Some tech investorsĀ blame their counterparts at other firms for whipping up the panic that brought down Silicon Valley Bank.
(Bloomberg) — Silicon Valley Bankās collapse laid bare divisions in the usually clubby venture capital community, with some investors blaming their counterparts for igniting aĀ panic that brought down a beloved startup business partner.Ā
In the chaotic early hours of the bank run on SVB, many VCs advised their companies to yank their deposits from the troubled lender. InĀ the aftermath Friday, other investorsĀ publicly lambasted their industryĀ for its role fueling the flames.Ā āIād like to formally thank my peers in the venture community whose stellar leadership over the past 48 hours triggered a run on deposits at Silicon Valley Bank, ultimately toppling one of the most important institutions in our ecosystem,ā tweetedĀ seed investorĀ Brad Svrluga.Ā
There’s no clear consensus on whether to celebrate or blameĀ VCs who told founders to pull out their money. āIt was a tightrope,ā said Benedikt von ThĆ¼ngen, founder of healthcare startup Sanome, who believesĀ that companies had a fiduciary duty to pull their funds even if they were broadly supportive of the bank.Ā
On Thursday, asĀ SVBĀ began to collapse, some investors visibly struggled over what action to take.Ā Hustle FundĀ investor Eric Bahn urged companiesĀ move their funds out of SVB in a tweet,Ā then deleted it, and on FridayĀ joked that Twitter ownerĀ Elon Musk should shut down the platform altogether. āWould be kind of nice for @Elon Musk go shut off twitter until we get a handle on this banking crisis,ā he wroteĀ āSo much FUD here!āĀ
VCs tend to flock together. They like to invest in the same companies, follow the same industryĀ trends, and even wear the same performance vests. So the level of open disagreement in the industry in the days following the bank run has beenĀ particularly notable.Ā āPanic wasnāt the way to handle it,āĀ General Catalyst Chief Executive Officer Hemant Taneja said over the weekend.Ā In a statementĀ co-signed by more than 600 VC firms, investors broadly described the events leading to the bankās downfallĀ as ādeeply disappointing.ā
The VCs did come together on one thing though: asking for intervention to safeguard vulnerable startupsā deposits. The group of investorsā statement said that they would continue doing business with SVB, calling for it toĀ be saved. Y CombinatorĀ circulated a petition signed by more than 5,000 foundersĀ urging US regulators to step in. And in the UK, dozensĀ of of leading venture capital firms signed a pledge ofĀ solidarity with SVB.
Perhaps aware that calls for help from moneyed investors might not be broadly palatable in Washington,Ā firms including the famed Y Combinator encouraged their founders to tell their own story on Twitter.Ā Indeed, direct cries for help from VCs didnāt always land well. āIām not asking for a bailout.Ā Iām asking for banking regulators to ensure the integrity of the system,ā tweetedĀ Craft Venturesā David Sacks, who also appeared on video over the weekend in his podcast. Others echoed the thinking: āItās entirely rational to have libertarian views and still want a functioning system,ā said Hussein Kanji, a partner at London-based Hoxton Ventures. āIf the system breaks apart, capitalism falls apart.ā
But the sentiment was widely critiqued:Ā Sacks is famously libertarian and frequently takes issue with the Biden Administration on his show. Reached with a request for comment, a representative for Sacks pointed to his TuesdayĀ tweetĀ saying that hisĀ politics were not āpure libertarianāĀ and that āeven libertarians understand the need for government to prevent bank runs.āĀ Other pleas forĀ US intervention were also mocked, including within the startup world.
Michael Arrington, founder of TechCrunch and Arrington Capital, weighed in:Ā āOne thing I learned this last weekend is āĀ most capitalists become fast socialists when they think they lost all their money.ā Investor Keval Desai wrote: āOh the irony of todayās VCs who are calling for a govt bailout who yesterday asked their cos to pull out & caused the run in the first place.ā Opinions diverge over what exactly constitutes a bailout. Going by the traditional view of saving the institution and its shareholders, the governmentās action didnāt meet the bar; if a bailout means saving the depositors, it did.
VCs werenāt the only ones disappointed with VCs. In an unusual turn for the business world, the sentiment spilled over into the mainstream. Politicians from both sides of the aisle came together to agree on their distaste for tech millionaires. Politics and culture magazine Slate published a well-trafficked anti-VC essay. Nassim Nicholas Taleb, who coined the term āblack-swan event,āĀ complained about tech investors even as some referenced his work while describing the crisis. And The Office star Rainn Wilson tweeted,Ā āSilicon Valley Bank last week: CAPITALISM RULES!!! Silicon Valley Bank this week: SOCIALISM PLEASE!!!āĀ
One UK-based entrepreneur, who asked to remain anonymous, said he was angry that the same VC investors who encouraged founders to use Silicon Valley Bank, leading to dangerous concentration, were the ones urging startups to pull their funds when it looked like the bank was in trouble. Two days later they were publicly pledging to support SVB again. It looked like āself-serving hypocrisy,ā he said.Ā
Some investors defended their decision to warn their companies. On Sunday in a Twitter Spaces chat, investor Jason Calacanis, who had been sending all-caps missives about the stakes of the bank failure all weekend, said that warning startups aboutĀ SVB was like pulling a fire alarm after seeing a fire āĀ a responsibility in times of crisis.Ā āI had a little panic, in honesty,ā he said. āI was a little panicked.āĀ
–With assistance from Mark Bergen and Lizette Chapman.
(Updates with David Sacks tweet in the eighth paragraph.)
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