Silicon Valley Bank crisis unfolded with ‘unprecedented’ speed, Lux Capital cofounder says

Yahoo Finance’s Brad Smith spoke with Lux Capital co-founder Josh Wolfe and Austin Mayor Kirk Watson at SXSW 2023.

Video Transcript

SEANA SMITH: Yahoo Finance's Brad Smith, he's out at South by Southwest in Austin, Texas, where he's been talking with tech leaders and politicians about the Silicon Valley Bank collapse. Brad, I'm sure it is a very hot topic down there. What are you hearing?

BRAD SMITH: It is a hot topic, indeed, Seana. And one of the big things that we're hearing continuously in our conversations and interviews that we're having in South by Southwest in Austin, Texas, where everybody is invited to the barbecue, is just about the unprecedented activity that had to transpire thus after that collapse of Silicon Valley Bank.

And one thing that came up in our conversation, particularly with the co-founder and managing director-- managing partner, rather, of Lux Capital Josh Wolfe was just how unprecedented this is, number one, and number two, that there is so much more focus now on the regional banks and what the consortium of larger banks may have to do in stepping in to make sure that there is still that restoration of confidence in the banking system. Here's what he had to say about this and this instance, as compared to the Great Recession and the great financial crisis of years past, and what's taking place from his purview from the VC side. Here's what he had to say.

JOSH WOLFE: What's really interesting in the current moment is in 2007, when you had banking crisis, that was relatively contained at first from a media perspective. It took longer for only a much bigger impact to occur. This is almost unprecedented in 24 to 48 hours, the impact that you had on a bank run for Silicon Valley Bank, requiring the FDIC, the Treasury, and the Fed to step in and the president openly give comments to say, we've got your back. We're stabilizing deposits. But there's no bailout. Everybody that is involved-- stockholders, [INAUDIBLE] debt holders-- will lose their money as they should.

So the ripple, then, goes from SVB to First Republic Bank and some of the other banks that bank the innovation economy. And I think that's being backstopped. But there's a lot of concern. And the main lessons are diversify. You need resiliency. You need redundancy. You need a lot of banking partners. Hopefully, this gets contained, but there's a lot of peripheral risks. And that was really what the crux of his conversation and even his panel was about, which, typically, he mentioned that the topic that he was on for his panel with, which discussed this very collapse, to some extent, that it wouldn't have had much attendance in years past.