The Ignominious End Of Silicon Valley Bank

The Ignominious End Of Silicon Valley Bank


December 5, 2025 | Alex Summers

The Ignominious End Of Silicon Valley Bank


Sudden Impact: The Fall Of SVB

You probably heard how Silicon Valley Bank collapsed in March 2023, sending waves of panic through the startup world, venture funds, fintech, and the banking industry. But how did a bank that seemed so secure fail in just 48 hours? The answer comes down to a mix of rapid growth, bad timing, and avoidable mistakes. We look back at what happened to Silicon Valley Bank and why it matters.

Svbmsn01

Advertisement

Beginnings And Rapid Growth In Start-Up Banking

SVB started in 1983 but it took a very different approach from most other banks. Instead of serving everyday consumers or regular companies, it focused on tech startups, venture capital and future Silicon Valley giants. This gave the bank a reputation as the financial backbone of innovation. SVB knew the tech industry and loved taking big bets that the other banks didn’t have the stomach for. The model worked spectacularly for decades.

File:3003 West Tasman Drive entrance 2, Santa Clara, California.jpgMinh Nguyen, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

The Tech Boom: A Surge Of Deposits

During the 2010s and especially through 2020 and 2021, venture capital went wild. Billions of dollars poured into tech startups, and SVB became the default banking choice for many of the new companies. Deposits exploded. Flush with cash from clients who weren’t spending much yet, SVB had an amazing amount of liquidity. It looked like a success story that other banks were eager to copy. The business model was ideal for the booming tech sector.

File:3003 West Tasman Drive monument sign, Santa Clara, California.jpgMinh Nguyen, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

Investment In Long-Term Bonds And Treasuries

With so much money flowing in, SVB did what a lot of banks do: they bought government bonds and long-term securities. Treasuries are normally ultra-safe investments and guarantee returns over time. SVB believed deeply that these investments were conservative and secure. The bank had every expectation that those deposits would remain stable or continue growing. At first, it looked like a simple, smart way to generate profit with low risk.

Markets Open As Fears Over Further Bank Failures Loom Over Financial IndustryMichael M. Santiago, Getty Images

Advertisement

Artificially Low Interest Rates: A Risky Strategy

For years interest rates stayed historically low, tempting SVB to keep buying long-term bonds without much worry. That low-rate environment made bonds look like a solid option — until the economic conditions changed. The strategy worked only as long as the world stayed predictable. In reality, SVB was stacking risk without much of a gameplan for what would happen when rates skyrocketed.

San Francisco, CA, USA, March 17, 2023: SVB Silicon Valley Bank Private Wealth boarded up, broken in, man walking byLarry Zhou, Shutterstock

Advertisement

Startups Slow Down: Deposits Turn To A Trickle

By late 2021 and through 2022, funding started getting tight. Tech valuations dropped, venture capital was suddenly scarce, and startups began to dip into the cash they had deposited at SVB. Instead of pouring in money, depositors began taking it out. The financial tide was now going out. SVB now had far less cash on hand. The same customers who fueled the bank’s rise were now unintentionally draining its lifeblood.

Silicon Valley Bank Shut Down By RegulatorsJustin Sullivan, Getty Images

Advertisement

Interest Rate Hikes: 2022–2023

As inflation surged, interest rates jumped rapidly. That was no minor inconvenience; it ruined the value of the long-term bonds SVB bought. The bank could no longer sell them at full price. The very assets meant to protect the bank had now turned into serious liabilities. Suddenly, a safe investment became a financial boat anchor dragging the balance sheet down into the cold inky depths of disaster.

Kazan, Russia - Mar 13, 2023: Smartphone with Silicon Valley Bank logo in hand on background of large red arrow pointing down. Falling stock price.Sergei Elagin, Shutterstock

Advertisement

Unrealized Losses Build On Balance Sheet

Banks don’t have to report losses until they sell assets. So SVB held on to these bonds, and the losses sat quietly on the books. On paper, the losses weren’t doing any harm—yet. But in reality, they were creating a huge hole. If depositors were to suddenly demand their money, selling those bonds would mean losses up into the billions. The moment when all hell broke loose wasn’t long in coming.

A man enters a Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) in Pasadena, California, Monday, March 13, 2023.  Ringo Chiu, Shutterstock

Advertisement

Growing Deposit Outflows: Liquidity Crisis Looms

Startups and venture firms continued to withdraw large sums of money. SVB’s liquidity evaporated. And because the bulk of its assets were tied up in long-term bonds, the bank couldn’t sell them quickly without taking an enormous hit. The race between withdrawals and liquidity wasn’t a slow erosion, but a gathering avalanche. SVB was now in a classic cash-shortage crisis.

Silicon Valley Bank's Future Remains Uncertain As Branches Reopen On MondayJustin Sullivan, Getty Images

Advertisement

The Trigger: SVB’s Public Announcement On Losses And Capital Raise

In early March 2023, SVB announced a loss of $1.8 billion from selling securities and said that it needed to raise capital immediately. The message was intended to reassure markets, but it ended up having the opposite effect. Startups and investors saw it as a warning sign on the road ahead. Confidence spiraled down the drain in an instant. What could have been a manageable situation evolved into a panic-stricken stampede for the exits.

Banks Collapse In Wake Of Closing Of Silicon Valley Bank By RegulatorsNurPhoto, Getty Images

Advertisement

Bank Run: Clients Pull Out Funds By The Billions

Within hours of hearing the announcement, founders, executives, and VC firms encouraged each other to pull their money. A digital bank run took off. Billions left the bank almost overnight. Because deposits were so heavily concentrated in a small industry, panic spread like wildfire. The speed of withdrawals left SVB no time to react. The bank simply couldn’t meet the sudden demand for cash, and the crisis burst forth like a dam breaking.

Silicon Valley Bank's Future Remains Uncertain As Branches Reopen On MondayJustin Sullivan, Getty Images

Advertisement

Regulatory Seizure And Collapse

On March 10, 2023, regulators stepped in, shut down the bank, and seized its deposits. It was now the second-largest bank failure in the checkered history of U.S. money and the biggest since 2008. The FDIC took the reins and issued guarantees of all the deposits. The collapse left businesses and lenders unsure of whether payroll, operating expenses, and savings would be available to them in sufficient amounts to make it through the next week.

File:FDIC seal Washington DC 2025-05-03 14-48-14 1.jpgG. Edward Johnson, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

Fallout Across Startups, Venture Firms, And Banking

The collapse of SVB didn’t stay contained inside one bank. Startups scrambled around looking for alternatives. Venture funds all moved their money. Regulators considered emergency measures. Other regional banks saw their stock prices go through the floor as frantic investors scanned their balance sheets. SVB’s fall was now a signal of a domino effect bringing imminent financial ruin through the entire sector.

SVB (Silicon Valley Bank) with keyboard and mouse, stock market chart, and red arrow pointing down. biggest bank in Silicon Valley, stocks fall.                      Oasishifi, Shutterstock

Advertisement

Concentration Risk In A Single Industry Sector

One major reason for the collapse was that SVB depended almost completely on tech startups and venture funding. When that sector slowed, the bank didn’t have much of a diverse deposit base to fall back on. A lack of diversification is always risky for any business, but for a bank, it can be an absolute death knell when one sector runs into trouble.

File:3005 West Tasman Drive, Santa Clara, California.jpgMinh Nguyen, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

Heavy Investment In Long-Term Securities

Over 75% of SVB’s assets were tied up in long-term Treasuries and mortgage-backed securities. That made the bank incredibly—and incredulously— vulnerable to fluctuating interest rates. When the rates rose, those assets instantly started hemorrhaging value. What should have been a conservative strategy now became one of the biggest risks on the balance sheet.

A man takes a closer look at a notice displayed at the window of a Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) in Pasadena, California, Monday, March 13, 2023.  Ringo Chiu, Shutterstock

Advertisement

Unrealized Losses Hidden Until It Was Too Late

SVB didn’t seem like it was losing money, but that was because its losses weren’t realized. The danger was invisible, lurking like a shark just below the surface. Then, right at the moment that the bank needed access to that cash, the losses became unavoidable. If the bank sold the bonds to raise money, it would lock in billions in real losses. That catch-22 wiped out public confidence and made the crisis irreversible.

Karola GKarola G, Pexels

Advertisement

Liquidity Mismatch: Cash Needed, Cash Unavailable

SVB’s problem wasn’t just of solvency it was liquidity. It owned huge assets but couldn’t convert them into cash quickly enough to meet the sudden onslaught of withdrawals. That mismatch between accessible cash and long-term investments meant that the deposits were solid on paper but unavailable when customers wanted access to their funds.

US-STOCKS-MARKETS-RATETIMOTHY A. CLARY, Getty Images

Advertisement

Weak Risk Management And Lack Of Hedging

SVB did not hedge interest-rate risk effectively. This means that banks normally use swaps, diversification, or other financial manipulations to protect against drastic or unforeseen market swings. SVB didn’t do this. When rates increased, the value of its assets took a nose-dive. The bank had no structural protection against the most predictable financial threat of the decade. Later criticism also focused on SVB's lack of a Chief Risk Officer for long periods leading up to the fall. Such a role might've been able to take steps to ward off the crisis.

Karola GKarola G, Pexels

Advertisement

Overconfidence In Low-Rate Conditions

For years the SVB brain trust assumed, as did many others, that interest rates would stay low. That confidence was based on the financial environment from 2008–2021. But the economic world changed quickly, and the bank didn’t catch on to the change quickly enough. The belief that conditions would remain the same turned into a blind spot that led directly to the collapse.

File:Silicon Valley Bank, Temple, Arizona.jpgTony Webster, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

Big Lesson: Diversify And Prepare For Risk

SVB’s collapse shows that a past track record of success isn’t enough. Without diversification, liquidity, and protection against market changes, even the strongest-looking business can fold like a house of cards. It just goes to show that no matter how good things are, you can’t assume it will last forever.

US-BANKING-GOVERNMENT-SVB-SILICON VALLEYNOAH BERGER, Getty Images

The Perfect Storm Of Bad Timing And Bad Decisions

Silicon Valley Bank imploded due to a combination of growth, sector concentration, long-term investments, interest-rate hikes, and most importantly, a sudden collapse in depositor confidence. When all those things converged, the bank collapsed within hours. The takeaway, as with any sudden spectacular financial meltdown, is to always prepare for risk even while you’re making money, because markets can turn faster than you expect.

File:Svb management.jpgSVB GmbH, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

You May Also Like:

Enron: The Anatomy Of A Fiasco

Sears once dominated retail with its catalogs and suburban stores, but decades of missteps led to the chain’s unravelling.

Photos From The Stock Market Crash On Black Thursday, 1929

Sources: 1, 2, 3, 4


READ MORE

A $10 flea-market find turns out to be a photo of Billy the Kid—one worth millions because of who else is pictured: The man who shot him.

He didn’t think much of it when he bought the old photo for $10 at a flea market. But under the dust and scratches lay something remarkable—a rare glimpse of the legendary Billy the Kid. Yet what stunned historians most wasn’t the outlaw himself…it was the man sitting right next to him.
October 29, 2025 Jesse Singer

10 Hidden Expenses That Are Draining Your Wallet Every Month

Even the most careful budgeters can end up wondering where their money went at the end of the month. Very often it's the small, recurring expenses that quietly add up over time.
May 6, 2025 Miles Brucker

10 Money Habits Of People Who Retire Before 40

Retiring at 40 isn't a pipe dream, and you don't have to be a tech genius, Wall Street bro, or pro athlete to do it. But you have to follow the habits of those who've done it before.
April 15, 2025 Penelope Singh

Once-Boring Postage Stamps That Are Now Jackpot To Collectors

A postmark here, a printing slip there—history has a way of hiding value in plain sight. Some stamps grew from ordinary mail carriers into cultural icons, now ranking among the world’s most sought-after collectibles.
September 16, 2025 Alex Summers
corporateinternal

10 Shocking Corporate Meltdowns

Major corporations seem so stable. That's why shocking corporate meltdowns are so compelling. Here are 10 of the worst ever.
June 14, 2023 Eul Basa

10 Ways To Increase Your Net Worth Without A Six-Figure Salary

Building wealth isn’t just for the rich or those with six-figure salaries. These ten strategies can help you grow your net worth without bringing in a huge paycheck.
May 20, 2025 Carl Wyndham


Disclaimer

The information on MoneyMade.com is intended to support financial literacy and should not be considered tax or legal advice. It is not meant to serve as a forecast, research report, or investment recommendation, nor should it be taken as an offer or solicitation to buy or sell any securities or adopt any particular investment strategy. All financial, tax, and legal decisions should be made with the help of a qualified professional. We do not guarantee the accuracy, timeliness, or outcomes associated with the use of this content.





Dear reader,


It’s true what they say: money makes the world go round. In order to succeed in this life, you need to have a good grasp of key financial concepts. That’s where Moneymade comes in. Our mission is to provide you with the best financial advice and information to help you navigate this ever-changing world. Sometimes, generating wealth just requires common sense. Don’t max out your credit card if you can’t afford the interest payments. Don’t overspend on Christmas shopping. When ordering gifts on Amazon, make sure you factor in taxes and shipping costs. If you need a new car, consider a model that’s easy to repair instead of an expensive BMW or Mercedes. Sometimes you dream vacation to Hawaii or the Bahamas just isn’t in the budget, but there may be more affordable all-inclusive hotels if you know where to look.


Looking for a new home? Make sure you get a mortgage rate that works for you. That means understanding the difference between fixed and variable interest rates. Whether you’re looking to learn how to make money, save money, or invest your money, our well-researched and insightful content will set you on the path to financial success. Passionate about mortgage rates, real estate, investing, saving, or anything money-related? Looking to learn how to generate wealth? Improve your life today with Moneymade. If you have any feedback for the MoneyMade team, please reach out to [email protected]. Thanks for your help!


Warmest regards,

The Moneymade team