Re Silicon Valley Bank Failure
Article Intro: Michael Hudson gives yet another meaty take on the recent spate of bank implosions in the US, with the spectacle of sick man Credit Suisse taking a big heave adding to rattled nerves. We’ll take the liberty of providing some additions and qualifications:
https://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2023...-failures.html
Pretty interesting though some of the comments are even more interesting, like this one by Karl which I find pretty compelling:
"Karl
March 16, 2023 at 10:33 pm
Roberts calls the actions of the bankers “stupidity.” The pattern of SVB’s actions suggest they were smart. I mean, the outcome turned out pretty well for the VC, so how “stupid” could they be?
There’s the old saying: if you owe someone a little, they own you; if you owe them a lot, you own them.
The VC and the SVB Execs understood this. They are not stupid. They know ventures and they know risk.
Here’s my scenario of what heppened. In early 2022, the SVB execs could see that their MBS portfolio was going to blow up if interest rates kept increasing. What to do? Do the responsible thing and hedge? Or do you decide to deliberately set the bank up for such a huge mess that you have to be and will be bailed out? Knowing the political influence of the VC community, their understanding of the DC game, and how to apply pressure, they knew they’d be able to engineer such a bailout.
Little problem: you know what the Chief Risk Officer would say. There is no way she could be kept out of the loop. So, what do you do? You get rid of her (on April 2022), and YOU DO NOT HIRE A REPLACEMENT until the damage is done (January 2023). That’s what SVB did. In the meantime, you write nothing down, and speak to the General Counsel or other execs only in dark alleys. You let your interest rate hedges expire on their own in 2022, which adds gasoline to the coming fire. Just before the conflagration, you give all the lower level staff their bonuses to keep them quiet. You get some of the insiders (e.g. Peter Thiel) to start the conflagration by saying “get your money out now” so it will be heard far and wide and start a panic. You get one of your insiders, the California Governor, to demand a bailout of this bank and save these essential “job creators.”
The signs point to this being deliberate and well orchestrated. These guys are all way too business savvy for “stupidity” to be credible, and they all had the motivation.
Will the Fed find any evidence of deliberate “financial sabotage” in its investigation of SVB? Almost certainly everyone involved was smart enough to cover their tracks, so my guess is “no”, but there could be leaks."
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