New York Post

Be very afraid of the Fed

SVB monkey wrench

- KEN FISHER Ken Fisher is the founder and executive chairman of Fisher Investment­s.

Aweek ago, traders were pricing in a Fed rate hike of 50 basis points at its March 22 meeting. Now, after all the bank failure fears, I have no idea what the Fed will do.

But whatever the Fed does, I bet it spews more chaos than calm.

Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen — government finance’s version of Anthony Fauci — loudly proclaimed on Saturday that the feds wouldn’t bail out Silicon Valley Bank.

On Sunday, however, they announced jointly with the Fed and FDIC that they were bailing out SVB’s depositors — although not the shareholde­rs or creditors — while insisting it wasn’t a bailout at all. Inconsiste­ncy instills fear. The media says SVB’s failure was the second-biggest ever and that New York-based Signature Bank’s was the third-biggest. Scary. But they weren’t really No. 2 and No. 3.

Yes, SVB was $200 billion-plus in deposits, and they are No. 2 measured that way. But in relevant economic impact — what really matters — SVB, for example, was only about 4% as big relative to the economy’s size in 2023 versus what Bank of the United States was when it failed in 1931.

That’s despite the fact that SVB was roughly 1,000 times bigger in dollars than New York’s Bank of the

United States.

Nominal GDP (not inflation-adjusted) growth since then accounts for the difference. Relative to contempora­ry GDP, Signature and SVB were smaller than 1984’s Continenta­l Illinois failure — relative pimples, not huge hemorrhage­s.

President Biden said failing bank management­s should be fired. Again — scary. But when?

If upper management had been fired last weekend, the FDIC would have had nobody to talk to at SVB to enable customers to redeem deposits. Chaos would reign.

SVB’s main problem? Its depositor base was way too concentrat­ed in firms and employees from the venture capital realm.

When VCs started urging their portfolio firms last Thursday to pull their SVB deposits before others might, it launched the “run” on SVB from among those firms, employees, families and friends.

SVB’s marginal balance sheet couldn’t take it as of last week. Ironically, 10year rates have just now fallen by 0.5% — actually now down a bit overall in 2023. SVB got caught in between.

Most banks don’t because of their diverse depositor base. Big banks are in far better financial shape than small ones.

As Warren Buffett said, “You should be fearful when others are greedy and greedy when others are fearful.”

Be greedy.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States