Houston Chronicle

Venture capitalist­s to blame for SVB

- By Elizabeth Spiers Elizabeth Spiers, a contributi­ng Opinion writer for the New York Times, is a journalist and digital media strategist.

In 2016, I started a New York-based creative agency that specialize­d in branded content. Among creative agencies, the trend at the time was for names that sounded like punk bands and I unfortunat­ely chose The Insurrecti­on. As of last week the only thing that aged worse than the name was my choice of bank: Silicon Valley Bank, which has now become the most spectacula­r example of a bank failure since the 2008 financial crisis. (I briefly lost access to our company’s funds, but I’m fine; my deposits were low enough to be covered by FDIC guarantees.)

There’s plenty to say about how the bank brought this about — making risky investment­s, issuing communicat­ions that did more to alarm than explain. But as I hit refresh on my account balance Monday morning, I was thinking of the high-prestige venture capitalist­s who herded start-ups like mine to SVB. They’re the reason the bank was so overloaded with risky clients, and they’re also the ones who panicked at the first rumors of trouble — and advised their portfolio companies to flee, initiating the bank run that brought the whole thing tumbling down.

On Saturday, an entreprene­ur named Alexander Torrenegra, who was an SVB depositor for two companies as well as his own personal accounts, explained what happened on Twitter. “Thursday, 9 AM: in one chat with 200+ tech founders (most in the Bay Area), questions about SVB start to show up.” he wrote. “10 AM: some suggest getting the money out of SVB for safety. Only upside. No downside.”

It’s easy to see how a whisper network of a few hundred CEOs — all convinced they have exceptiona­l vision, all working themselves into a panic — could spiral out of control. But what happened in that chat is an extension of the fundamenta­l way that these venture capitalist­s operate, which is groupthink on a staggering­ly consequent­ial scale.

Top tier firms like Andreessen Horowitz, Sequoia Capital and Kleiner Perkins subject candidates to a rigorous screening process that ensures that only the strongest founders leading the most promising businesses proceed to the next level. Or that’s what I once believed, anyway. But the screening process places significan­t emphasis on “culture fit,” which is industry speak for whether a founder fits into the venture capital firm’s full portfolio of companies and conforms to their ideas about how a founder is supposed to look and behave. A founder’s ability to navigate this process is considered a good indicator of the company’s success. Unfortunat­ely for women and people of color, culture fit often boils down to being a white male engineer with a degree from an elite university.

Some screening mechanisms are more subtle, like whether the VCs are already in your profession­al network, or one or two degrees removed. The industry line is that relationsh­ips will help founders attract capital, talent, and business partners. True, but the result is a largely homogeneou­s and even self-reinforcin­g community that’s difficult for outsiders to crack.

It’s this sort of insularity, emphasis on existing relationsh­ips, and reliance on intangible measures of competency that fueled last week’s bank run. The VCs expect the companies in their portfolio to use approved vendors. When it comes to legal counsel, that generally means tech-friendly law firms like Morrison & Foerster or Wilson Sonsini. When it comes to banks, it has meant S.V.B.

S.V.B., in turn, assessed its clients’ creditwort­hiness in part by who their funders were. As my colleagues and I saw, an investment from a top tier VC could be the ticket to a package of favored services, including things like home mortgages for the founders of these start-ups.

I opened my account at SVB in 2017, when I had meetings lined up with some top tier VCs to raise money for a digital media company. Like everyone else who heads to Buck’s of Woodside (a favored venue for early-stage deal making) with a deck and a dream, I tried to anticipate the screening mechanisms and make sure I passed. And despite the fact that I was not a first-time founder, and having worked in tech and tech adjacent companies, was decently well networked, I suspected they might regard a 40-year-old woman without an engineerin­g degree as not quite the culture fit of their dreams. I wasn’t contractua­lly obligated to bank with SVB, but as with so many other unspoken norms, I was aware that I would be evaluated by my choices.

Disaster has now struck, but I don’t see any public introspect­ion from the investment community participan­ts who both helped create the dangerous conditions and triggered the avalanche by directing portfolio companies to withdraw en masse.

The biggest supposed geniuses of Silicon Valley could have chosen to remain calm and used their influence to work with the bank and help maintain stability in the market. When SVB disclosed its losses last week, it was in the process of restructur­ing its portfolio to include treasuries with shorter-term maturities, which would have helped. It had a commitment from General Atlantic — a top tier firm itself — to help shore up its balance sheet. The bank was doing exactly what it should have done under the circumstan­ces, and had the depositors kept their money there, it could have stabilized as the restructur­ed portfolio became more profitable.

Instead, people panicked. The venture capitalist­s chose a path that would be disastrous for their industry, freezing up capital, spooking investors and reducing the favored financial institutio­n to rubble. Then they had the temerity to go on social media and congratula­te one another for their quick thinking. Upfront Ventures’ Mark Suster, one of the few V.C.s who saw the potential damage of a bank run and publicly urged his colleagues to stay calm, told TechCrunch on Friday, “I’m seeing emails from VCs” to their limited partners “and they are forwarding these things like, ‘Aren’t I super smart?’ ”

The hubris of high-profile libertaria­ns who howl for regulatory interventi­on (“Where is Powell? Where is Yellen? Stop this crisis NOW,” Tweeted Craft Ventures’ David Sacks) after previously coming out against it is all the more galling. I expect that as soon as the system stabilizes, they’ll all develop amnesia and return to insisting that government interventi­on destroys innovation.

They are not the only people to blame of course, but no bank is built to withstand simultaneo­us withdrawal­s from all its depositors. One SVB executive told the Financial Times their biggest risk was “a very tightly knit group of investors who exhibit herd-like mentalitie­s.” The executive continued, “doesn’t that sound like a bank run waiting to happen?”

I’ll keep my SVB debit card as a souvenir, partly because the giant arrow logo points in the opposite direction that it’s supposed to go into a card reader — an example of a design that obviously went through no user testing. It’s also a reminder that successful people aren’t always the best decision makers.

 ?? Jeff Chiu/Associated Press ?? A pedestrian passes a Silicon Valley Bank branch in San Francisco. As the primary regulator of the bank, the Federal Reserve is coming under criticism after its collapse.
Jeff Chiu/Associated Press A pedestrian passes a Silicon Valley Bank branch in San Francisco. As the primary regulator of the bank, the Federal Reserve is coming under criticism after its collapse.

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