Tech execs race to save startups from 'extinction' after SVB collapse
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[March 14, 2023] By
Jeffrey Dastin, Anna Tong and Krystal Hu
PALO ALTO, California (Reuters) - Technology executives, prominent
venture capitalists and founders including OpenAI CEO Sam Altman raced
this weekend to keep alive companies caught up in the collapse of
Silicon Valley Bank.
Friday's dramatic failure of the bank, which focuses on tech startups,
was the biggest since the 2008 financial crisis. It roiled global
markets, walloped banking stocks and left California tech entrepreneurs
worrying about how to make payroll.
Aiming to avoid what Garry Tan, the CEO of startup accelerator Y
Combinator, called a potential "extinction level event" in the tech
sector, industry executives moved quickly to do what they could to save
small businesses.
Altman, who runs one of Silicon Valley's hottest companies, bailed out
some entrepreneurs from his own pocket, according to a Twitter message
by his brother and one beneficiary who spoke with Reuters.
"I was running out of options, and so I just emailed him," Doktor Gurson,
CEO of Rad AI, said in an interview on Saturday. Within an hour or two,
Altman responded, offering him six figures: enough to make payroll and
no strings attached, just a request to return the funds once Gurson is
able, he said.
Asked for comment, Altman told Reuters, "I remember the investors who
helped me out when I was running a startup and I really needed it, and I
always try to pay it forward."
Henrique Dubugras, co-CEO of fintech startup Brex, also spent the
weekend working the phone after his company announced an emergency
credit line on Friday to help startups get through their next payroll.
As of Saturday evening, he said Brex had received $1.5 billion in demand
from nearly 1,000 companies. "We’re trying to sign up lenders by end of
day tomorrow. Everybody is sprinting," he said.
Even small startups are getting in on the action to help others. Aleem
Mawani, founder of Streak, a company with about 30 employees, tweeted
Friday he would lend his personal cash free of any terms to other small
startups worried about paying staff. He said he then had discussions
with a few companies and was aiming to prioritize lending for those
living paycheck to paycheck.
“I'm a founder and I know how awful it would be to not make payroll,”
Mawani said in an interview.
'MALFEASANCE OR MISMANAGEMENT'
By late Saturday, more than 3,500 CEOs and founders representing some
220,000 workers had signed a petition started by Y Combinator appealing
directly to U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen and others to backstop
depositors, many of them small businesses who are at risk of failing to
pay staff in the next 30 days.
The petition advocated "stronger regulatory oversight and capital
requirements for regional banks" and an investigation into any
"malfeasance or mismanagement" by SVB executives. More than 100,000 jobs
could be at risk, the petition warned.
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The main entrance of Silicon Valley Bank
is pictured in Menlo Park, California, U.S. March 10, 2023.
REUTERS/Michaela Vatcheva
SVB did not reply to a request for comment, and Y Combinator did not
elaborate on the petition.
Venture investors have advised startups to seek alternatives to gain
short-term liquidity. Some, including Lowercarbon Capital, have
offered loans to portfolio companies that have funds stuck at SVB.
Its partner Clay Dumas said Lowercarbon would provide payroll
support for the next two weeks and was wiring funds out Monday.
Khosla Ventures told Reuters, “Given the rapidly evolving situation,
we are talking to 100+ portfolio companies assessing their critical
needs and plan to bridge where we are a lead or major investor."
'LIFELINE'
Rad AI's Gurson had not talked to Altman for years when he emailed
the OpenAI chief Saturday morning, desperate for help. The startup
relied on SVB, the sudden closure of which meant he lacked the money
to pay some 65 employees on Monday, he said.
"People's livelihoods depend on us," said Gurson, whose San
Francisco-based company helps radiologists work more efficiently and
includes staff with wide-ranging roles and wherewithal. "They’ve got
mortgages to pay; they’ve got bills."
Gurson's co-founder waited eight hours on a Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation hotline to no avail, he said. Multiple
attempts to transfer funds out of SVB had failed.
But Gurson saw a Twitter post from Altman, whom he met as a founder
participating in 2014 in Y Combinator, where Altman was president.
The two men did not know each other very well, he said.
"It's like a lifeline," Gurson said of Altman's generosity.
Gurson estimated "conservatively" that Altman has given more than $1
million to support other startups in similar need.
"The crazy thing here is he's not an investor in our company,"
Gurson said. "He didn’t ask for anything."
Altman did not comment on how much he had given companies but said
he did not view his contributions as risky.
"Even if SVB can't find a buyer or a loan over the weekend, a lot of
the money startups have on deposit will be made available to them.
But in the meantime, people are facing a real liquidity crunch
through no fault of their own, and employees need to get paid," he
said.
(Reporting by Jeffrey Dastin in Palo Alto, Anna Tong and Krystal Hu
in San Francisco; Additional reporting by Tatiana Bautzer; Writing
by Kenneth Li; Editing by William Mallard)
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