Amid crashing stock prices, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) points fingers at crypto and poor management for Signature Bank’s demise.
Remarking at a US House of Reps hearing, FDIC chair, Martin Gruenberg, attributed Signature’s failure to ignorance of the risks associated with cryptocurrencies.
A related report noted the FDIC investigation into the collapse of the crypto-friendly Signature Bank revealed a lack of liquidity and poor management.
Questions have been raised concerning the demise of three US crypto-friendly banks Silicon Valley Bank (SVB), Silvergate Bank, and Signature Bank, which led to a stock price decline and deposit runs.
During a speech at a House Financial Services Committee hearing on Oversight of Prudential Regulators, Gruenberg outlined reasons for the banks’ failures.
According to the FDIC chair, a related report by the FDIC chief risk officer attributed the root cause of Signature Bank's failure to poor management.
In addition, Gruenberg blamed Signature Bank for its over-dependence on uninsured crypto deposits without implementing proper risk control measures.
He noted that cryptocurrency deposits are risky as the crypto industry is still vulnerable to contagion from the crisis that occurred in late 2022.
Further, Gruenberg said the Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank’s failures resulted in the loss of $16.1 billion and $2.4 billion, respectively.
In addition, a subsequence closure of First Republic Bank resulted in a loss of $13 billion.
In summary, the FDIC Chair suggested that banks with $100 billion or more in assets deserve special attention and long-term debt requirement to ensure orderly resolutions.
In a previous report, the FDIC blamed Signature's management and board of
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