Kuwait Times

Worry for tech startups after SVB failure

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NEW YORK: Silicon Valley Bank’s stunning collapse has led to the freezing of tens of billions of dollars stored there by startups and their private equity backers, raising fears of a wider tech sector fallout. The company, whose website says it is “the financial partner of the innovation economy,” was taken over Friday by the US Federal Deposit Insurance Corporatio­n (FDIC) to prevent further damage.

“SVB knew the entreprene­urial community,” Joseph DeSimone, a professor at Stanford University and founder of several startups, told AFP. “They helped us recruit people, helped with securing mortgages for transplant­s, gave financial advice to new executives... So their disappeara­nce is a real loss,” he said. The company previously boasted that “nearly half” of technology and life science companies that had US funding banked with them, leading many to worry about the possible ripple effects of its collapse.

For banks that are FDIC-insured, only $250,000 per account is guaranteed. But according to SVB’s latest annual report, 96 percent of its total $173 billion in deposits was uninsured. The FDIC said Friday that all accounts would quickly get access to the insured portions of their deposits, but that the rest would depend on how much is recovered from sales of the bank’s assets, an often lengthy process. “The real victims of the SVB fallout are the depositors: startups with 10 to 100 employees, who cannot make payroll, and will have to furlough or shutdown workers as soon as Monday,” tweeted Garry Tan, head of the well-known incubator Y Combinator. He warned that “years of US innovation” are on the line, as an entire “generation of American startups” could be destroyed in a month or two.

Activist investor Bill Ackman raised a similar alarm on Twitter, saying that SVB’s collapse “could destroy an important long-term driver of the economy.” “If private capital can’t provide a solution, a highly dilutive gov’t (government) preferred bailout should be considered.” According to several US media reports, SVB had discussed on Thursday and Friday a possible buyout with several banks, but could not find a solution quickly enough. Champ Bennett, cofounder of the video platform Capsule, revealed on Friday that the $5 million raised in mid-February during the company’s first seed funding round was housed at SVB and now inaccessib­le.

“What happens next is anyone’s guess, but it doesn’t look good,” he tweeted. Bennett added that an interventi­on should not be viewed as “bailing out ‘The 1’ or ‘Big Tech’,” pointing to the “thousands of the most hardworkin­g, talented individual­s” at impacted companies who are currently “struggling.” — AFP

 ?? ?? SANTA CLARA: A delivery person drops off pizzas at Silicon Valley Bank’s headquarte­rs in Santa Clara, California. — AFP
SANTA CLARA: A delivery person drops off pizzas at Silicon Valley Bank’s headquarte­rs in Santa Clara, California. — AFP

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