Silicon Valley is breathing a sigh of relief as they access bank accounts

Sara Mauskopf finally got to see her kids for the first time in days and eat a meal Sunday night.

The start-up founder had been working nonstop to keep her company afloat since she lost access to its only banking account, at Silicon Valley Bank, more than two days earlier. When the federal government announced all depositors would have access to all their money on Monday, she felt she could finally take a breath.

“It’s a lot of relief for sure,” said the founder of Winnie, which operates an online marketplace to help parents find child care. “We were concerned about if we were going to make payroll on time.”

Founders reported early Monday they were able to access their Silicon Valley Bank accounts online and initiate wires to other banks. Two founders said their wires hadn’t been processed yet, but added that it usually takes a few hours.

U.S. says all deposits at failed bank will be available Monday

Regulators stepped in to close Silicon Valley Bank after the tech industry bank said it would have to sell some of its stock to raise money and recoup its losses. That disclosure sent off a wave of panic among venture capital firms and start-ups, many of whom pulled their money from the bank, setting off a cascading effect and collapsing the bank.

The closure marked the second largest bank failure in U.S. history, following just behind Washington Mutual’s crash at the beginning of the Great Recession.

Silicon Valley Bank customers were assured that at least $250,000 in their accounts would be protected due to federal insurance, but most customers had far higher amounts — stretching into the many millions of dollars — sitting in the bank.

For start-ups, panic came immediately. Some companies realized their employees’ paychecks hadn’t been delivered on Friday. They scrambled to find ways to pay their bills. And they wondered how long their businesses could stay afloat without access to savings.

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Jacob Eiting, an Ohio-based founder of tech company RevenueCat, tweeted at his senators that he was “struggling to find liquidity to make it through next week.”

“I didn’t make risky bets. I wasn’t doing anything illegal,” he wrote. “We just put our money in a bank account and now, our business is a precarious position for it.”

RevenueCat’s account had about $38 million in it, Eiting said in an interview, and the founder wasn’t able to relax all weekend.

In emergency meetings over the weekend, federal regulators eventually decided to reassure depositors that all their money would be accessible, even beyond the insured amount. The money to reimburse customers will come from a federal fund that’s paid into by U.S. banks.

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When the news came that he would be able to access his account on Monday, it was like “a million pounds have been lifted off my shoulders,” Eiting said.

Mauskopf had been putting all business expenses on her personal credit cards since Friday, the only solution she could quickly find because the only business credit cards she had were held with Silicon Valley Bank. That was by design — Winnie recently secured a line of venture debt from the bank, she said, and one of the conditions was that the start-up use Silicon Valley Bank as its sole financial institution.

“It turns out that banks aren’t as safe as I thought,” she said Sunday night.

Mauskopf was able to get another business credit card by early Monday, a relief since she had been carefully monitoring her personal balances all weekend. Winnie is now opening five different banking accounts in an attempt to avoid ever having the same experience, she said.

“I’m also just really happy that we can go into work tomorrow and focus on our mission of helping families access child care and not cash flow management,” she said.

Silicon Valley Bank was well-known for supporting founders and companies in the California home base of innovation, but the bank’s customers stretched around the world and encompassed industries beyond just technology. The bank had more than $200 billion in assets at the end of last year.

Aleksandr Volodarsky, the founder of Ukrainian startup Lemon.io, had used Silicon Valley Bank for years, even before he left Ukraine last year and relocated to New York state. His company had about $800,000 in Silicon Valley Bank and he had been fielding calls all weekend from investors and friends who were willing to extend loans to help him make it through.

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Several prominent venture capital firms offered their portfolio companies low-interest loans this weekend, attempting to keep the young companies afloat. Brex, a San Francisco financial tech company, offered an emergency credit line to start-ups and said as of Saturday that it had received $1.5 billion in requests from nearly 1,000 companies.

Still, founders faced the possibility of not being able to pay their employees or watching the efforts of their hard work dissolve with the bank.

When he learned he’d be able to access his full account, Volodarsky was “very relieved.”

“Now we can just go back to normal,” he said.

Source: washingtonpost.com