
the staff of the Ridgewood blog
Washington DC, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) today transferred all deposits—both insured and uninsured—and substantially all assets of the former Silicon Valley Bank of Santa Clara, California, to a newly created, full-service FDIC-operated ‘bridge bank’ in an action designed to protect all depositors of Silicon Valley Bank.
Depositors will have full access to their money beginning this morning, when Silicon Valley Bank, N.A., the bridge bank, opens and resumes normal banking hours and activities, including online banking. Depositors and borrowers will automatically become customers of Silicon Valley Bank, N.A. and will have customer service and access to their funds by ATM, debit cards, and writing checks in the same manner as before. Silicon Valley Bank’s official checks will continue to clear. Loan customers should continue making loan payments as usual.
Silicon Valley Bank was closed by the California Department of Financial Protection and Innovation on Friday, March 10, 2023, and the FDIC was appointed receiver.
The transfer of all the deposits was completed under the systemic risk exception approved yesterday. All depositors of the institution will be made whole. No losses associated with the resolution of Silicon Valley Bank will be borne by taxpayers. Shareholders and certain unsecured debt holders will not be protected. Senior management has also been removed. Any losses to the Deposit Insurance Fund to support uninsured depositors will be recovered by a special assessment on banks, as required by law.
The receiver for Silicon Valley Bank has also transferred all Qualified Financial Contracts (as defined in 12 USC 1821(e)) of the failed bank to the bridge bank.
These actions will protect depositors and preserve the value of the assets and operations of Silicon Valley Bank, which may improve recoveries for creditors and the DIF.
A bridge bank is a chartered national bank that operates under a board appointed by the FDIC. It assumes the deposits and certain other liabilities and purchases certain assets of a failed bank. The bridge bank structure is designed to “bridge” the gap between the failure of a bank and the time when the FDIC can stabilize the institution and implement an orderly resolution.
The FDIC named Tim Mayopoulos as CEO of Silicon Valley Bank, N.A. Mr. Mayopoulos is former president and CEO of the Federal National Mortgage Association and most recently served as president of Blend Labs, Inc.
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Deja Vu….
This was necessary to keep confidence in the banking system since too many people were affected, not just depositors.
All these startups with over 250k in the bank, unable to use funds for payrolls
Lesson learned: Put your money in a bank that lends to all types of business, not focused on a particular industry
Its a woke tech bank so they get the preference and insurance above 250k.
These were big tech , likely liberal leaning customers… not joe six pack.
Imagine if it was bank in TX or OK that let to the petroleum industry. its take 250k or shove it
Ah, yes, those famously liberal tech finance bros.
GTFO here with that BS.
Yes… your liberal tech friends in social media that surpressed conservative opinions and handed us a dementia case puppet for ‘president’. GTFO here and go back to brooklyn
For someone who is woke, you are fast asleep…
Liberals have taken over Finance, Wall Street, Banking and technology, along with Education, Media (social and traditional and Large population government and politics.
Another gift by Biden to his wealthy friends. 90% of deposits exceed the FDIC insured limit of $250k.
You can bet if it was a bank in the oil patch Biden would never have stepped up.
unless Hunter was a board member so he could kick back ten percent to the big guy
Great article. See link below.
Hold on for the rough ride ahead of us.
sovereignman.com/trends/if-svb-is-insolvent-so-is-everyone-else-146244/