Silicon Valley Bank (March 2023): the 44-hour bank run that took down the startup ecosystem's primary lender
On March 8, 2023, Silicon Valley Bank announced that it had sold approximately $21 billion of its available-for-sale (AFS) investment portfolio at a $1.8 billion realised loss and intended to raise $2 billion in capital. The announcement triggered an extraordinary deposit-withdrawal panic among SVB's concentrated startup-and-VC customer base. On March 9, customers attempted to withdraw approximately $42 billion — nearly a quarter of SVB's total deposits — in a single day. The FDIC took control of SVB on March 10. From the announcement to closure, the whole thing took about 44 hours. SVB became the third-largest bank failure in US history and the largest since the 2008 financial crisis. The case is the defining recent example of how concentrated customer-base risk plus digital-speed bank runs can collapse a $200B-plus institution in under two days.
- Story: Silicon Valley Bank collapsed March 10, 2023 in second-largest US bank failure ever. $42B single-day withdrawal attempts after March 8 announcement of bond losses. Social-media-coordinated bank run. FDIC takeover. All deposits protected including uninsured >$250K.
- Why it matters: SVB collapse is a defining recent banking crisis and social-media-accelerated bank run case.
- Takeaway: Modern banking faces social-media-accelerated bank-run risk that didn't exist in pre-digital era.
- Takeaway: Concentrated customer base creates correlated withdrawal risk.
- Takeaway: Bank runs can occur in 48 hours rather than weeks.
Silicon Valley Bank collapse — the four-step story
SVB collapse by the numbers
Quick facts
The SVB business model and concentration risk
Silicon Valley Bank was founded in 1983 and built a deeply specialised business model around the venture-capital-backed startup ecosystem. The bank's primary customer base was US VC-backed technology and healthcare companies and the VC firms that funded them. SVB held deposits from companies that had just raised funding rounds, provided venture debt and other startup-specific lending products, and built deep relationships with the major VC firms in the ecosystem. Industry estimates suggest approximately half of US VC-backed tech and healthcare companies banked at SVB at the time of the 2023 collapse.
The concentration was a strategic advantage during the 2010s and 2020-2021 venture-funded growth era — the ecosystem deposits grew rapidly through the 2020-2021 venture-funding peak. SVB invested the deposits heavily in long-duration US Treasury and mortgage-backed securities to pick up yield. The duration mismatch (long-term assets backing demand-deposit liabilities) was a structural risk that the bank's asset-liability committee did not adequately hedge against the possibility of rapid deposit outflows.
The March 8-10 collapse
In late 2022 and early 2023, rising interest rates produced two simultaneous pressures. First, the long-duration bond portfolio that SVB held lost significant market value (interest-rate increases reduce bond prices). Second, the venture-funded startup ecosystem shifted from net-deposit-positive (companies were raising money faster than they were spending it) to net-deposit-negative (companies were burning cash faster than they could raise new funding). The combination forced SVB to consider selling securities to raise cash to fund continuing deposit outflows.
On March 8, 2023, SVB announced it had sold approximately $21 billion of its AFS investment portfolio at a $1.8 billion realised loss, and that it intended to raise approximately $2 billion in additional capital. The announcement was intended to position SVB for the higher-rate environment but instead triggered panic. VC firms began advising their portfolio companies to move deposits out of SVB. On March 9, customers attempted to withdraw approximately $42 billion (nearly a quarter of total deposits) in a single day. The bank could not raise the cash to meet the withdrawal demand fast enough. The FDIC took control of SVB on March 10. From announcement to closure: roughly 44 hours.
The government intervention and ecosystem aftermath
On March 12, 2023, the FDIC, the Federal Reserve, and the US Treasury jointly announced that all SVB deposits would be backstopped — both insured deposits (under the $250,000 FDIC limit) and uninsured deposits (above the limit). The decision was significant because SVB had an unusually high proportion of uninsured deposits (most startup operating accounts held more than $250,000). Without the backstop, thousands of startups would have lost meaningful working capital. The Federal Reserve also launched the Bank Term Funding Program (BTFP) to provide emergency liquidity to banks holding underwater Treasury and MBS portfolios.
First Citizens Bank acquired SVB on March 26, 2023. The acquired business continued operating under the SVB brand initially. Many of SVB's key startup banking relationships subsequently dispersed across multiple banks (Mercury, Brex, JPMorgan, First Citizens, others) rather than remaining concentrated. The post-SVB period has been characterised by a more fragmented startup-banking landscape with multiple players competing for the deposits and lending business that SVB had concentrated.
How RGM thinks about concentration risk and digital-speed bank runs
When clients ask about concentration risk in financial services, the SVB collapse is the defining recent example. Three structural lessons. First, customer-base concentration is a strategic advantage in growing markets and a structural vulnerability in declining markets — the same VC-backed ecosystem that drove SVB's 2020-2021 growth produced the run dynamics in 2023. Second, digital-speed bank runs are operationally different from historical paper-and-physical-line bank runs — the $42 billion single-day withdrawal-attempt was possible only because online wire transfers let customers move money in minutes rather than days. The traditional bank-run buffer (the time it took for customers to physically arrive at branches) no longer exists. Third, communications matter as much as fundamentals in a crisis — SVB's March 8 announcement was technically sound (selling underwater bonds and raising capital was the right operational move) but the framing produced panic rather than confidence.
The pattern is hard to avoid in concentrated-customer-base banks. We tell clients that customer-concentration is a structural risk that needs to be priced into capital-and-liquidity planning, not just into competitive positioning. The SVB case has prompted broader regulatory discussion about deposit insurance limits, hedging requirements for long-duration assets backing demand-deposit liabilities, and stress-testing methodology that better accounts for digital-speed run dynamics.
Frequently asked questions
When did SVB collapse?
On March 10, 2023, the FDIC took control of Silicon Valley Bank. The collapse followed a March 8, 2023 announcement about losses on bond sales that triggered a deposit-withdrawal panic on March 9 (~$42 billion in withdrawal attempts). From announcement to FDIC takeover: approximately 44 hours.
Why did SVB fail?
Three structural factors compounded. First, customer concentration in the VC-backed startup ecosystem meant SVB's deposits moved together when the ecosystem shifted from net-deposit-positive to net-deposit-negative. Second, SVB had invested heavily in long-duration Treasury and MBS securities to pick up yield; rising interest rates produced significant unrealised losses on the portfolio. Third, the March 8 announcement of bond sales and capital raise — intended to position SVB for the higher-rate environment — instead triggered customer panic that produced the run.
Were depositors made whole?
Yes. On March 12, 2023, the FDIC, Federal Reserve, and US Treasury jointly announced that all SVB deposits would be backstopped — both under and over the $250,000 FDIC insurance limit. The decision was unusual because most uninsured deposits would not have been backstopped under normal FDIC procedures. The Fed also launched the Bank Term Funding Program to provide liquidity to other banks in similar situations.
Who acquired SVB?
First Citizens BancShares (NASDAQ: FCNCA) acquired SVB on March 26, 2023. The acquired business operations continued under the SVB brand initially, though many key startup banking relationships subsequently dispersed across multiple banks (Mercury, Brex, JPMorgan, First Citizens, others). The post-SVB startup-banking landscape is more fragmented than the pre-SVB-collapse concentration.
How does this compare to 2008?
SVB was the third-largest US bank failure in history and the largest since the 2008 financial crisis. Several structural factors distinguish it from 2008 failures, however: SVB was undone by a duration-mismatch run rather than by underlying loan-portfolio losses; the contagion was contained to a few similarly-concentrated regional banks (Signature, First Republic) rather than spreading to the broader banking system; the government intervention was faster and more comprehensive than the 2008 response. The 2023 episode has nonetheless raised durable questions about deposit insurance limits and concentration risk in regional banks.
Sources & references
- Collapse of Silicon Valley Bank (Wikipedia) — Aggregated reference for the full timeline, depositor concentration, and policy response.
- Silicon Valley Bank (FDIC.gov) — FDIC's official failed-bank listing for SVB with key dates and acquirer information.
- Material Loss Review of Silicon Valley Bank (Federal Reserve OIG) — Federal Reserve OIG's post-failure material loss review with regulatory and supervisory analysis.
- The Failure of Silicon Valley Bank and the Panic of 2023 (American Economic Association) — Academic-economics analysis of the 2023 banking panic and SVB's specific role.
- Silicon Valley Bank collapse: How it happened (CNBC, March 2023) — CNBC's contemporaneous coverage of the collapse with day-by-day detail.
- A Silicon Valley lender collapsed after a run on the bank (NPR) — NPR coverage of the run dynamics and FDIC takeover.