Quote (thesnipa @ Mar 13 2023 05:23pm)
the issue with a bank run is never in how much money consumers actually hold vs businesses. it's panic. if this causes enough panic, whether the consumer money held there is safe or not, it will be nasty. let's hope consumers keep a cool head, because if they dont its going to get rough quick.
SVB telling customers not to withdraw money, after the management sold options and withdrew money, should result in heads on spikes. any bailouts should come with the requirement of jail time for management or at the least heavy fines. lets these CEOs understand their board will literally toss them in prison if they mismanage risk. because that's the issue, RISK. it's all over leveraged. we're still chopping up and repackaging loans of all kinds as stable bonds. 99% of wallstreet thought that housing bonds were as safe of a load yield commodity as you could find even a week out from the collapse. they wont see what they dont want to see.
Fed behavior of increased loan %'s is great, but it was too slow and doesn't really do much to mitigate 5 or so years of absolutely mismanaged risks. we learned nothing in 2008 and now it's knocking at the door again. this is the first bell at midnight on the clocktower, imo. i'd love to be wrong, millions of families will lose homes, cars, jobs, savings, etc. But i think it's come time to pay the piper.
The government stepping in to guarantee customer deposits should allay panic.
It's not 'all over leveraged', either. Banks have huge reserves, especially the big ones. SVB collapsing isn't very complex, it's not about derivatives, it's a classic case of borrowing too short and lending too long with the backdrop of rising rates. It's stuff that most management teams can navigate without major problems.
Banks are also raking it in from high net interest margins so cash inflows are really strong...SVB didn't have much of a loan book.
Not a bad time to buy IMO.