The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. board voted Tuesday to explore a lawsuit against six former officers and eleven unnamed former directors of Silicon Valley Bank for mismanagement that led to the bank's failure.
According to a statement by FDIC Chairman Martin J. Gruenberg, the agency seeks to sue these individuals — who were not named by the agency — for their role in mismanaging SVB's investment portfolios, which exposed the bank to substantial risks, incurred billions of dollars in losses, and
"SVB's former directors and officers, who simultaneously served in equivalent positions for the holding company, SVBFG, permitted an imprudent payment of a bank-to-parent dividend from SVB to the holding company while the Bank was experiencing financial distress," Gruenberg said in an FDIC release. "SVB suffered billions of dollars in losses for which the FDIC as Receiver has both the authority and the responsibility to recover."
SVB, based in San Jose and founded in 1983, primarily served businesses backed by venture capital.
By the end of 2022, the bank reported $209 billion in assets and $191.4 billion in deposits. However, its rapid growth concealed significant risks, including a heavily concentrated customer base and an alarming 94% of deposits being uninsured, as noted by regulators.
These vulnerabilities came to a head in March 2023 when a surge of depositors rushed to withdraw funds. This forced SVB to sell securities at a loss, triggering its collapse within just 24 hours. The fallout created instability across the banking sector, prompting
The FDIC's
Earlier Tuesday, FDIC board member and CFPB Director Rohit Chopra floated the idea of considering
Consumer advocacy group Better Markets praised the FDIC for taking steps to hold bank executives accountable for alleged mismanagement and reckless behavior that drove the bank's collapse.
"The needless and avoidable collapse of SVB precipitated a banking crisis, led to a $23 billion loss to the deposit insurance fund and cost Americans as much as 1% of lost GDP due to the contagion and resulting credit contraction," they wrote in a release. "Banks don't neglect their duties, act recklessly, engage in high-risk behavior, or break the law – bankers do and that will continue unless and until individual bankers are meaningfully and personally punished."