SVB collapse may be start of ‘slow-rolling
crisis’, warns BlackRock boss
Larry Fink tells investors more ‘shutdowns and
seizures’ in US possible and predicts inflation and interest rates to rise
Credit
Suisse shares fall to record low as investor rules out more funding
Edward
Helmore in New York
Wed 15 Mar
2023 14.53 GMT
The collapse
of Silicon Valley Bank could just be the start of “a “slow rolling crisis” in
the US financial system with “more seizures and shutdowns coming”, the chief
executive of the world’s largest asset manager has warned.
The CEO of
BlackRock, Larry Fink, also predicted in a letter to investors and company
bosses that inflation would persist and rates continue to rise, trends that
both contributed to SVB’s collapse.
The
failures over the past week of not only the California-based bank but also
fellow US lenders Signature and Silvergate have prompted jitters across global
markets. Such concerns were further fuelled on Wednesday when shares in Credit
Suisse plunged to record lows after the troubled Swiss lender’s biggest
investor ruled out providing it with more funding.
Fink
described the situation as the “price of easy money” that was having to be paid
after the Federal Reserve’s decision to start aggressively raising interest
rates. “Something else had to give as the fastest pace of rate hikes since the 1980s
exposed cracks in the financial system,” he said.
Fink added
it was not yet clear where new victims of the “asset-liability mismatches” that
claimed SVB would be found.
“It’s too
early to know how widespread the damage is,” Fink wrote. “The regulatory
response has so far been swift, and decisive actions have helped stave off
contagion risks. But markets remain on edge.”
However,
other leading financial figures warned that the instability brewing in the
European banking sector could pose an even bigger threat to global market
stability.
The
high-profile economist Nouriel Roubini told Bloomberg news that if Credit
Suisse were to collapse it could result in a “Lehman moment” – a reference to
the collapse of the US investment bank Lehman Brothers in August 2007 at the
start of the global financial crisis.
Despite
government interventions to secure depositors of SVB and New York-based
Signature, leading Wall Street figures warned that crises affecting regional or
mid-size US banks may not be at an end, with further regulatory and market
repercussions.
Ray Dalio,
the recently retired founder of Bridgewater, said on his LinkedIn page that
SVB’s failure was part of the “very classic bubble-bursting part of the
short-term debt cycle”, adding: “This bank failure is a ‘canary in the
coalmine’ early-sign dynamic that will have knock-on effects in the venture
world and well beyond it.”
SVB was
placed under government administration on Friday, with its depositors
guaranteed beyond $250,000 limits to try to reassure markets.
Prosecutors
and regulators have reportedly launched twin investigations into the
tech-focused lender, looking at its lack of a risk management officer in the
run-up to its failure and subsequent takeover by government regulators.
According
to the Wall Street Journal, which first reported on the yet-to-be-announced
investigations, the US department of justice and the Securities Exchange
Commission will examine the events that led up to bank’s collapse, stock sales
by SVB officials made in recent weeks, and its lack of a chief risk officer.
SVB had not
had anyone in that position since April 2022, when executive Laura Izurieta
stepped down, and January this year SVB announced it had hired Kim Olson,
formerly with Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corp.
On Monday,
the UK government helped strike a deal for HSBC to buy SVB’s UK operations,
saving thousands of British tech startups and investors from big losses.
On
Wednesday, bosses at the London-headquartered lender called on employees at the
rescued British arm of SVB to assure clients “their deposits are safe and loans
are supported”.
“We’ve put
close to £2bn of liquidity into SVB UK and we’re ready to deploy more cash and
more liquidity, as needed,” said the memo, signed by HSBC’s group CEO Noel
Quinn.
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário