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2023 Isn't 2008: Explained

Published 03/14/2023, 07:36 AM
Updated 07/09/2023, 06:31 AM
US10YT=X
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  • SVB failed due to higher interest rates and a liquidity problem
  • Despite the failure, today's situation is different from 2008, with lower bank leverage, safer investments, and Fed support
  • This, in turn, ensures that one bank's crisis does not become a systemic risk
  • In today's analysis, as we can guess from the title, I'll try to explain in simple terms (as much as possible) why the two situations (the subprime crisis and Lehman bankruptcy in 2008 and SVB Financial Group's current situation) are very different.

    Why Did SVB Fail?

    During the post-pandemic period (late 2020 and 2021 in market terms), liquidity flowed like wildfire, supported by government support programs and extremely accommodative central banks. Asset prices tend to inflate (and vice versa) when there is so much liquidity.

    So, a bank like SVB, which had Silicon Valley startups as its main customers, received a flood of money, mainly deposited by its customers. This money represents a liability for the bank (it is the customers' money). What did the bank do with this money?

    It took the money and invested it in US government bonds, one of the safest investments in the world. Since it was also a time of extremely low-interest rates, the customers received zero percent interest by depositing their money in the bank.

    In contrast, the SVB, by investing this money precisely in US government bonds, could count on a return of more than 1 percent.

    So, what was the problem? Starting in 2022, the US Federal Reserve (the Fed) began one of the fastest and strongest interest rate hikes ever (to fight inflation), going from 0.25% to 4.75% in just over a year.

    Fed Interest Rate

    As an investor, if I have a United States 10-Year Treasury bond in my portfolio, purchased in 2021 that was yielding, say, 1.5 percent today (after this rate hike), bonds with the same maturity and characteristics are yielding more than twice as much, the value of my investment will have to decline in price to match the market (see below).

    US 10-Year Daily Chart

    This is exactly what happened to SVB's investments (the well-known assets), which fell by 20-30%.

    Now, in a normal situation, this would be nothing strange since these government bonds (assets with "almost" no risk) are classified on the bank's balance sheets as "held to maturity."

    This means that once purchased, and if prices fall, no real losses (caused precisely by the fall in prices) show up on the balance sheets because it is assumed that the bank will hold this investment until maturity (and at maturity, you know that the value is always 100).

    So, what was the fuse that blew the whole thing up? As always, the liquidity problem...

    We went from a situation where mountains of money flowed around at almost no cost to one where money is scarce and expensive. Many startups, especially those that weren't making money, needed to raise money in this new environment, and what did they do? Simple, they went to the bank to get it.

    And here comes another problem, that of fractional reserve. When a bank receives a deposit of $100, it is required by law to keep only a small fraction of that deposit on hand.

    Right now, banks have about $3 trillion in cash versus $17.6 trillion in deposits. But most of that cash is just a webpage with an amount written on it. In fact, only about $100 billion (0.1 trillion) is held by banks in the form of physical notes in vaults and ATMs. Thus, the $17.6 trillion in deposits is supported by only $3 trillion in cash, of which perhaps $0.1 trillion is physical cash. The rest is backed by less liquid securities and loans.

    So, when people rush to the bank to get their money back, the bank has to sell its investments, as did the SVB, which sold many of its government bonds (at a loss of about $2B). Since it didn't have much liquidity left, it tried to raise more money, which caused a bank run, and as the demand for cash increased even more, it all blew up.

    Why 2023 Is Not 2008

    It isn't for several reasons...

    In 2008, banks had $23 of deposit liabilities for every $1 of liquidity, an absurd level of leverage. Today, in light of that financial tragedy, the ratio is 5x or 6x.

    Back in 2008, banks as a whole also had a credit problem, and they were not investing in US Treasuries (as they are now), but (to quote a famous movie) in "dog shit wrapped in cat shit."

    This chart shows banks' holdings of cash and Treasuries (the safest assets in terms of credit risk) as a percentage of total bank assets:

    Bank and Cash Treasuries as a % of Bank Assets

    When you put it all together and consider the timely intervention of the Fed to provide liquidity to the banks when needed, the situation is very different. Yesterday, for example, I made initial entries in stocks such as Credem and BPER, which are good companies with little to do with small US banks.

    At these prices, good buying opportunities have been created (and I have prepared further entries in the event of a further decline).

    ***

    Disclaimer: This article is written for informational purposes only; it does not constitute a solicitation, offer, advice, consultation, or recommendation to invest and, as such, is not intended to induce the purchase of any assets. I would like to remind you that any type of investment is evaluated from multiple perspectives and is highly risky and therefore, any investment decision and the associated risk remains with the investor.

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Latest comments

Rosy opinion.
not the same, it's much worse. Too many financial parasites to save them
So the banks collapse don't need any sympathy from anyone...... don't think any banks will reduce compound interest to any defaulters when they are making tons of money........
like the S&L crisis of 1980-82
How funny, actually believing that banks are in better shape than 2008. When it all collapes this time there will be wars in the streets. Be prepared.
Well said.
@Edward Lee If only there was a widely held stock that would go to the moon That would boost spending, boost GDP, and the surplus would be big enough to inject cash in the US states that might need it. It's 'Merica, they'll probably figure something out. As for me, i like the GME stock.
bye bye GME too.
@Edward Lee If only there was a widely held stock that would go to the moon. That would boost spending, boost the economy, it would probably bring down inflation faster, and a debt 'crisis' would turn into a surplus so big that a lot of US states could get a cash injection where it might be needed. It's 'Merica, so they'll probably come up with something, would be my best guess.
2008 we did not have a debt crisis , but 2023 we has a debt crisis and we hit the debt limit and can not continue printing green paper unless we ca lift up our GDP significantle to match the huge debt, but, unfortunately we can not
Another thing which is different is in 2023 we have a Federal reserve chairman want to fight inflation and to avoid a recession at the same time , well , that is a conflict . Either a deep recession or depression to kill the inflation or a super high inflation and most people can not make both etnds meet and the society collapse
 Fed trying to fight the inflation in the 1970's way they fail to noticed the inflation is driven by expansion of world population. Since 1970 the world population grow more compared to the previous 100000 years!!!
2023 is definitely NOT 2008. In 2008, we had the Federal Reserve saying they would do whatever it takes to stimulate the economy.  In 2023, we have the Federal Reserve Chairman saying he wants a recession if that is what it takes to cut inflation. In 2008, we were one country, and people greeted one another saying "God Bless America". In 2023, people hate America and each other. We are divided into red states versus blue states. People hate Trump and hate Biden. We fear an invisible virus but not an invisible God. Where is the love
Everyone complaining about the market rebounding today. If you hate America... leave
I dont think this author ever made money in this business
this guy never stops being an idiot
You really don’t need to use this language, please wash your mouth, this is not Tik Tok
i think you forget the stresstest are based on 2008 models..... 15 years of QE isnt priced in
Can you elaborate?
And the knuckledraggers surface to reject the authors thesis without addressing his documented and substantiated specifics.
they are holding treasuries but also sitting on 100s of billions of unrealised losses on those and the fed could be sitting on 1 trillion+ of unrealised losses so its not 2008 but its also not just a small hiccup like some are trying to claim
This will age badly
This nonsense again. Real interest rates are still negative, plus merely raising rates does not end inflation, it only kills demand. Stop this propaganda
I would agree with you, but everything about how money should work NOW has an unexpected quirk! Normally, high inflation, usually, also equals high job loss! Not now, so like 2008, we are dealing with uncharted aspects, that will strengthen our efforts as we learn and grow from what happened at SVB!
you are so nub if you think 2008 isn't 2023 will be 100x higher than 2008 tell the truth too people noob
true, is more worse
What will be 100x higher?
It's more like 1929. 2023 to be followed by The Great Depression II. The Fed raised rates to 6-percent in 1929 and caused the financial crisis and 1000 bank collapse. History is repeating.
true
What did Putin think of this? 0.0
They didnt hedge interest rate risk through swaps - how did they pass a stress test?!
They did not have a street test when A dobb-Frank Act was removed by Trump signed.
Well yeah, 2023 is 2023. like 2008 wasn't 2000 ... get the point?
Failure explicitly die to 2018 bank restrictions reversed thanks to the GOP and Trump Period! Crypto wildcweat failure due to politicans gladly recieving money. This is not 2008 it is much worse. 40 years of disinflation made sure mistakes like this become common. Wait till Fed Funds hit 6 percent. Debacle worse than anything in last 100 years.
Wow, so if you buy a long term asset with an interest income of 0.25% and you have to borrow money at 3.5% you will be fine as making a 3.25% pa long as you wait until your long term asset matures! I do not even believe that Investing.com editors passed this article. The loss on a bond is the difference between the yield at which you had bought it and the cost of funds. Hold to maturity is a strategy of hope, hope that interest rates fall back to the level at which you bough. Lucky you but if not then holding on to it becomes an increasingly untenable proposition as the longer you hold the greater the loss. Banks did exactly the same in 2008 until it cause systemic risk, it was called mark-to model. Holding a loss making asset hoping for better days is a recipe for disaster.
making a 3.25% loss pa as long as
If anyone there traded for like 5 minutes he must know that this is the worst strategy ever!Young traders blow up accounts this way, I can’t believe it happened to a large bank like SVB
just made big bubbles bigger
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