Home / Finance / Bill Ackman says U.S. did right thing in protecting SVB depositors

Bill Ackman says U.S. did right thing in protecting SVB depositors


A sign hangs at Silicon Valley Banks headquarters in Santa Clara, California on March 10, 2023.

Noah Berger | AFP | Getty Images

Billionaire investor Bill Ackman said the U.S. government’s action to protect depositors after the implosion of Silicon Valley Bank is “not a bailout” and helps restore confidence in the banking system.

In his latest tweet on SVB’s collapse, the hedge fund investor said the U.S. government did the “right thing.”

“This was not a bailout in any form. The people who screwed up will bear the consequences,” wrote the CEO of Pershing Square. “Importantly, our gov’t has sent a message that depositors can trust the banking system.”

Ackman’s comments came after banking regulators announced plans over the weekend to backstop depositors with money at Silicon Valley Bank, which was shut down on Friday after a bank run.

“Without this confidence, we are left with three or possibly four too-big-to-fail banks where the taxpayer is explicitly on the hook, and our national system of community and regional banks is toast,” Ackman added.

Ackman further explained that in this incident, shareholders and bondholders of the banks will be mainly the ones affected, and the losses will be absorbed by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation’s (FDIC) insurance fund.

This is in contrast to the great financial crisis in 2007-2008, where the U.S. government injected taxpayers’ money in the form of preferred stock into banks, and bondholders were protected.

The decisive government action was seen by some as a critical step in stemming contagion fears brought on by the collapse of SVB, a key bank for start-ups and other venture-backed companies.

Not everyone agrees.

Peter Schiff, chief economist and global strategist at Euro Pacific Capital, said the move is “yet another mistake” by the U.S. government and the Fed.

He explained in another tweet: “The bailout means depositors will put their money in the riskiest banks and get paid higher interest, as there’s no downside risk.”

The result?

“… all banks will take on greater risks to pay higher rates. So in the long-run many more banks will fall, with far greater long-term costs,” Schiff said.

Clear roadmap

‘Lost faith’

SVB crisis: You can't understate the danger the American banking system is in, strategist says

“Right at this moment, I don’t think you would expect to see the Treasury Secretary, the head of the Fed and the head of the FDIC, making a public joint statement — unless they understood clearly the risk that the banking system and the American in America is facing right now,” he said.

Bove pointed out the U.S. banking system is at risk for two reasons.

“Number one, the depositors have lost faith in American banks: Forget the people who may or may not have been taking money out of SVB. Deposits in American banks have dropped 6% in the last 12 months,” he noted.

“The second group that has lost faith in the American banking system are investors,” he added. “The investors have lost faith because the American banks have a whole bunch of accounting tricks that they can play, to show earnings when earnings don’t exist, to show capital when capital doesn’t exist.”

He went on to say that accounting practices for the banking industry are “totally unacceptable,” and that banks are using “accounting gimmickry to avoid indicating what the true equity is in these banks.”

“The government is now on its back feet. And the government is trying to do whatever it can to stop what could be a major, major negative thrust,” Bove said.

Political support

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