Silvergate Bank collapsed on March 8; Silicon Valley Bank on March 10; Signature Bank on March 12. These are the first banks to collapse since the 2008 Financial Crisis, and are considered the second and third largest bank failures in American history.
The Federal Reserve’s discount window lent various U.S. banks $153 billion this week, and an additional $12 billion in emergency funding, though wouldn’t disclose how many banks have and continue to borrow. On Thursday, a consortium of eleven U.S. banks came together to inject $30 billion into the First Republic Bank.
It’s the afterglow of COVID-19, as aftershocks of stimulus and inflation on the bank’s Treasury securities roil U.S. bank runs into contagion.
In reaction to COVID-19, the U.S. Treasury Department ramped up its borrowing by over $6 trillion to pay for the 2.2 trillion CARES Act. In fact, the federal government enacted six pieces of legislation in all, estimated at $5.3 trillion, auctioning off U.S. Treasury Bonds to pay for them.
Meanwhile, SVB’s deposits were soaring from $62 - $124 billion from March 2020 through March 2021 thanks to low interest rates on their Treasury notes and bonds yielding. As interest rates rose to 4.5 percent in the last year — designed to slow down markets, hiring and wage growth — they began wreaking havoc on bank balance sheets. Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Chairman Martin Gruenberg explains,
As a result of the higher interest rates, longer term maturity assets acquired by banks when interest rates were lower are now worth less than their face values.
Certainly I believe a central bank would be good, but I doubt whether our people would support the scheme at present. The inevitable popular distrust of big financial men might result very dangerously if it were concentrated upon the officials of one huge bank.