The run on Silicon Valley Bank's deposits this month went far deeper than was initially known.
Since the day regulators seized SVB, it was public knowledge that panicked customers withdrew $42 billion from the bank on March 9 on concerns that uninsured deposits were at risk.
But that pales in comparison to what would've gone out the next day, Michael Barr, vice chair for supervision at the Federal Reserve, testified Tuesday before the Senate Banking Committee. Regulators shuttered SVB on March 10 in the biggest bank failure since the 2008 financial crisis.
«That morning, the bank let us know that they expected the outflow to be vastly larger based on client requests,» Barr said. «A total of $100 billion dollars was scheduled to go out the door that day.»
If the March 9 and 10 figures are added up, a cumulative $142 billion in attempted withdrawals represents a staggering 81% of SVB's $175 billion in deposits as of yearend 2022.
Lawmakers summoned top U.S. banking regulators to Washington to explain why Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank collapsed earlier this month. Barr and others pointed to mismanagement by bank executives, and noted that banks with assets of more than $100 billion may need stricter rules. The former CEOs of the banks did not attend.
SVB's final days as an independent bank were a rollercoaster of emotions. After SVB management «spooked» investors and customers with its «belated» attempt to raise capital late Wednesday March 8, the situation appeared to have calmed early Thursday, Barr testified.
«But later Thursday afternoon, deposit outflows started and by Thursday evening, we learned that more than $42 billion, as you indicated, had rushed out of the bank,» he said.
Fed staff worked around the
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