US banks rethink social media as a threat, not a marketing tool
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[May 18, 2023]
By Nupur Anand
NEW YORK (Reuters) -Bankers are beefing up risk management, monitoring
and emergency procedures around the use of social media after an
internet-fueled run toppled Silicon Valley Bank two months ago and
sparked turmoil in the industry.
In board rooms across the United States, executives are devising
programs and plans to counteract online threats including rumors around
the health of the banks that could lead to deposit outflows or weigh on
the stock, according to seven banking industry executives and analysts.
The efforts, which have not been previously reported, underscore banks'
urgent efforts to adapt to changing times, prevent depositors from
sparking a bank run or stop online attacks on their shares by short
sellers.
Lenders are taking action, rethinking social media's role as a potential
risk rather than marketing tool, after tweets questioning SVB's
financial health prompted nervous customers to pull $1 million per
second from their accounts before the bank failed on March 10.
"Social media risk was primarily reputational, but now it has led to
deposit flight risks, which are existential," said Sumeet Chabria,
founder of ThoughtLinks, a consulting and advisory firm that works with
banks.
Greg Becker, the former CEO of Silicon Valley Bank, blamed social media
as an "unprecedented" factor in the lender's demise. Depositors withdrew
$42 billion from SVB in 10 hours, he wrote in testimony to the Senate
Banking Committee on Monday.
SVB's swift downfall stunned markets. On March 8, the lender announced
it was selling securities and raising capital. As concerns about its
financial health escalated, clients in the Bay Area tech industry
tweeted about their worries and pulled out funds via mobile apps or
online banking.
The former CEO of First Republic Bank, Michael Roffler, also blamed
social media for its collapse two months later.
"It has been a wake-up call for some smaller lenders who are now working
on updating their emergency response and risk capabilities, along with
business continuity plans to tackle this threat," Chabria said.
Bank executives and directors have ordered their companies to add social
media into risk-management programs, according to regional bank
executives who declined to be identified because the discussions are
private.
Risk departments "have been pulled in to detail out a plan which allows
banks to measure internet-related risk, prepare for it and respond to
it," one of the executives said.
"NIP IT IN THE BUD"
Banks are also contacting customers who complain on social media to
address their issues quickly.
"We want to nip it in the bud," the second executive said.
What played out at SVB could easily happen elsewhere, said Greg Hertrich,
head of U.S. depository strategies at Nomura.
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Customers wait outside as an employee
enters the Silicon Valley Bank branch office in downtown San
Francisco, California, U.S., March 13, 2023. REUTERS/Kori
Suzuki/File Photo
"Any bank that doesn't pay attention to their social media presence,
and the effect it might have on deposit behavior is doing
themselves, their stakeholders and most importantly, their
depositors, a pretty significant disservice," Hertrich said.
Smaller lenders are focused on identifying who their depositors are
and tapping into influential community members to counter any
misinformation, said Lindsey Johnson, CEO of the Consumer Bankers
Association, an industry group whose members hold $15.1 trillion in
assets, or about 68% of the U.S. total.
"Many banks are taking a proactive approach to communicate to their
customers to convey the right message," she said. The outreach
includes "providing facts and resources to their depositor bases via
email, Twitter and LinkedIn," she said.
The biggest lenders are also taking note. JPMorgan Chase & Co CEO
Jamie Dimon cited social media as a factor in SVB's failure, and
Citigroup Inc CEO Jane Fraser called it "a complete game changer."
As the collapses of SVB and Signature banks shook confidence in
regional lenders, First Republic's stock plunged. A $30 billion
deposit lifeline from 11 major lenders did not stop its decline, nor
did the customer testimonials it posted on LinkedIn to shore up
confidence.
First Republic was seized by regulators and bought by JPMorgan
earlier this month.
Regulators, too, are watching. The U.S. Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation and Federal Reserve both underscored how technology has
sped up bank runs. The Financial Stability Board, an international
body, is also investigating the role of social media in recent
market turmoil, a source said.
While some banks have a game plan, others are still struggling, an
analyst said.
"There are so many social media monitoring tools today, but the use
of those tools is often delegated to threadbare marketing teams or
third party vendors," said Jim Perry, senior strategist at Market
Insights.
"Banks are cognizant of the risks and are beginning to understand
that they need to dedicate more human resources to social media
monitoring, it just hasn’t become a priority for many small
lenders," Perry added.
(Reporting by Nupur Anand in New York; Editing by Lananh Nguyen and
Anna Driver)
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