

However, on Wednesday it announced this resulted in a $2 billion loss. Confidence cratered Thursday as depositors withdrew their money to the point where the bank could not cover all withdrawals.

Silicon Valley Bank’s main focus was funding technology startups, according to CNBC.

“The number one question is, ‘How do you make payroll in the next couple days?’ No one has the answer,” Ryan Gilbert, founder of venture firm Launchpad Capital, said.

Will this bank collapse spread?

Yes: 88% (100 Votes)

No: 12% (14 Votes)

CNBC noted that the FDIC insures deposits of up to $250,000 per client. Because Silicon Valley Bank mostly focuses on businesses, CNBC said the FDIC’s protection has limited impact.

As of December, about 95 percent of the deposits at Silicon Valley Bank were not insured,  according to Securities and Exchange filings obtained by CNBC.

The FDIC said in a release that Silicon Valley Bank customers whose money is insured can access their funds on Monday.

Uninsured depositors face a much murkier future.

“The FDIC will pay uninsured depositors an advance dividend within the next week. Uninsured depositors will receive a receivership certificate for the remaining amount of their uninsured funds. As the FDIC sells the assets of Silicon Valley Bank, future dividend payments may be made to uninsured depositors,” the FDIC said.

Related:

4th Largest Bank’s Customers Panic After Waking Up to Missing Money, Negative Balances

That will cause some ripples. For example, the TV streaming company Roku had $487 million in Silicon Valley Bank, most of which is not insured, according to The New York Times.

Roku said in an SEC filing it did not know “to what extent” it would be able to recover the cash.

It is uncertain if the collapse will trigger further instability.

“The debate today is whether SVB issues are SVB’s issues or the start of a bigger issue for the banking sector. There seems to be an allowance in the stock market for it being more of a company-specific problem or at least not a debilitating systemic issue,”  a note from Patrick O’Hare of Briefing.com said, according to the Daily Mail.