Silicon Valley Bank collapse — everything you need to know right now: Morning Brief

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Monday, March 13, 2023

Today's newsletter is by Brian Sozzi, Yahoo Finance's executive editor. Follow Sozzi on Twitter @BrianSozzi and on LinkedIn. Have tips on SVB? Send confidentially to [email protected].

Welcome to the first true black swan event for markets since the COVID-induced meme stock craze.

Silicon Valley Bank's collapse on Friday is the second largest bank failure in the U.S.

Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said early Sunday there will be no federal bailout for the stricken bank, and she held true to those words by the end of the day.

A joint statement from Yellen, Fed chief Jerome Powell and FDIC chair Martin Gruenberg said depositors will have access to all of their money today from Silicon Valley Bank. The same goes for Signature Bank, which was closed on Sunday. No losses will be borne by the taxpayer. Any losses to the Deposit Insurance Fund to make uninsured depositors whole will be recouped by a special assessment on banks, the statement said.

Shareholders in these banks will not be protected. Senior management has been removed.

The Fed added it will make available additional funding to eligible depository institutions to help assure they can meet depositor needs.

Wall Streeters are likely still to brace for more contagion despite the extraordinary measures, while at the same time trying to convey messages this is not Lehman Brothers circa 2008/2009.

"Yes there are a couple other banks that have some tech concentration that pose some risk, but SVB was extreme in its courting of large accounts and perks. And they will try to tell you this is a risk to the entire system but it isn’t. The big banks are incredibly well capitalized and the market even told you that on Friday with JP Morgan, Citi, Bank of America and Wells Fargo all having uneventful days in the market. This will be a one (or possibly two)-off situation where a bank made a mistake with buying longer term mortgages to push for yield and with a concentrated deposit base that was incredibly loyal until they were not," one long-time fund manager told Yahoo Finance.

As I have reminded a lot of folks in the last 72 hours, I view our job here at Yahoo Finance at this unique moment in time as to present the facts, add easy to understand context and bring our community into our world of sources across the world of business. It's not the time to yell fire in a crowded theater (it never is), or in our field (business news) add more noise to an already unnerving situation.