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Worry for tech startups after Silicon Valley Bank failure

NEW YORK (AFP) – Silicon Valley Bank’s (SVB) stunning collapse has led to the freezing of tens of billions of dollars stored there by startups and their private equity backers, raising fears of a wider tech sector fallout.

The company, whose website says it is “the financial partner of the innovation economy,” was taken over Friday by the US Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) to prevent further damage.

“SVB knew the entrepreneurial community,” professorJoseph DeSimone at Stanford University and founder of several startups, told AFP.

“They helped us recruit people, helped with securing mortgages for transplants, gave financial advice to new executives… So their disappearance is a real loss,” he said.

The company previously boasted that “nearly half” of technology and life science companies that had US funding banked with them, leading many to worry about the possible ripple effects of its collapse.

For banks that are FDIC-insured, only USD250,000 per account is guaranteed.

But according to SVB’s latest annual report, 96 per cent of its total USD173 billion in deposits was uninsured.

A Brinks armoured truck sits parked in front of the shuttered Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) headquarters in Santa Clara, California. PHOTO: AFP

The FDIC said on Friday that all accounts would quickly get access to the insured portions of their deposits, but that the rest would depend on how much is recovered from sales of the bank’s assets, an often lengthy process.

“The real victims of the SVB fallout are the depositors: startups with 10 to 100 employees, who cannot make payroll, and will have to furlough or shutdown workers as soon as Monday,” tweeted head of the well-known incubator Y Combinator Garry Tan.

He warned that “years of US innovation” are on the line, as an entire “generation of American startups” could be destroyed in a month or two.

Activist investor Bill Ackman raised a similar alarm on Twitter, saying that SVB’s collapse “could destroy an important long-term driver of the economy.”

“If private capital can’t provide a solution, a highly dilutive gov’t (government) preferred bailout should be considered.”

According to several US media reports, SVB had discussed on Thursday and Friday a possible buyout with several banks, but could not find a solution quickly enough.

Cofounder of the video platform Capsule Champ Bennett, revealed on Friday that the USD5 million raised in mid-February during the company’s first seed funding round was housed at SVB and now inaccessible.

“What happens next is anyone’s guess, but it doesn’t look good,” he tweeted. Bennett added that an intervention should not be viewed as “bailing out ‘The 1’ or ‘Big Tech’,” pointing to the “thousands of the most hardworking, talented individuals” at impacted companies who are currently “struggling”.

According to the news website Semafor, hedge funds are offering to front cash to SVB’s corporate clients, but at a 20 to 40 per cent discount.

Beyond that, boss of virtual gig platform Wave Adam Arrigo warned his fellow tech entrepreneurs: “Whether or not you had money in SVB, you are not unaffected. This is going to materially impact everyone.”

Like others, Bennett says he is also concerned about the fate of other banks favoured by the tech industry, including California’s First Republic, whose stock price fell 30 per cent in two days.

Some see in the back-to-back failure of two banks, SVB and Silvergate Bank, an example of the financial system’s precariousness.

“What happened to everyone talking about how banks (SVB, Silvergate) are safe and better than Crypto DEFI?” tweeted US investor Arjun Sethi.

DeFi, or decentralised finance, allows users to theoretically access their funds at any time and without intermediary, but comes without deposit protections or regulations.

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