Silicon Valley Bank scrambles to reassure clients after 60% stock
wipe-out
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[March 10, 2023] By
Krystal Hu, Anna Tong and Ananya Mariam Rajesh
(Reuters) - SVB Financial Group scrambled on Thursday to reassure its
venture capital clients their money was safe after a capital raise led
to its stock collapsing 60% and contributed to wiping out over $80
billion in value from bank shares.
SVB, which does business as Silicon Valley Bank, launched a $1.75
billion share sale on Wednesday to shore up its balance sheet. It said
in an investor prospectus it needed the proceeds to plug a $1.8 billion
hole caused by the sale of a $21 billion loss-making bond portfolio
consisting mostly of U.S. Treasuries. The portfolio was yielding it an
average 1.79% return, far below the current 10-year Treasury yield of
around 3.9%.
Investors in SVB's stock fretted over whether the capital raise would be
sufficient given the deteriorating fortunes of many technology startups
that the bank serves. The company's stock collapsed to its lowest level
since 2016, and after the market closed shares slid another 26% in
extended trade.
SVB's CEO Gregory Becker has been calling clients to assure them their
money with the bank is safe, according to two people familiar with the
matter.
Some startups have been advising their founders to pull out their money
from SVB as a precautionary measure, the sources added. One of them is
Peter Thiel's Founders Fund, according to one of the sources.
One San Francisco-based startup told Reuters they successfully wired all
their funds out of SVB on Thursday afternoon, and the funds had appeared
in their other bank account as a "pending" incoming wire by 4 pm Pacific
Time on Thursday.
However, the Information publication reported the bank told four clients
that transfers could be delayed.
SVB did not respond to multiple requests for comment.
A crucial lender for early-stage businesses, SVB is the banking partner
for nearly half of U.S. venture-backed technology and healthcare
companies that listed on stock markets in 2022.
"While VC (venture capital) deployment has tracked our expectations,
client cash burn has remained elevated and increased further in
February, resulting in lower deposits than forecasted," Becker said in a
letter to investors seen by Reuters.
BROADER RISKS?
The funding winter is a fallout of a relentless increase in borrowing
costs by the Federal Reserve over the last year as well as elevated
inflation.
The SVB turmoil raised investors' concerns about broader risks in the
sector.
Shares of First Republic, a San Francisco-based bank, sank more than
16.5% after hitting the lowest level since October 2020, becoming the
second-biggest decliner in the S&P 500 index. Zion Bancorp dropped more
than 12% and the SPDR S&P regional banking ETF slid 8% after hitting its
lowest point since January 2021.
[to top of second column] |
Greg Becker, President and CEO of SVB,
speaks at the 2022 Milken Institute Global Conference in Beverly
Hills, California, U.S., May 3, 2022. REUTERS/Mike Blake
Major U.S. banks were also hit, with Wells Fargo & Co down 6%,
JPMorgan Chase & Co down 5.4%, Bank of America Corp 6% lower and
Citigroup Inc 4% lower.
Thursday's slump evaporated over $80 billion in stock market value
from the 18 banks making up the S&P 500 banks index, including a $22
billion drop in the value of JPMorgan.
In a separate deal, SVB said private equity firm General Atlantic
will buy $500 million worth of its shares.
Meanwhile, ratings agency Moody's downgraded the bank's long-term
local currency bank deposit.
Natalie Trevithick, head of investment grade credit strategy at
investment adviser Payden & Rygel, said the bank's bonds were not
doing as poorly as the equity.
"Future performance is going to be news dependent but I don't expect
them to properly recover in the near term. It's not quite cheap
enough for a lot of buy-the-dip people to come back in," Trevithick
said.
Despite the latest concerns, analysts at brokerage firm Wedbush
Securities said the bank had received significant proceeds from
selling securities and raising capital.
"We do not believe that SIVB is in a liquidity crisis," Wedbush
analyst David Chiaverini said in a report, referring to the
company's trading symbol.
POSITIONING FOR HIGHER RATES
SVB said that funds raised from the stock sale will be re-invested
in shorter-term debt and the bank will double its term borrowing to
$30 billion.
"We are taking these actions because we expect continued higher
interest rates, pressured public and private markets, and elevated
cash burn levels from our clients," Becker said in the letter.
"When we see a return to balance between venture investment and cash
burn – we will be well positioned to accelerate growth and
profitability," he said, noting SVB is "well capitalized."
The bank also forecast a "mid-thirties" percentage decline in net
interest income this year, larger than the "high teens" drop it
forecast seven weeks earlier.
Bank stocks remained under pressure from "risk-off sentiment" and
questions about systemic risks to the industry, said John Luke
Tyner, a fixed income analyst at Aptus Capital Advisors.
(Reporting by Ananya Mariam Rajesh and Niket Nishant in Bengaluru,
Tom Westbrook in Sydney, Noel Randewich in San Francisco, Matt Tracy
in Washington, Krystal Hu, Nupur Anand and Chuck Mikolajczak and
Megan Davies in New York; Editing by Lananh Nguyen, Deepa Babington,
Diane Craft, Chris Reese and Muralikumar Anantharaman)
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