SVB collapse puts Fed's faith in a strong, low-risk financial system to
the test
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[March 13, 2023] By
Howard Schneider
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Earlier this month the U.S. Federal Reserve in a
report to Congress gave what has become a standard reassurance: Banks
were strong and the overall financial system in solid shape.
That confidence is now being tested as the Fed and other regulators
watched the failure of Silicon Valley Bank last week rapidly morph into
a potential systemic shock, threatening to undermine confidence in bank
deposits and touch off more destabilizing runs.
Just days after delivering the all clear to Congress, the Fed rolled out
a crisis playbook honed during the housing collapse in 2008 and expanded
during the Covid-19 pandemic, announcing its latest go-big and go-fast
effort to keep the financial system stable.
Banks will now be allowed to borrow essentially unlimited amounts from
the Fed as long as the loans could be collateralized with safe
government securities, a way to prevent financial firms from having to
sell a class of investments that have been losing value because of the
Fed's own high interest rate policies.
The response from regulators on Sunday also included a pledge to make
whole all depositors, even those with accounts above the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corp's standard $250,000 limit, at Silicon Valley Bank and a
second smaller institution, Signature Bank, that failed over the
weekend.
By allowing loans for a year against the full face value of government
bonds and mortgage backed securities, banks will be able to "easily
leverage (the new Fed facility) to access liquidity, rather than have to
realize significant losses and flood the markets with paper" they are
forced to sell to meet depositor demands, economists from Jefferies
wrote. "Monday will surely be a stressful day for many in the regional
banking sector, but today's action dramatically reduces the risk of
further contagion."
The Fed has standing programs that are always available to shore up the
financial system, including direct loans to banks with adequate
collateral through its so-called discount window. The Fed made changes
at the start of the coronavirus pandemic to encourage such borrowing,
some of which, including a lowered interest rate on discount window
loans relative to its benchmark policy rate, remain in place.
But in this case, as in crises dating back to the 2007-to-2009 housing
collapse, the discount window was considered inadequate to address the
developing risks, problems that to some degree stemmed from the Fed's
own aggressive monetary policies.
SVB's collapse highlighted whether the Fed's aggressive rate increases,
which took rates from near zero percent a year ago to more than 4.5%
today, had finally caused something important to "break" as holders of
low-yielding Treasury bonds face capital losses and banks, particularly
smaller ones, faced tougher terms to attract the deposits needed for
operations.
'IDIOSYNCRATIC'
Fed officials have been surprised to some degree by how little turmoil
their rate increase have triggered until now, with some policymakers
saying the lack of clear stress made them more inclined to keep raising
rates as they work to tame inflation.
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The main entrance of Silicon Valley Bank
is seen in Menlo Park, California U.S. March 10, 2023.
REUTERS/Michaela Vatcheva
That may change now, with some analysts suggesting it could tilt the
Fed toward a lower endpoint in its rate-hiking cycle.
The initial sense was that SVB's problems were "idiosyncratic," as
Bank of America analysts put it, with others noting that markets
still looked at the largest financial institutions as immune from
fallout. Those firms in particular are buffered by the higher levels
of capital under reforms enacted a decade ago to cushion them
against failure.
When it was closed Friday, SVB had a balance sheet of around $200
billion and was the country's 16th largest bank. That is far from
the league of the large, systemic players, but big enough to rattle
the stock prices of other mid-sized institutions and prompt calls
for depositors to be protected beyond the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corp's standard $250,000 limit.
The concern was the type of herd behavior that might develop if
SVB's depositors faced losses, and confidence began to erode more
broadly.
The Fed's response was described by Fed officials as classic central
banking, lender-of-last-report behavior - offering funds on a
virtually unlimited basis against safe collateral.
But it also was framed by the lessons and restrictions of prior
crisis. The situation had to be judged systemic, a finding
unanimously endorsed by the Fed's Board of Governors, Treasury
Secretary Janet Yellen, and others.
Its structure was meant to match the size of the problem,
potentially big enough, Fed officials said, to match all currently
uninsured deposits - which amounted to more than $9.2 trillion
across the banking system at the end of last year - should account
holders march en masse to their bank and demand their money.
Yet it also highlighted the still limited scope regulators have on
how and where potential crises may develop.
SVB's collapse appears driven by the sort of rate and funding
dynamics the Fed watches for in semiannual reports devoted to
financial stability and in documents like the Monetary Policy Report
to Congress delivered earlier this month.
In its report to Congress on March 3, that funding risk was judged
"low" in the system overall.
"Large banks continue to have ample liquidity to meet severe deposit
outflows," the Fed report said. "Against the backdrop of a weaker
economic outlook, higher interest rates, and elevated uncertainty
over the second half of the year, financial vulnerabilities remain
moderate overall."
(Reporting by Howard Schneider;Editing by Dan Burns and Leslie
Adler)
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