Credit Suisse - Is it going to go bust, if so what happens?

Credit Suisse - Is it going to go bust, if so what happens?

Author
Discussion

Gecko1978

8,098 posts

144 months

Friday 10th March
quotequote all
pquinn said:
Bluequay said:
Gecko1978 said:
Not credit Suisse but Silicon Valley Bank share price fell 61% yesterday a fall in mkt cap of 81bn in 1 day. Makes the bank bailouts in the UK seem tiny. An SVB have not asked for any FED support.
A banks share price and it's solvency are not necessarily related.
They are when a run starts like it did with SVB.
I worked at SVB untill end of last year. So I won't comment on solvency or customers I will say broadly they are well run and it looks like this incident was driven by external factors.

I might add I also have worked at CS and it was different

isaldiri

16,253 posts

155 months

Friday 10th March
quotequote all
Gecko1978 said:
Not credit Suisse but Silicon Valley Bank share price fell 61% yesterday a fall in mkt cap of 81bn in 1 day. Makes the bank bailouts in the UK seem tiny. An SVB have not asked for any FED support.
Sorry but how do you get a 60% fall of SVB representing a fall in market cap of $81 billion yesterday......?

Gecko1978

8,098 posts

144 months

Friday 10th March
quotequote all
isaldiri said:
Gecko1978 said:
Not credit Suisse but Silicon Valley Bank share price fell 61% yesterday a fall in mkt cap of 81bn in 1 day. Makes the bank bailouts in the UK seem tiny. An SVB have not asked for any FED support.
Sorry but how do you get a 60% fall of SVB representing a fall in market cap of $81 billion yesterday......?
Was the fall in mkt cap quoted this morning

isaldiri

16,253 posts

155 months

Friday 10th March
quotequote all
Gecko1978 said:
Was the fall in mkt cap quoted this morning
Um....that isn't right.

Today's numbers, reverse the 60% fall and it's still nowhere even close to that kind of market cap fall.


pquinn

5,638 posts

33 months

Friday 10th March
quotequote all
isaldiri said:
Gecko1978 said:
Was the fall in mkt cap quoted this morning
Um....that isn't right.

Today's numbers, reverse the 60% fall and it's still nowhere even close to that kind of market cap fall.

52 week high was nearly 600. Didn't just work with SV firms, they seem to have traded like them.


bitchstewie

45,610 posts

197 months

Friday 10th March
quotequote all
Gecko1978 said:
Was the fall in mkt cap quoted this morning
Possibly getting mixed up with how much other big banks (like JPM) lost for little obvious reason than panic over SVB.

Gecko1978

8,098 posts

144 months

Friday 10th March
quotequote all
bhstewie said:
Gecko1978 said:
Was the fall in mkt cap quoted this morning
Possibly getting mixed up with how much other big banks (like JPM) lost for little obvious reason than panic over SVB.
Could well be as rushed looking my bad

clubsport

7,167 posts

245 months

Friday 10th March
quotequote all
The problem with SVB was down to poor risk management of interest rate risk, something JPM are considerably more accomplished at!

It is being compared to the Orange County failure of '94..... they were poorly positioned for the post pandemic rise in interest rates, with low yielding, hold to maturity securities.
I am aware of some eye watering losses from portfolios at major banks since late 2022, however they are in a position to absorb such events.

The question is, as the curve moves around in it's inverted state will this bring to light serious problems at more smaller (relatively) financial institutions?

Timothy Bucktu

14,269 posts

187 months

Friday 10th March
quotequote all
markbigears said:
I enjoyed his videos until this one a few days ago. I’m not sure what to think of him now

It's just an attention grabbing thumbnail to pull in the views. Lots of YouTubers do it. It was an interesting video.

isaldiri

16,253 posts

155 months

Friday 10th March
quotequote all
clubsport said:
I am aware of some eye watering losses from portfolios at major banks since late 2022, however they are in a position to absorb such events.

The question is, as the curve moves around in it's inverted state will this bring to light serious problems at more smaller (relatively) financial institutions?
In theory, most 'normal' banks actively want higher longer term interest rates (although as you note the inverted yield curve is not a particularly good state for them). SVB are a bit of an outlier in that the way they had structured their balance sheet such that higher long term rates was much more detrimental to them as they didn't have sufficient offsets on their loan book for that.

clubsport

7,167 posts

245 months

Friday 10th March
quotequote all
isaldiri said:
clubsport said:
I am aware of some eye watering losses from portfolios at major banks since late 2022, however they are in a position to absorb such events.

The question is, as the curve moves around in it's inverted state will this bring to light serious problems at more smaller (relatively) financial institutions?
In theory, most 'normal' banks actively want higher longer term interest rates (although as you note the inverted yield curve is not a particularly good state for them). SVB are a bit of an outlier in that the way they had structured their balance sheet such that higher long term rates was much more detrimental to them as they didn't have sufficient offsets on their loan book for that.
As I suggested in part of my post you chose not to quote? smile

they were poorly positioned for the post pandemic rise in interest rates, with low yielding, hold to maturity securities.



isaldiri

16,253 posts

155 months

Friday 10th March
quotequote all
clubsport said:
As I suggested in part of my post you chose not to quote? smile
(honstly!) wasn't intended to mean anything. I simply copied down the 2nd part of the post.

You were of course entirely correct that they were poorly positioned although if one might want to be pedantic, every bank holds plenty of low yielding, hold to maturity securities, but SVB got the balance of their assets in duration exposure completely wrong so it wasn't the holdings of low yielding hold to maturity securities in themselves that were the problem...

J210

4,200 posts

170 months

Friday 10th March
quotequote all
SVB has been seized by US banking regulators

Newc

1,642 posts

169 months

Friday 10th March
quotequote all
Merch already on sale




Catastrophic Poo

3,019 posts

173 months

Friday 10th March
quotequote all
JQ said:
Catastrophic Poo said:
Timothy Bucktu said:
Neil McCoy-Ward talked about this here https://youtu.be/u2BtAJrvHqM

Note: He's a little too direct and to the point for some on PH to be able to handle I suspect. But he has some interesting insights into the financial world. Take it with a pinch of salt and come to your own conclusions.
He does have somewhat fringe views, and said there would be a 40% drop in property values 3 years ago.

Sells courses though, so thats a thing biggrin
I've not watched the video, so he could be talking residential values, but prime industrial property values in the UK dropped 40% last year which impacted plenty of pension funds and REITs.
He exclusively talks about resi.

pquinn

5,638 posts

33 months

Friday 10th March
quotequote all
The FDIC takeover / closure of SVB is probably going to fk a lot of companies & people.

The access to $250k on Monday via the new bank isn't going to go far if the rest might not appear for a long time/ever.

Gecko1978

8,098 posts

144 months

Friday 10th March
quotequote all
Newc said:
Merch already on sale



I have a branded reusable mug but never got thr cool bottle wonder if it is worth something now lol. Also 4 days ago on LinkedIn


Carl_Manchester

Original Poster:

10,775 posts

249 months

Friday 10th March
quotequote all


Carl_Manchester

Original Poster:

10,775 posts

249 months

Monday 13th March
quotequote all
Credit Suisse CDS has hit an all time high.


turbobloke

97,901 posts

247 months

Monday 13th March
quotequote all
Carl_Manchester said:
Credit Suisse CDS has hit an all time high.

SVB fallout presumably behind a lot of that jump?