ECON [FINANCE] First Deathburger Thread of the 2023 Banking Crisis. ALL welcome (hall passes at the door). Have At It.

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Groucho

Has No Life - Lives on TB
There is one other quiet monster lurking just beyond the lights. These "little" bank failures may be the BLACK SWAN some have been hinting at. You know, that creature that all the "experts" said doesn't exist until it waddles into the light. If these failures cause the markets to panic or see the light, we could wind up experiencing a honest to goodness black swan event.

black swan.jpg

Things could really become unglued with our massive Biden/Bammy debt, grossly under collateralized banks, and equities that are trying to breathe in a monetary vacuum.
In a relatively short period of time, we could find our country asking Zimbabwe if they would trade their currency for ours and we'd be refused.
That's hyper inflation. Hyper inflation isn't just bad inflation, it means your "cash" has absolutely no value compared to the goods and services you want/need.

Can't happen? Uh-huh, and there's no such thing as a black swan either.
 

phloydius

Veteran Member
I'm searching for a video which was posted several months ago. In it, a group of officials were discussing what they would do if they knew an economic collapse was imminent. They all agreed that it would be counterproductive to announce anything to the public. As one woman responded to this consensus, she remarked with a wink and a chuckle, "We'd actually prefer it happen on a Friday". All parties present smiled in agreement.

If you remember seeing this same video clip, please post a link.

Don't have a link, but I think that was part of the videos where they were talking about how to implement the bail-in's if banks collapse.
 

rondaben

Veteran Member
I wonder if this will FINALLY convince these wise fools that Keynes was wrong and Adam Smith was right.

You CANNOT "spend" your way out of debt.

Any elementary school student could see that--but our oh-so-wise economists think their fairy-tale reality will somehow erase.....reality.
Actually, its working as intended. Read the account of the first central banker, Joseph.

THAT is the model.

And it will have the same effect that it did to bring the known world at that time under Pharoah's boot.
 

Groucho

Has No Life - Lives on TB
That, if memory serves, is how it happened in 2008. After the govt nationalized Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac in Sept, we thought with relief--"Ok--that's fixed it. That's plugged that hole."

Then Lehman Brothers failed in Oct.
Oh, you rascal. "They" don't want us to remember that.

Very good. ;)
 

ChicagoMan74

ULTRA MAGA

New Acronym: the Buttf&$ker Program, or BTFP​

Meet the BTFP, the Fed’s 2023 Crisis Facility​

Among measures to counter fallout from the failure of Silicon Valley Bank, the Federal Reserve said it would create a new lending program for banks: the Bank Term Funding Program, or BTFP.

The facility will allow banks to take advances from the Fed for up to a year by pledging Treasurys, mortgage-backed bonds and other debt as collateral. By allowing banks to pledge their bonds, they can meet customer withdrawals without having to sell their bonds at a loss, which is what Silicon Valley Bank did last week, sparking a run on the bank.

The biggest draw of this facility is that banks can borrow funds equal to the par value of the collateral they pledge, according to the Fed's announcement. This means that the Fed won’t look to the market value of the collateral, which in many cases reflect big unrealized losses due to the jump in interest rates.

That is a boon for banks, who were sitting on some $620 billion in unrealized losses on securities at the end of last year, according to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.

The Fed also won’t demand that banks pledge collateral in excess of the advances they are taking, which is typically the case when banks borrow from, say, the Federal Home Loan Bank system.

And if banks can’t repay all the advances in a year’s time? The Treasury Department is providing $25 billion of credit protection to the Fed just in case. “The Federal Reserve does not anticipate that it will be necessary to draw on these backstop funds,” the Fed said in its announcement Sunday night.
BTFP? Sounds too much like BTFD.

NSFW.

RT 2:45
 

psychgirl

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Well, while we're waiting for it to all burn down... ZH is reporting the oversight committee now has docs in hand, detailing (some of) Biden's CCP financial connections. It's been bugging me all day, what the "other hand" might be up to that we're not supposed to look at.
Good Lord, finally!
Steep price to pay for possible justice though, isn’t it.

“ match, meet my good friend gasoline!”
 

The Hammer

Has No Life - Lives on TB
just a guess,

Their stock price will all open up sometime tomorrow.

The Fed blinked and now the market thinks its free money and the government will backstop all failures and stupid decisions.

Market goes up they get rich, market goes down they get bailed out and they get rich. AND WE GET THE BILL.
Yep, this is why the futes are up. The government handing out money like free candy.

Which, of course, is what's propped up the market ever since 2008, and why the market has had an off-and-on hissy fit with the Fed raising rates the past year or so...
 

Truthsearch

Doom is ALWAYS 6 Months Away...
Sure there is. Where is the money?
how liquid is it?
Remember the key concept that leverage works in reverse too.
Its the basis of why its important to try to contain contagion. 1 billion dollars of loss here can result in 10 billion in the next bank that has leveraged it 10:1, and 100:1 in the tertiary banks. Thats assuming that there is a reserve being held and, for the last covid years there hasn't been one.
Respectfully, your knowledge of economics is flawed. Trillions of dollars has been printed recently, which means the money has less overall value; leading to inflation. You can clearly see this in higher prices at the grocery store, gas pump, family homes, non-luxury cars, and not to mention inflated stock prices.

The government, in the form of the FDIC and Treasury Department has made it known that they will stand behind any and all deposits to prop up dead/zombie banks. They will do this by creating(printing) yet more money, continuing the inflationary spiral.

Please know what you are talking about before giving what might pass for financial advice.
 

JDSeese

Veteran Member
Respectfully, your knowledge of economics is flawed. Trillions of dollars has been printed recently, which means the money has less overall value; leading to inflation. You can clearly see this in higher prices at the grocery store, gas pump, family homes, non-luxury cars, and not to mention inflated stock prices.

The government, in the form of the FDIC and Treasury Department has made it known that they will stand behind any and all deposits to prop up dead/zombie banks. They will do this by creating(printing) yet more money, continuing the inflationary spiral.

Please know what you are talking about before giving what might pass for financial advice.
Should we just dump a few more billion into the paper shredder that is the Ukraine Defense Fund?
Brewster needs to spend his Billions and have nothing to show for it in the end

I don't pretend to understand how any of this works
 

Bolt

FJB
Oh, just so you all know, I know nothing about all this high finance stuff and I haven't stayed in a Holiday Inn for over 25 years. I'm just passing gas and having a Buffalo Trace with a splash. :)
Great minds, and all that. I'm having a BT Old Fashioned right now. Banking debacles be damned. The .gov is going to bail out those on their side as soon as tomorrow morning. They owe them and will be rewarded accordingly. But don't worry, Ukraine will still continue to get $BILLIONS of the taxpayers' money.
 

rondaben

Veteran Member
Respectfully, your knowledge of economics is flawed. Trillions of dollars has been printed recently, which means the money has less overall value; leading to inflation. You can clearly see this in higher prices at the grocery store, gas pump, family homes, non-luxury cars, and not to mention inflated stock prices.

The government, in the form of the FDIC and Treasury Department has made it known that they will stand behind any and all deposits to prop up dead/zombie banks. They will do this by creating(printing) yet more money, continuing the inflationary spiral.

Please know what you are talking about before giving what might pass for financial advice.
Thats fine, I'm not an economist.

But simply looking at the monetary supply that "printed" money didn't end up in the broader economy. In fact, the monetary supply started to drop last spring corresponding to the increase in the Fed Funds rate and quantitative tightening. The cost of the goods wasn't driven by excess demand due to printing, it was due to a supply shortage when most of the world was shut down due to covid. As things reopened supply caught up and surged; now demand is tanking because the last of that sweet stimulus is drying up and the Fed is draining the pool.

That's deflationary.

Here is the M2 charts that show monetary contraction:

https://fred.stlouisfed.org/graph/fredgraph.png?g=10KLK
fredgraph.png
 

homecanner1

Veteran Member
To get us all in the proper roaring 2020's about to collapse on its arse mood

Aint We Got Fun from Great Gatsby Soundtrack

Every morning,
Every evening,
Ain't we got fun?
Not much money,
Oh, but honey,
Ain't we got fun?
The rent's unpaid dear,
We haven't a bus.
But smiles were made, dear,
For people like us.
In the winter,
in the Summer,
Don't we have fun?
Times are bum
and getting bummer
Still we have fun.
There's nothing surer,
The rich get rich
and the poor get children.
In the meantime,
In between time,
Ain't we got fun!

I don't think this generation of Millennials and Gen z will even have abundant fertility left to count on this time around

still ain't decided if that is a curse or a blessing for them just yet...

And I am reminded the meek shall inherit the earth. Not megayachts, not mcmansions, just the land as its stewards.

Grill that deathburger well done for me!
 

doctor_fungcool

TB Fanatic
Three.

Silvergate
Silicon Valley Bank
Signature (in New York)
³
Pre market implied open for Dow is 93 points up.
Once I built a railroad, I made it run
I made it run against time
Once I built a railroad, and now it's done
Buddy, can you spare a dime?

Once I built a tower way up to the sun
Of bricks and morter and lime
Once I built a tower, and now it's done
Buddy can you spare a dime?

Once in khaki suits, gee we looked swell
Full of that Yankee-Doodlee-Dum
A half-a-million boots went sloggin' through hell
And I was the kid with the drum

Say don't you remember, you called me Al
It was Al all the time
Say don't you remember, I was your pal
Buddy, can you spare a dime?

Once I built a railroad, I made it run
I made it run against time
Once I built a railroad, and now it's done
Buddy, can you spare a dime?
 

doctor_fungcool

TB Fanatic
»



Excerpt from Bill Holter0​

"Holter, who is also a precious metals broker from Miles Franklin, says the bankruptcy of SVB is just the tip of the default iceberg. Holter says, “The problem is a global bankruptcy. In order to avoid the bankruptcy, you don’t go from bank A to bank B or some sovereign treasury. That is not totally true because the government basically turned depositors into creditors in 2012. Holter says, “In 2012 or 2013, the FDIC amended their rules and said there would no longer be bailouts, but bail-ins. People don’t understand that when there is a bail-in and a bank goes down, it takes all or part of the money they are holding on your behalf to make themselves solvent. It is no surprise that Janet Yellen (Treasury Secretary) is saying there are not going to be bailouts because it’s been official policy for ten years or more. . . .There are cockroaches everywhere. The whole system is rotten to the core. The whole system is over-levered. The whole system is fraudulent. The entire system is a Ponzi scheme . . . . The government of the reserve currency of the world has to borrow a trillion dollars a year to stay solvent. That’s ridiculous.”
 

jward

passin' thru

Fed Panics: Signature Bank Closed By Regulators; Fed, TSY, FDIC Announce Another Banking System Bailout​


by Tyler Durden


6:20pm ET Update: Panic is finally here.
On Friday, we said that the Fed will have to make an announcement before the Monday open, and we didn't have to wait that long: in fact, the Fed waited just 15 minutes after futures opened for trading to announce the new bailout, alongside even more shocking news: the Treasury announced that New York State regulators are shuttering Signature Bank - a major New York bank - adding that all depositors both at Signature Bank, and also the now insolvent Silicon Valley Bank, will have access to their money on Monday.

And as we process the shock of yet another small bank failure (which makes JPMorgan even bigger), the Fed just issued a statement saying that "to support American businesses and households, the Federal Reserve Board on Sunday announced it will make available additional funding to eligible depository institutions to help assure banks have the ability to meet the needs of all their depositors. This action will bolster the capacity of the banking system to safeguard deposits and ensure the ongoing provision of money and credit to the economy."

The Fed also said that it is prepared to address any liquidity pressures that may arise, which in turn has just unveiled the first bailout acronym of the new crisis: the Bank Term Funding Program, or BTFP. Some more details:

The financing will be made available through the creation of a new Bank Term Funding Program (BTFP), offering loans of up to one year in length to banks, savings associations, credit unions, and other eligible depository institutions pledging U.S. Treasuries, agency debt and mortgage-backed securities, and other qualifying assets as collateral. These assets will be valued at par. The BTFP will be an additional source of liquidity against high-quality securities, eliminating an institution’s need to quickly sell those securities in times of stress.

The Fed explains that the Department of the Treasury will make available "up to $25 billion from the Exchange Stabilization Fund as a backstop for the BTFP." And while the Federal Reserve - which was completely clueless about this banking crisis until Thursday - does not anticipate that it will be necessary to draw on these backstop funds, we anticipate that the final number of needed backstop liquidity be somewhere north of $2 trillion.

What is more notable is that the BTFP - or Buy The ****ing Pivot - facility, will pledge collateral at par, not at market value, thus giving banks credit for all those hundreds of billions in unrealized net losses, and allowing banks to "unlock liquidity" based on losses which the Fed and TSY now backstop!

More from the Fed statement:

After receiving a recommendation from the boards of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) and the Federal Reserve, Treasury Secretary Yellen, after consultation with the President, approved actions to enable the FDIC to complete its resolution of Silicon Valley Bank in a manner that fully protects all depositors, both insured and uninsured. These actions will reduce stress across the financial system, support financial stability and minimize any impact on businesses, households, taxpayers, and the broader economy.

The Board is carefully monitoring developments in financial markets. The capital and liquidity positions of the U.S. banking system are strong and the U.S. financial system is resilient.

Depository institutions may obtain liquidity against a wide range of collateral through the discount window, which remains open and available. In addition, the discount window will apply the same margins used for the securities eligible for the BTFP, further increasing lendable value at the window.

The Board is closely monitoring conditions across the financial system and is prepared to use its full range of tools to support households and businesses, and will take additional steps as appropriate.

But wait, there's more: concurrently with the Fed's statement, the Treasury also issued a joint statement with the Fed and FDIC in which Powell, Yellen and Gruenberg all said that they are "taking decisive actions to protect the U.S. economy by strengthening public confidence in our banking system. This step will ensure that the U.S. banking system continues to perform its vital roles of protecting deposits and providing access to credit to households and businesses in a manner that promotes strong and sustainable economic growth."

Additionally, the trio announced that all depositors at Silicon Valley Bank will be bailed out, as will the depositors of New York's Signature Bank, which has just failed as well, and whose depositors will be made whole after invoking a "systemic risk exception"

After receiving a recommendation from the boards of the FDIC and the Federal Reserve, and consulting with the President, Secretary Yellen approved actions enabling the FDIC to complete its resolution of Silicon Valley Bank, Santa Clara, California, in a manner that fully protects all depositors. Depositors will have access to all of their money starting Monday, March 13. No losses associated with the resolution of Silicon Valley Bank will be borne by the taxpayer.

We are also announcing a similar systemic risk exception for Signature Bank, New York, New York, which was closed today by its state chartering authority. All depositors of this institution will be made whole. As with the resolution of Silicon Valley Bank, no losses will be borne by the taxpayer.

While depositors are safe, creditors and equity holders are not:

Shareholders and certain unsecured debtholders will not be protected. Senior management has also been removed. Any losses to the Deposit Insurance Fund to support uninsured depositors will be recovered by a special assessment on banks, as required by law.

Finally, the Federal Reserve Board on Sunday announced it will make available additional funding to eligible depository institutions to help assure banks have the ability to meet the needs of all their depositors.

The conclusion:

The U.S. banking system remains resilient and on a solid foundation, in large part due to reforms that were made after the financial crisis that ensured better safeguards for the banking industry. Those reforms combined with today’s actions demonstrate our commitment to take the necessary steps to ensure that depositors’ savings remain safe.

Translation: the Fed's hiking cycle is dead and buried, and here comes the next round of massive liquidity injections. It also means that the Fed, Treasury and FDIC have just experienced the most devastating humiliation in recent history - just 4 days ago Powell was telling Congress he could hike 50bps and here we are now using taxpayer funds to bail out banks that have collapsed because they couldn't even handle 4.75% and somehow the Fed has no idea!

To summarize:

Signature Bank has been closed
All depositors of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank will be fully protected
Shareholders and certain unsecured debtholders will not be protected
New Fed 13(3) facility announced with $25 billion from ESF to backstop bank deposits

As we said earlier on twitter, "this is a regulatory failure of historic proportions by both the Fed and Treasury. Instead of preventing billions in losses, the Fed was worrying about board diversity and Yellen was flying to Ukraine. Everyone should be sacked immediately."

Oh, and if the Fed really thinks that $25 billion from the ESF will be enough to backstop a bank run on $18 trillion of deposits...

... we wish them the best of luck.

* * *

6:10pm ET Update: Futures have opened for trading sharply higher, with bitcoin and precious metals also spiking amid rising expectations of either some sort of bank system bailout/backstop or, more likely, an end to the Fed's hiking cycle.

Echoing what the WaPo reported in an earlier trial balloon, Bloomberg writes that the Fed and the Treasury Department are preparing emergency measures to shore up banks and ensure they can meet potential demands by their customers to withdraw money.

As reported earlier, the Fed is planning to "ease the terms" of banks’ access to its discount window, giving firms a way to turn assets that have lost value into cash without the kind of losses that toppled SVB’s Silicon Valley Bank (as we noted earlier, the access to the Discoint Window was never an issue, what was is the stigma associated with using it and the likelihood that depositors will flee the moment it becomes public).

Additionally, the Fed and Treasury are also preparing a program to backstop deposits using the Fed’s emergency lending authority.

The use of the Fed’s emergency lending authority is for “unusual and exigent” circumstances, and signals that US regulators view the spillovers from SVB’s collapse as a sign of systemic risk in markets. Bloomberg adds that the FDIC will need to declare a system risk exception in order to insure the uninsured depositors, but we doubt that will be an issue.

The emergency lending facility is a Depression-era statute in the Federal Reserve Act that allows the central bank to make loans directly. The Fed is required to establish that borrowers were unable to obtain liquidity elsewhere. Using the emergency authority requires a vote by the Fed’s board and approval from the Treasury secretary.

Meanwhile, as reported previously, some banks began drawing on the discount window Friday, seeking to shore up liquidity in a panicked frenzy as widespread liquidations on Friday saw many regional banks lose as much as half of their market cap before recovering.

Amid speculation of yet another taxpayer funded bailout - and a guaranteed end to the Fed's rate hikes and potential return of QE - stock futures jumped above 3900...

.... with gold and bitcoin surging too.

* * *

4:30pm ET Update: It's getting to the point where every new "proposal" or "idea" being thrown about is worse than the previous one (or maybe this is just how the clueless LGBTQ equity-focused Fed is doing trial balloons on a Sunday afternoon. Shortly after the WaPo reported that the Fed is "seriously considering safeguarding all uninsured deposits at Silicon Valley Bank", BBG is out with a report that the Federal Reserve is also "considering easing the terms of banks’ access to its discount window, giving firms a way to turn assets that have lost value into cash without the kind of losses that toppled SVB Financial Group."

Such a move would increase the ability of banks to keep up with demands from depositors to withdraw, without having to book losses by selling bonds and other assets that have deteriorated in value amid interest-rate increases — the dynamic that caused SVB to collapse on Friday.

The report goes on to note that as many had expected, some banks began drawing on the discount window Friday, seeking to shore up liquidity after authorities seized SVB’s Silicon Valley Bank, which is precisely why it is bizarre that this is even news: after all, the Discount Window has always been opened, and the fact that banks hate to use it has nothing to do with "ease of access" and all to do with the stigma of being associated with the discount window. Just recall how banks that were revealed to have used the discount window around Lehman's failure saw accelerating bank runs.

Or maybe the Fed's thinking goes that while it would be too late to save SIVB, other banks would somehow boost confidence of their depositors by yelling from the rooftops: "Hey, look at us, we are well capitalized: we just borrowed $X billion from the Fed's Discount Window."

Needless to say, the mere rumor that regional bank XYZ has been forced to access this "last ditch" funding facility will result in all its depositors fleeing, which is why we once again ask: after "fixing" Ukraine's Burisma, is that polymath genius Hunter Biden now in charge of US bank bailout policy?
 

jward

passin' thru
* * *

3:00pm ET Update: In a reversal of what Janet Yellen said just hours ago, WaPo reports that federal authorities are "seriously considering safeguarding all uninsured deposits at Silicon Valley Bank" - and by extension any other bank on the verge of failure - and are weighing an extraordinary intervention to prevent what they fear would be a panic in the U.S. financial system. Translation: bailout of all depositors, not just those guaranteed by the the FDIC (<$250K).

Officials at the Treasury Department, Federal Reserve, and Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation discussed the idea this weekend, the people said, with only hours to go before financial markets opened in Asia. White House officials have also studied the idea, per two separate people familiar with those discussions. The plan would be among the potential policy responses if the government is unable to find a buyer for the failed bank.

While selling SVB to a healthy institution remains the preferred solution - as most bank failures are resolved that way and enable depositors to avoid losing any money - there have been several reports that no big bank has stepped up as of yet, leaving the government/Fed as the only option.

As reported earlier, the FDIC began an auction process for SVB on Saturday and hoped to identify a winning bidder Sunday afternoon, with final bids due at 2 p.m. ET.

Some more from the WaPo report:

Although the FDIC insures bank deposits up to $250,000, a provision in federal banking law may give them the authority to protect the uninsured deposits as well if they conclude that failing to do so would pose a systemic risk to the broader financial system, the people said. In that event, uninsured deposits could be backstopped by an insurance fund, paid into regularly by U.S. banks.

Before that happens, the systemic risk verdict must be endorsed by a two-thirds vote of the Fed's Board of Governors and the FDIC board along with Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen. No final decision has been made, but the deliberations reflect concern over the collateral damage from SVB's collapse and authorities' struggle to respond amid limits on their powers implemented following the 2008 financial bailouts.

"We've been hearing from those depositors and other concerned people this weekend. So let me say that I've been working all weekend with our banking regulators to design appropriate policies to address this situation," Yellen said on the CBS program "Face the Nation."

But more importantly, the WaPo report contradicts what Yellen said just a few hours earlier, namely that "during the financial crisis, there were investors and owners of systemic large banks that were bailed out . . . and the reforms that have been put in place means we are not going to do that again,”

This suggests that in just a few short hours, officials and regulators peaked behind the scenes and realized just how bad a potential bad crisis could be and have made a 1800 degree U turn.

The result: any erroneous higherer for longerer narrative spewed by some self-appointed experts has just blown up, and what is about to be unleashed is another vast liquidity wave, something that bitcoin clearly is starting to anticipate.

* * *

1:15pm ET Update: In a throwback to the legendary "Lehman Sunday", when dozens of credit traders did an ad hoc CDS trading and novation session on the Sunday ahead of the bank's Chapter 11 filing to minimize the chaos and fallout from the coming bankruptcy, Bloomberg reports that the FDIC kicked off an auction process late Saturday for Silicon Valley Bank, with final bids due by Sunday afternoon.

The FDIC is reportedly aiming for "a swift deal" but a winner may not be known until late Sunday. Bloomberg also reported that the regulator is racing to sell assets and make a portion of clients’ uninsured deposits available as soon as Monday; the open questions are i) whether there will be a haircut and ii) how big it will be. A table from JPM's Michael Cemablest below shows historical haircuts on uninsured depositors in previous bank crises.

We get a slightly more positive vibe from a Reuters report according to which "authorities are preparing "material action" on Sunday to shore up deposits in Silicon Valley Bank and stem any broader financial fallout from its sudden collapse."

Details of the announcement expected on Sunday were not immediately available. One source said the Federal Reserve had acted to keep banks operating during the COVID-19 pandemic, and could take similar action now.

"This will be a material action, not just words," one source said. Earlier, U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said that she was working with banking regulators to respond after SVB became the largest bank to fail since the 2008 financial crisis.

As fears deepened of a broader fallout across the U.S. regional banking sector and beyond, Yellen said she was working to protect depositors but ruled out a bailout.

"We want to make sure that the troubles that exist at one bank don't create contagion to others that are sound," Yellen told the CBS News Sunday Morning show. "During the financial crisis, there were investors and owners of systemic large banks that were bailed out ... and the reforms that have been put in place means we are not going to do that again," Yellen added.

Meanwhile, more than 3,500 CEOs and founders representing some 220,000 workers signed a petition started by Y Combinator appealing directly to Yellen and others to backstop depositors, warning that more than 100,000 jobs could be at risk.

Reuters also reports that the FDIC was trying to find another bank willing to merge with SVB:

"Some industry executives said such a deal would be sizeable for any bank and would likely require regulators to give special guarantees and make other allowances."

That said, the longer we wait without some resolution the more likely it is that SVB's unsecured depositors will get pennies on the dollar, according to the following (unconfirmed) reporting from Chalie Gasparino: "Bankers increasingly pessimistic a single buyer will emerge for SVB, laying out options for clients w money in there: 1-ride it out. 2-sell deposits for around 70-80 cents on dollar to other financial players; borrow against deposits jpmorgan at 50 cents on dollar."

The FDIC previously said the agency has said it will make 100% of protected deposits available on Monday, when Silicon Valley Bank branches reopen.

There was also news for those whose money remains frozen at SIVB. BBG notes that tech lender Liquidity Group is planning to offer about $3 billion in emergency loans to start-up clients hit by the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank.

Liquidity has about $1.2 billion ready in cash to make available in the coming weeks, Chief Executive Officer and co-founder Ron Daniel said in an interview on Sunday. The group is also in discussions with its funding partners, including Japan’s Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group Inc. and Apollo Global Management Inc., to offer an additional $2 billion in loans, he said.

“By helping the companies to survive now, I’m hoping some of them would succeed and come back to us in the future,” Daniel said. “We’re nurturing our future clients.” A typical loan will be a one-year facility of $1 million to $10 million, or as much as 30% of the balances held with SVB, Daniel said. The priority is to help companies meet payroll expenses.

The fate of other SVB-linked entities appears to be somewhat rosier. Bloomberg reports that Royal Group, an investment firm controlled by a top Abu Dhabi royal, is considering a possible takeover of the UK arm of Silicon Valley Bank following its collapse last week, according to people familiar with the matter. The conglomerate, chaired by United Arab Emirates National Security Adviser Sheikh Tahnoon bin Zayed Al Nahyan, is discussing a potential buy-out through one of its subsidiaries.
 
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