Tuesday, March 14, 2023

"Biden Admin 'Radicals' Blocked SVB Sale, Nationalized It, Then Blamed Trump For Collapse"

This, if true is almost beyond belief. Almost.

From the Wall Street Journal and ZeroHedge, March 14:

Instead of spending taxpayer dollars to nationalize Silicon Valley Bank, a private buyer favored by the Treasury and the Federal Reserve had emerged, only to be nixed by FDIC Chairman Martin Gruenberg, according to the Wall Street Journal, citing a source with knowledge of the situation.

Instead the regulators offered solutions that bail out even uninsured bank depositors and other banks at unknown costs that Mr. Biden isn’t acknowledging. -WSJ

Kevin Hassett, former Chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers under Trump, told Fox Business that "there were buyers who were willing to step in & buy [SVB, but] the radicals at the @FDICgov basically weren’t going to allow that to happen ... the Biden Admin had a whitelist of companies that were allowed to buy the failed bank & companies that weren’t."

"If this is true," said Grabien founder Tom Elliott, "then this is another Biden scandal."

While most banks have hedged their interest-rate risk and diversified their deposits, SVB and Signature bank did not - yet, President Biden is of course blaming former President Donald Trump for modifying certain rules from the 2010 Dodd-Frank act in the 2018 bipartisan banking law, which raised the threshold to classify financial institutions as 'systemically important' (Sifi) from $50 billion in assets to $250 billion.

Yet, as the Journal notes, Barney Frank, co-author of Dodd-Frank, thinks that's BS, as the entire point of the 2018 legislation was to reduce costly compliance on mid-size banks so they could be more competitive with the giants - the latter of which benefit from a lower cost of funding due to their implicit government backstop. In short, the Dodd-Frank legislation was driving more deposits to large banks, while mid-size banks forced to comply with the same regulations were at a disadvantage.

The 2018 law did not excuse mid-sized banks from performing quarterly liquidity stress tests to ensure they could withstand "adverse market conditions," and "combined market and idiosyncratic stresses," such as interest-rate shocks. Mid-sized banks must also maintain a liquidity buffer of "highly liquid assets" such as Treasurys and MBS.

Something deeper afoot?

Biden's blame game aside, crypto VC Nic Carter has some very interesting thoughts on what went down in regards to the shuttering of Signature Bank, calling it a "Colossal scandal."....

...MUCH MORE

I think I now understand why I was asked what may be a pertinent question: 

Fun With The Political Contributions Database: California Venture Capitalists

As for the crypto angle, that seemed pretty obvious to anyone paying attention: 

And just like that crypto in America became unbanked.