SVB Failure Fallout: Which U.S. and European Companies Were Directly Affected?

 | Mar 15, 2023 21:45

  • SVB failure could have been avoided if its leaders had paid attention to an internal report
  • As the fallout continues, will Fed and ECB reconsider raising rates?
  • Here are the main stocks that had money deposited in SVB before it failed
  • It may surprise some, but the issue of bank failures is not something strange or isolated; on the contrary, it is much more common than one might initially think.

    For example, the average number of failures between 2011 and 2020 was two per month. But what we are experiencing does have some peculiarities, two of them in particular are:

    • The size of the companies affected. After the collapse of Washington Mutual in 2008, these are the second and third-largest bankruptcies in U.S. history.
    • The time that has passed since the last bankruptcy in October 2020 (Almena State Bank).

    Worst of all, SVB's failure could have been avoided. In the final stretch of 2020, the bank received an internal report with a specific recommendation: to buy shorter-term bonds. The aim was to minimize the risk of heavy losses if interest rates rose aggressively.

    But the bank's leaders ignored the recommendation, citing the economic costs, and continued to invest in other assets, which resulted in good profits a year later.

    Here is a list of US and European companies that had money in SVB:

    United States:

    • Roblox (NYSE:RBLX)
    • Roku (NASDAQ:ROKU)
    • AcuityAds Holdings (NASDAQ:ATY)
    • AppLovin (NASDAQ:APP)
    • Astra Space (NASDAQ:ASTR)
    • Cohu (NASDAQ:COHU)
    • Rocket Lab USA (NASDAQ:RKLB)
    • Lantronix (NASDAQ:LTRX)
    • Alkami Technology (NASDAQ:ALKT)
    • Circle SpA (BIT:CIRC)
    • BlockFi
    • LendingClub (NYSE:LC)
    • Vir Biotechnology (NASDAQ:VIR)
    • Sunrun (NASDAQ:RUN)
    • Ginkgo Bioworks Holdings (NYSE:DNA)
    • Alphatec Holdings (NASDAQ:ATEC)

    Europe:

    • Trustpilot Group (LON:TRST)
    • Diaceutics (LON:DXRX)
    • Dianomi (LON:DNM)
    • Glantus Holdings (LON:GLAN)
    • Zealand Pharma (CSE:ZELA)
    • Pharming Group (AS:PHAR)
    • Kinnevik (ST:KINVb)
    • RWS Group (LON:RWS)
    • PCI-PAL (LON:PCIPP)
    • Yourgene Health (LON:YGEN)
    • Windward (LON:WNWD)
    • Technoprobe SpA (BIT:TPRO)
    • Alecta: The Swedish Pension Fund

    The good news for these companies is that, on Sunday, US regulators outlined a strategy to provide a safety net for depositors with funds at Silicon Valley Bank or Signature Bank (NASDAQ:SBNY).

    Furthermore, the Federal Reserve has revealed plans for a so-called Bank Term Funding Program, which will target the protection of financial institutions impacted by the market volatility resulting from the SVB's collapse.

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    While the measures should guarantee financial stability for these companies for now, risks remain in place as the pipeline for financing new projects appears to have dried out.

    h2 Remember Warren Buffett’s Advice in the Annual Letter to Shareholders?/h2

    Warren Buffett released his annual letter to Berkshire Hathaway's (NYSE:BRKa) shareholders on February 25.

    The letter does a good job of explaining that investing involves choosing good companies, not necessarily good stocks.

    And he provided one of his keys to success: it is enough to get a few investments right for the portfolio to do very well. A few good winners over time will make up for the mistakes.

    He discussed his own case. He explained that his good numbers were due to 12 very good buying decisions, an average of one every five years.

    For example, he bought $1.3 billion worth of Coca-Cola (NYSE:KO) stock in 1994.