The Mercury News

Silicon Valley Bank collapse sets off blame game in tech industry

- By David Yaffe-Bellany, Erin Griffith and Mike Isaac

SAN FRANCISCO >> For once, the crisis didn't seem to revolve around a cryptocurr­ency company.

The sudden collapse of Silicon Valley Bank on Friday set off panic across the technology industry. But crypto executives and investors — who have endured a year of nearly constant upheaval — seized on the moment to preach and scold.

Centralize­d banking was to blame, the crypto advocates said. Their vision of an alternate financial system, unmoored from big banks and other gatekeeper­s, was better. They argued that government regulators that recently cracked down on crypto firms had sown the seeds of the bank's implosion.

“Fiat is fragile,” wrote bitcoin advocate Erik Voorhees, using a common shorthand for traditiona­l currencies.

“We're seeing glitches in the machine,” said Mo Shaikh, CEO of crypto company Aptos Labs. “This is an opportunit­y to take a breath and consider the practicali­ties of decentrali­zation.”

But the tone quickly shifted as a major crypto company revealed late Friday that it had billions of dollars trapped in Silicon Valley Bank. A socalled stablecoin designed to maintain a constant value of $1 suddenly dipped in price, sending shudders through the market.

And the finger-pointing went in both directions. Some tech investors argued that the crypto world's procession of bad actors and overnight collapses had conditione­d people to panic at the first sign of trouble, setting the stage for the crisis at Silicon Valley Bank. In November, FTX, the crypto exchange run by Sam Bankman-Fried, went out of business after the crypto equivalent of a bank run exposed an enormous hole in its accounts.

“That's the pattern recognitio­n too many have,” said Joe Marchese, an investor at the venture capital firm Human Ventures.

The blame game is a sign of factionali­sm in the tech industry, where hot startups and trends come and go and crises can be used to advance agendas. As Silicon Valley Bank imploded, crypto advocates blamed the structures of the traditiona­l finance system for sowing instabilit­y. Some venture investors blamed the social media panic that touched off the bank run. Others blamed the government for its economic policies, or the bank itself for poor management and worse communicat­ion.

The debate is unfolding after a tumultuous year for tech companies in which the crypto industry entered a monthslong meltdown and some of the largest Silicon Valley firms conducted mass layoffs.

“People are just traumatize­d. They're financiall­y shell-shocked,” said Sam Kazemian, founder of the crypto project Frax. “As soon as you see something, you wonder if there's fire over there because it smells like smoke. And then you treat it like everything is burning and get out while you still can.”

Silicon Valley Bank started wobbling Wednesday, when it revealed that it had lost nearly $2 billion and announced it would sell off assets to meet demand for withdrawal­s. The news set off fear in the tech industry as startups rushed to get their money out.

As often happens in bank runs, those concerns became a self-fulfilling prophecy. On Friday, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. announced that it was taking control of Silicon Valley Bank, marking the largest bank failure since the 2008 financial crisis. Tech companies with money deposited in the bank scrambled to pay employees and vendors.

Silicon Valley Bank was in “sound financial condition prior to March 9,” according to an order from California's Department of Financial Protection and Innovation. It became insolvent after investors and depositors caused a run on its holdings, the order said.

Silicon Valley Bank appears to have had a relatively small footprint in the crypto industry. Historical­ly, many large banks have resisted working with crypto companies, given the legal uncertaint­y surroundin­g much of the business.

“A lot of crypto startups had a very hard time onboarding onto Silicon Valley Bank,” said Haseeb Qureshi, a crypto investor at venture capital firm Dragonfly. “So our exposure is a lot less than we anticipate­d.”

As the crisis brewed, though, crypto advocates treated the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank as a chance to press arguments they have been making since the 2008 banking crisis. That upheaval showed financial systems were too centralize­d, they said, which helped inspire the creation of bitcoin.

“Centralize­d entities are more opaque,” said Brad Nickel, who hosts the crypto podcast “Mission: DeFi.” “If cryptocurr­ency were powering the financial rails of our world, then a lot of things might not happen or would be a lot less severe.”

But the run on Silicon Valley also followed a playbook that was reminiscen­t of crises that erupted last year in the crypto industry, culminatin­g in the implosion of FTX.

Critics of the crypto industry argued that a crypto-centric version of Silicon Valley Bank's failure would have ended worse for everyone.

“If this was an unregulate­d crypto bank, then the money could just disappear,” Marchese said. The fact that the FDIC stepped in to handle the situation in an orderly fashion showed “the system is working,” he said.

In the coming days, the FDIC will refund the bank's depositors up to $250,000 while overseeing a process to recover the lost funds. “There's no crypto regulator insuring accounts for $250,000,” said Danny Moses, an investor at Moses Ventures who is known for his role in predicting the 2008 crisis in “The Big Short.”

Other analysts argued that Silicon Valley Bank had worsened the crisis by announcing its financial losses shortly after Silvergate Capital, a bank with close ties to the crypto industry, started winding down its operations this past week. They pointed out that the manner of Silicon Valley Bank's communicat­ion helped cause the panic that fueled the run.

“SVB's rollout, for whatever reason, was poorly timed,” said Adam Sterling, assistant dean at Berkeley Law. “Everyone was already fidgety after Silvergate's collapse.”

 ?? JIM WILSON — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Silicon Valley Bank's headquarte­rs in Santa Clara is seen Friday. One of the most prominent lenders in the world of technology startups, struggling under the weight of ill-fated decisions and panicked customers, collapsed Friday.
JIM WILSON — THE NEW YORK TIMES Silicon Valley Bank's headquarte­rs in Santa Clara is seen Friday. One of the most prominent lenders in the world of technology startups, struggling under the weight of ill-fated decisions and panicked customers, collapsed Friday.

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