Silicon Valley Bank and Fed supervisors: what's known so far
FILE PHOTO: FILE PHOTO: Silicon Valley Bank branch in Santa Clara, CA · Reuters

By Ann Saphir

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - A team of 20 bank examiners at the San Francisco Federal Reserve took over day-to-day supervision of Silicon Valley Bank in the second half of 2021, after the bank's growth pushed its assets above the $100 billion mark that triggers more intense oversight.

Soon after, supervisors began calling out problems at the bank, but only internally. None were made public until after the bank's failure on March 10, 2023, and much is still unknown.

Fed Vice Chair of Supervision Michael Barr has promised full disclosure as part of his supervisory review due out May 1.

Here's what regulators saw -- but the public did not -- in the lead-up to the collapse. The details come from testimony given by regulators to Congress this week.

NOVEMBER 2021

Examiners issue six citations -- "matters requiring attention" (MRA) and "matters requiring immediate attention" (MRIA) -- related to the bank's liquidity stress testing, contingency funding, and liquidity risk management.

The citations come just as the Fed has begun to telegraph that it will soon start raising interest rates to fight inflation.

Banks of SVB's size must conduct quarterly liquidity stress tests to assess the bank's resilience to both rising and falling interest rates.

SVB's tests, supervisors find, are not "stressful enough; they were not realistic... it conducted those tests and the guidance back from the supervisors was that the tests were inadequate," Barr told Congress.

APRIL 2022

SVB's chief risk officer Laura Izurieta steps down. The post remains vacant until December 2022, when Kim Olson takes the job.

MAY 2022

Supervisors issue three findings related to ineffective board oversight, risk management weaknesses, and the bank's internal audit function, according to Barr's testimony.

SUMMER 2022

SVB gets its first supervisory ratings as a large bank: a downgrade to a "3" on its overall rating and a "3" on its management rating.

The scores mean the bank is "not well-managed," Barr said this week.

"The supervisors told the board of directors and the bank that the board oversight with respect to risk management was deficient," Barr said this week.

SVB's liquidity rating is a "2" -- satisfactory.

"We are trying to understand how that is consistent" with the other, lower ratings, Barr said.

A "3" rating triggers what industry experts call the "penalty box" where the bank is barred from growth by acquisition.