smart phone tweets? maybe they should have recognized the risk in their investment model  .. 
Silicon Valley Bank's risk model flashed red. So its executives changed it.
https://www.yahoo.com/news/silicon-v...015929419.html
Daniel Gilbert
Sun, April 2, 2023 at 8:59 PM CDT
Flush  with cash from a booming tech industry, Silicon Valley Bank executives  embarked on a strategy in 2020 to juice profits that quickly triggered  an internal alarm.
In buying longer-term investments that paid  more interest, SVB had fallen out of compliance with a key risk metric.  An internal model showed that higher interest rates could have a  devastating impact on the bank's future earnings, according to two  former employees familiar with the modeling who spoke on the condition  of anonymity to describe confidential deliberations.
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Instead  of heeding that warning - and over the concerns of some staffers - SVB  executives simply changed the model's assumptions, according to the  former employees and securities filings. The tweaks, which have not been  previously reported, initially predicted that rising interest rates  would have minimal impact.
The  new assumptions validated SVB's profit-driven strategy, but they were  profoundly misplaced. Over the past year, interest rates have climbed  nearly five percentage points, the fastest pace since the 1980s.  Meanwhile, the tech industry has entered a post-pandemic swoon, causing  SVB's elite clientele to withdraw cash far faster than bank executives  had expected.
On March 8, the bank was forced to raise additional  cash by selling securities at a $1.8 billion loss. That touched off  panic among SVB clients, who staged one of the biggest bank runs in U.S.  history. Fanned by social media, depositors tried to withdraw $42  billion in a single day. The next morning, the bank collapsed and  federal regulators took control.
The episode shows that executives  knew early on that higher interest rates could jeopardize the bank's  future earnings. Instead of shifting course to mitigate that risk, they  doubled down on a strategy to deliver near-term profits, displaying an  appetite for risk that set the stage for SVB's stunning meltdown.
"Management  always wanted to tell a growth story," one former employee involved in  the bank's risk management said. "Every quarter, there was always this  pressure to deliver earnings."
The new revelations come as  lawmakers and regulators review what a senior Federal Reserve official  called a "textbook case of mismanagement" leading to the nation's  second-largest bank failure. Much of their focus will turn to the arcane  world of managing interest-rate risk.
SVB's new projections took  effect last year and assumed that cash flow from deposits would stay  consistent for longer, softening the projected bite of higher interest  rates. Before changing the model, an interest-rate hike of two  percentage points would drop a measure of future cash flows by more than  27 percent; afterward, the hit was less than 5 percent, according to  the bank's securities filings.
Pushing for the change in  assumptions was Dan Beck, SVB's chief financial officer, according to  one former employee, and it was approved by the bank's Asset Liability  Management Committee, which manages interest-rate risk, both former  employees said. The change made several mid-level bank officials  uncomfortable, one person said, though there was historical data on  deposits to support it.
Efforts to contact Beck were unsuccessful,  and lawyers representing him in a lawsuit didn't respond to requests  for comment. Efforts to contact Michael Kruse, who headed the bank's  Asset Liability Management Committee, according to the former employees,  were also unsuccessful.
One of the former employees said changing  assumptions about interest-rate risk were shared with federal and state  regulators in late 2021 or 2022.
An official at the California  Department of Financial Protection and Innovation said it could not  comment on "confidential supervisory information."
Michael Barr,  the Fed's vice chair for supervision, testified to a Senate committee  Tuesday that its supervisory team cited the bank for "ineffective board  oversight" and "risk management weaknesses" in May. A Federal Reserve  spokesman declined to comment beyond those public statements.
SVB  was a financial pillar of Silicon Valley start-ups, lending money to  companies with untested business models but high potential for growth.  As SVB prospered alongside the start-ups it aided, top executives  increasingly thought of themselves as part of the industry they served  and prioritized highflying returns, according to current and former  employees. For a time, they succeeded: The stock price of SVB Financial  Group, the bank's holding company, tripled in less than two years as  deposits grew at breakneck speed.
Greg Becker, SVB's chief  executive, was given to enthusiastic pronouncements on the prospects of  start-ups and tech firms, even in recent downtimes. He saw himself as  more venture capitalist than banker, according to some who know him.
"He  thinks about taking some risks to make effective investments in  companies, which is not how banks normally do them," a longtime venture  capitalist who often dealt with Becker said, speaking on the condition  of anonymity to preserve relationships in the Silicon Valley finance  world. "It's fair to say he was more focused on the upside than risk  management."
A spokesman for Becker declined to comment for this article.
SVB's  rapid growth during the early years of the pandemic created several  stresses. The bank had to invest a mountain of customer cash at a time  of rock-bottom interest rates. To maximize its return, the company  purchased longer-term mortgage and government-backed securities that pay  higher interest than the bank passed on to its depositors, allowing it  to show sparkling financial performance every quarter for two years.
In  an apparent bet that interest rates would go down last fall, SVB sold  for a profit the financial instruments it used to hedge against the risk  of higher rates, according to a company presentation. Instead, the  opposite happened: The Federal Reserve began to raise interest rates  more aggressively over the summer to tamp down inflation. That reduced  the value of SVB's securities portfolio, meaning the bank would take a  loss if it had to sell.
"They thought they could never go wrong,"  said a former bank official who spoke on the condition of anonymity to  discuss internal business practices, recalling an internal stress test  in late 2018 or 2019 that showed SVB could lose at least a third of its  deposits over two years. Executives directed that that model also be  reworked. "If they see a model they don't like," the official said,  "they scrap it."
Kate Mitchell, a venture capitalist and chair of the SVB board's risk committee, didn't respond to a request for comment.
The  behavior of customers depositing money is a key variable that banks use  in developing risk models. One metric, closely tracked by banks and  their examiners, estimates future cash flows and how sensitive they are  to changes in interest rates. It was this metric, called the economic  value of equity, that triggered a warning in mid-2020, according to the  former employees.
SVB hired a consultant, Curinos, to review its  interest-rate risk model, according to the former employees. The bank  first disclosed the review of its model in May and finalized the change  in the second quarter of 2022. But by the end of the year, SVB left out  the economic value of equity - which it had reported for a decade - from  its public interest-rate analysis.
Curinos declined to comment on  whether it did any work for SVB, adding in a statement that the company  works with banks and "routinely analyzes customer behavior to assess  the likelihood that their balances will change based on different  stimuli, such as interest rates."
In catering to start-ups and  tech companies, the bank had fewer customers than most banks its size.  At the end of last year, 93.8 percent of SVB's deposits were above  Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. limits and thus uninsured, the highest  proportion among large U.S. banks, according to S&P Global. That  made it more exposed to the risk of customers pulling their money, some  felt.
In April 2022, SVB parted ways with its chief risk officer  of nearly six years, Laura Izurieta. The bank said that it "initiated  discussions with Ms. Izurieta about a transition" in early 2022 and that  she stayed on to help with "transition-related duties" until October.  SVB didn't disclose this until March 3, when a securities filing  revealed it didn't hire a new chief risk officer until late December.
Izurieta didn't respond to requests for comment.
As  late as July, Beck, the company's chief financial officer, said on an  earnings call that "we're still well positioned to the upside for higher  rates." But pressure was mounting on SVB as interest rates rose faster  than the company had expected.
When the company filed its  quarterly earnings report the following month, it revealed that its  long-term securities - accounting for about 45 percent of its total  assets - had an unrealized loss of $11.2 billion, up dramatically from a  $1.3 billion unrealized loss just six months earlier. Three months  later, unrealized losses totaled nearly $16 billion.
Compounding  SVB's troubles, the bank was paying higher interest to keep customers  from pulling their money while borrowing at higher rates.
By the  end of 2022, SVB's deposits were costing the bank almost twice as much  as the median among a group of peers, according to Moody's.
Some  on Wall Street were also taking notice. Chris Kotowski, an analyst at  Oppenheimer & Co., downgraded SVB's stock from buy to hold last  September after the bank indicated its income from interest payments was  under pressure.
"That just set the alarm bells off for me," Kotowski said.
With  SVB's income squeezed by higher deposit and borrowing costs, investors  soured on its stock, prompting executives to make their case to Wall  street analysts.
JPMorgan Chase & Co. analysts hosted a  webinar last November with Beck, SVB's chief financial officer, who  addressed investor concerns over nearly two hours, according to a  research note the bank sent to clients. The analysts concluded that the  downturn in deposits was manageable and that SVB had ample liquidity  without having to sell securities at a loss, "even if a worst case  scenario plays out." As late as January, JPMorgan forecast a turnaround  for SVB and recommended clients buy the stock.
A week before the  bank failed, in its annual report to shareholders, SVB praised its top  executives for an area of achievement: managing risk.
Becker, the  CEO, had displayed "strong leadership of the continued evolution of risk  management." Beck, the CFO, was credited for "promotion of a strong  risk culture."