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Don't expect “gentlemanly” behavior from corporate boards under financial stress, says Hilco Global's Vice Chairman James H. M. Sprayregen, as they should consider exercising all the rights available to them under credit agreements to maximize enterprise value. Bloomberg Intelligence's Phil Brendel and Negisa Balluku speak with Sprayregen, who founded Kirkland & Ellis's restructuring practice more than three decades ago, in this episode of BI's State of Distressed Debt podcast. They talk about those early days at K&E, his new role at Hilco Global, the jousting among lenders and debtors, the Supreme Court's Purdue decision and his restructuring outlook (5:38). Prior to that, BI's Noel Hebert and Phil discuss July's sharply-tighter credit markets and what to make of early August's wild swings as we head into credit's toughest months. The podcast concludes with all three examining the latest developments in bankruptcy courts and distressed situations, including SVB Financial, J&J, Ardagh, Incora, Diamond Sports, Yellow Corp. and Spirit Airlines (1:05:15).
On this day in history, in 1991, Boris Yelstin was elected Russia's first popularly elected president. Boris Yeltsin, a Soviet and Russian politician, served as the first president of Russia from 1991 to 1999. Initially a member of the Communist Party, he later distanced himself from the party and aligned himself with liberalism and Russian nationalism. Yeltsin was born in Butka, Ural Oblast, and after studying at the Ural State Technical University, he worked in the construction industry. Rising through the ranks of the Communist Party, he became known as an anti-establishment figure when he resigned from the Politburo in 1987. In 1990, he was elected chair of the Russian Supreme Soviet and then as president of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic (RSFSR) in 1991.Yeltsin played a crucial role in the dissolution of the Soviet Union, leading to the establishment of the independent Russian Federation. During his presidency, Yeltsin pursued economic reforms that shifted Russia from a command economy to a market economy. This included implementing shock therapy, introducing a market exchange rate for the ruble, privatizing state-owned enterprises, and lifting price controls. Yeltsin was reelected in the controversial 1996 election, which was criticized for widespread corruption. While his presidency was marked by significant political and economic changes, it also faced challenges and criticism for its handling of reforms and corruption allegations.A white postal employee who sued the US Postal Service for race bias has lost the case. James Halbauer claimed that he was treated unfairly for wearing a MAGA hat while his fellow co-worker faced no consequences for wearing a Black Lives Matter hat. The court ruled that the Hatch Act, which restricts political activity for civil-service employees, played a role in the decision. The judge stated that the other employee's hat was not campaign-related but associated with a social movement, whereas Halbauer's MAGA hat violated the Hatch Act. Other claims of unequal treatment regarding dress code violations were also dismissed, as Halbauer failed to provide statistical proof or demonstrate suspicious background circumstances required for a reverse discrimination case. The court concluded that Halbauer didn't exhaust pre-suit remedies and didn't raise race discrimination in his internal EEO complaint.MAGA-Hat-Wearing White Postal Employee Loses Race Bias LawsuitLaw firm Greenberg Traurig and other major firms are shifting their focus to the growing private credit market as traditional M&A opportunities dwindle. Private debt has increased from around $300 billion in 2010 to approximately $1.5 trillion globally as of September 2022, with projections estimating it to reach $2.2 trillion by 2027. Private credit deals are gaining popularity as an alternative to traditional lending, given bank failures and stricter standards. Greenberg Traurig has been hiring lawyers specializing in private credit across multiple locations, recognizing the potential in this area. The firm attributes its long-term success to its early focus on private equity work, and it aims to follow the trajectory of the market by investing in private credit expertise.For the uninitiated private credit is a type of investment that involves lending money to private companies – that is, those that are not listed on stock exchanges. This asset class has been gaining popularity in recent years, as fewer companies have gone public and the number of private firms looking for capital has grown. Private credit can offer investors higher returns than traditional investments, but there are also some risks involved. In brief, these include transparency (you may not know what you are investing in) and illiquidity (you may have difficulty finding someone to buy shares you want to unload). Greenberg Traurig Eyes $2.2 Trillion Private Credit MarketThe IRS is changing its approach to target potentially abusive transactions by issuing proposed rules to identify them as listed transactions. This shift comes after court opinions ruled that the agency must follow the formal regulatory process with notice and a comment period. The proposed rules aim to address syndicated conservation easements, micro-captive insurance transactions, and transactions involving Maltese retirement plans. The Biden administration's unified agenda also includes proposed rules on charitable remainder annuity trusts and monetized installment sales. Listing transactions as suspect subjects them to additional reporting requirements, with penalties for non-compliance. The change in approach provides more transparency and ensures that court rulings do not hinder the agency's efforts to combat abusive transactions. The IRS is expected to continue targeting transactions involving promoters and heavy marketing in its enforcement efforts.IRS Shifts Tactics on ‘Dirty Dozen' Suspected Tax DodgesSVB Financial Group has filed a lawsuit against the U.S. Federal Deposit Insurance Corp (FDIC) in an attempt to recover $1.93 billion that was seized during the FDIC's takeover of failed Silicon Valley Bank in March. SVB Financial argues that the lack of access to these funds is hindering its reorganization efforts, and the money should be generating over $100 million in annual interest. The FDIC has stated that it can legally hold the seized funds while determining SVB Financial's share of the rescue costs, which the FDIC estimates to be around $16 billion. SVB Financial claims that the FDIC has not provided any specific claims to justify its refusal to pay despite having multiple opportunities to do so. In a separate ruling in May, a bankruptcy judge ordered the FDIC to return $10 million in seized tax refund checks to SVB Financial.SVB Financial sues US FDIC to recover $1.93 bln seized in SVB rescue | ReutersCalifornia Governor Gavin Newsom has announced that he will no longer fight against granting parole to Leslie Van Houten, one of Charles Manson's followers. Van Houten, now 73 years old, has been in prison for over 50 years. In May, a California appeals court ruled that Van Houten was entitled to parole from her life sentence. The governor could have appealed the decision to the California Supreme Court but has decided not to pursue further action as it is unlikely to succeed. Van Houten's attorney stated that she would be paroled in a matter of weeks. Van Houten was convicted of fatally stabbing a couple in their Los Angeles home as part of Manson's killing spree in 1969. Manson died in prison in 2017.California governor to stop fighting against parole for Manson follower Leslie Van Houten | Reuters Get full access to Minimum Competence - Daily Legal News Podcast at www.minimumcomp.com/subscribe
Ben and Senior Analyst Ali Ragih talk about equity gifts by corporate insiders, why they are important transactions, and how to incorporate them into your analysis when screening for investment ideas. Plus, how banking insiders signaled with company stock purchases in the wake of the SVB Financial meltdown. Edited, mixed, and scored by Calvin Marty.
Brendan Hall, director and research analyst at Brean Capital Management in New York, talks with Reorg's James Holloway about the SVB Financial filing, including the valuation of the investment bank and asset management businesses, the FDIC's claims, NOIs and the trading prices of the bonds. #SVB #restructuring #bankruptcy #assetmanagement
Compliance Clarified – a podcast by Thomson Reuters Regulatory Intelligence
The collapse of Silicon Valley Bank sent shockwaves through the venture capital and technology industries. It has had uncomfortable echoes of the 2008 financial crisis with regulators and other policymakers working through the weekend to engineer solutions to avoid further contagion and possible systemic risk. And that was the weekend of 11/12 March; this weekend just gone, regulators and policymakers were busy with the shotgun wedding of UBS and Credit Suisse.In the UK, HSBC has bought SVB and its liabilities to the tech sector for £1, but the situation is different in the United States where the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation has stepped in to protect all deposit holders, even though most of them (mainly venture capital firms and tech companies) have way more in their accounts than the insured amount of $250,000. The collapse of the specialist lender has raised plenty of questions about risk management and the role played by regulators.Most of SVB's balance sheet was in longer dated bonds and the value of these fell as rates rose, which caused the subsequent run on the bank. Few seem to have questioned why no one at the bank appeared to hedge their risk.Events are still unfolding but with different results on either side of the Atlantic. There are many unknowns directly related to possible compliance and risk management concerns. As more facts surface, regulators and lawmakers are sure to investigate any failures in these areas. Such inquiries often lead to new regulations or regulatory change in the future. In this episode of Compliance Clarified, Alexander Robson, managing editor of Regulatory Intelligence in London, talks to Henry Engler, senior editor in New York and Mike Cowan, senior Regulatory Intelligence expert in London.Program notes:Silicon Valley Bank collapse: What you need to know now: https://www.reuters.com/business/finance/silicon-valley-bank-collapse-what-you-need-know-2023-03-13/SVB Financial files for bankruptcy protection after swift implosion: https://www.reuters.com/business/finance/how-svb-financial-group-imploded-two-days-2023-03-14/SVB is largest bank failure since 2008 financial crisis: https://www.reuters.com/business/finance/global-markets-banks-wrapup-1-2023-03-10/Behind the Regulatory Intelligence paywallINSIGHT: Five important regulatory aspects of the Silicon Valley Bank collapse: http://go-ri.tr.com/S5LTLfOPINION: Scale of U.S. banks' unrealized losses, distressed borrowing and central bank actions point to wider problems: http://go-ri.tr.com/oyHrxDU.S. lawmakers to hold first hearing on SVB, Signature Bank collapse: http://go-ri.tr.com/7AcwNS Compliance Clarified is a podcast from Thomson Reuters Regulatory Intelligence.Listen to wide-ranging, insightful discussions on all things compliance for financial services firms. We delve into the hot topics of the day, the challenges faced and offer up practical ideas for emerging good practice. We de-mystify regulation and explore the art, as well as the science, of the ever-expanding role of the compliance officer. Enforcements, digital transformation, regulatory change, governance, culture, conduct risk – anything and everything impacting the compliance function is up for discussion.
A conversation about the latest in the banking industry, and the types of questions you should be asking yourself with about your bank and any banking investments you may be holding.
SVB Financial, la compañía detrás de Silicon Valley Bank, solicitó la protección por bancarrota del Capítulo 11 en el Tribunal de Quiebras de los Estados Unidos para el Distrito Sur de Nueva York. Esta solicitud cree que tiene cerca de $2,200 millones en liquidez. La misma no afecta a SVB Capital o SVB Securities, las cuales son entidades legales distintas. Cualquier venta de la empresa o de sus activos ahora estaría sujeta a la aprobación judicial, aunque también permite que SBV Financial reanude operaciones sin ser controlada por la Corporación Federal de Seguro de Depósitos.Para esta y más noticias, escucha el podcast de Noticias de Tecnología ExpressDisponible en Spotifyhttps://open.spotify.com/show/2BHTUlynDLqEE2UhdIYfMaen Apple Podcastshttps://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/noticias-de-tecnolog%C3%ADa-express/id1553334024
Se intensifica la guerra de Inteligencias entre Google y Microsoft, TikTok podría separarse de ByteDance y los Diputados aprueban propuesta para compilar biométricosPuedes apoyar la realización de este programa con una suscripción. Más información por acáNoticias:-En su evento de Reinventando la Productividad con IA, Microsoft anunció que Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook y Word comenzarán a usar la plataforma GPT-4 de OpenAI, con asistencia impulsada por IA como parte del nuevo asistente de Microsoft, el Copiloto 365.-Continuando con la guerra de Inteligencias Artificiales, Google anunció nuevas funciones generativas que llegarán a su suite de aplicaciones Workspace, que llegarán primero a los miembros de su programa de probadores de confianza en los Estados Unidos este mes. -SVB Financial, la compañía detrás de Silicon Valley Bank, solicitó la protección por bancarrota del Capítulo 11 en el Tribunal de Quiebras de los Estados Unidos para el Distrito Sur de Nueva York.-Fuentes de Bloomberg dicen que TikTok discutió el separarse de su empresa matriz ByteDance como un último recurso para poder atender las preocupaciones de seguridad nacional expresadas en Estados Unidos.-En México, la Cámara de Diputados aprobó una nueva iniciativa que busca construir una base de datos biométricos, lo que dará origen al Sistema Nacional de Registro e Identidad, o SID.¿Prefieres leer las noticias? ¡Suscríbete a mi newsletter y te llegarán todos los días! Become a member at https://plus.acast.com/s/noticias-de-tecnologia-express. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
**** UBS is paying 3bn Swiss francs ($4.5 billion) for Credit Suisse in an all-share deal that includes extensive government guarantees and liquidity provisions. The price is less than half the 7.4 billion francs Credit Suisse was worth at the close of trading on Friday. Regulator Finma said about 16bn francs of Credit Suisse bonds will become worthless to ensure private investors help bear some of the costs.Dow Jones down 385 (-1.19%). Trading down all day friday, reaching 518 at worst. S&P 500 down 1.1%. NASDAQ down 0.74%. S&P 500 up 1.41%, and NASDAQ up 4.39% for the week, while the Dow posted weekly losses down 0.25%. US treasury yields continued to slide, 2-year yield down 28.4bps. 10-year yield down 14.9bps. Oil prices fell to 15-month lows, and data showed consumer sentiment fell for the first time in four months. SPI Futures down 98 (-1.19%). European markets record worst week in five months, Stoxx 50 -1.3%, FTSE -1%, CAC -1.4%, and DAX -1.3%.Global equities fall, gold rallies as banking worries linger.European shares record worst week in five months on bank crisis jitters.Dysfunction in 'wildly illiquid' bond markets unnerves investors.US consumer sentiment deteriorates in March, inflation expectations retreat.Fed to stay the course with 25 bps rate hike on March 22.Meta launches subscription service in US.First Republic shares tank as $30bn support fails to soothe banking nerves.SVB Financial seeks bankruptcy protection as banking turmoil persists.Copper rises but still faces weekly loss after banking shocks.China to look at measures to curb 'unreasonable' iron ore prices.Oil prices settle down, post big weekly losses on bank fears.War crimes court seeks Putin arrest over deportation of Ukraine's children.Pressure mounts on Macron after violent unrest over pensions.Catch up on the latest news with Henry Jennings' Pre-Market Podcast.Why not sign up for a free trial? Get access to expert insights and research and become a better investor.
SVB Financial files for Ch. 11 bankruptcy protection, says it has $2.2B in liquidity; Meta launches paid verification on Instagram and Facebook in the US; YouTube reinstates Donald Trump's account
QuickFS Link: https://quickfs.net/?via=focused Twitter: @Focusedcompound Email: info@focusedcompounding.com Focused Compounding is an exclusive, members-only site for buy and hold value investors. Inside, you will find research writeups written by hedge fund manager, Geoff Gannon. Experience all this in the company of investors who follow the principles of Buffett, Munger, and Fisher instead of the whims of the crowd. Please read our Disclaimer: https://focusedcompounding.com/disclaimer/
SVB Financial, which no longer includes the bank, filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy protection; The Fed has provided $300 billion in emergency financing to banks; Consumer sentiment weakened in March, survey finds; French workers protest pension age increase To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Bloomberg's Caroline Hyde and Ed Ludlow break down the continuing banking chaos with SVB Financial now filing for Chapter 11 Bankruptcy, as First Republic sees it worst week ever on record. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Tune in for today's industry updates.
The investment world was recently rocked by a bank failure. It was a niche bank but nonetheless important, as its demise highlights the impact of repeated and rapid rate rises. Iain Cunningham explains why this may be the beginning of a problem, not the end. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Es ist richtig Druck auf dem Kessel: Die Kurse fallen, #dax unter 15.000 Punkten, die Nervosität steigt und Anleger flüchten immer mehr in #Staatsanleihen! Einige Bankaktien wurden heute sogar vom Handel ausgesetzt! Die Aktie der Credit Suisse markierte ein neues Allzeittief und die Kreditausfallversicherungen schossen in die Höhe. Erleben wir gerade eine richtige #Bankenkrise? Ausgelöst wurde alles durch die Pleite der Silicon Valley Bank. Am Montagmorgen gab es erst mal Entwarnung, weil SVB Financial gerettet wurde und die Kunden ihre Einlagen bekommen sollen. Doch es sind trotzdem Schockwellen, die durch das Finanzsystem zucken, von den USA bis nach Großbritannien und Schweden und Asien. Auch die Deutsche Bundesbank tagt gerade ... es gibt viel zu besprechen – das musst Du jetzt wissen! Natürlich auch, dass sich die Politik der Fed jetzt massiv verändern dürfte und die Zinsen nicht mehr so stark steigen ...Dein rationaler Vorsprung an der Börse – BEATING BETA: https://beating-beta.deDu brauchst noch ein Depot! Hier kaufe ich meine Aktien: http://trade.re/3sCjH4U *
Renewed fears gripped global markets overnight on news of problems at Credit Suisse. US indices mixed Dow and S&P 500 closed down. Treasury yields fell, and the two-year yield is down to its lowest levels since September. Gold rallied on safe-haven buying and the USD greenback strengthened. Dow Jones down 281 points (-0.87%). Dow down 726 at worst. S&P 500 down 0.86%. NASDAQ up 0.05%. VIX Volatility Index up 10%. In Europe, STOXX 50 -3.5% FTSE -3.8% CAC -3.6% DAX -3.3%. SPI Futures are down 115 points (-1.63%).ASX to plunge as Credit Suisse sparks global banking rout.Wall Street down as Credit Suisse sparks fresh bank selloff.Credit Suisse unease sparks sell-off in world stocks; gold resumes rally.Wall Street regulator unveils new hacking, data and market resiliency rules.Fed rate hike campaign in question as bank stocks swoon.Swiss regulators rush to assuage fears over Credit Suisse.US retail sales point to underlying strength in the economy.SVB Financial explores bankruptcy as option for asset sales.Visa, MasterCard $5.6 bln settlement with retailers is upheld.Apple supplier Foxconn steps up investment outside China, as consumer electronics demand dips.US general says drone crash part of Moscow's increasing aggression.Gold rallies over 1% as Credit Suisse crisis hits risk appetite.Copper prices fall on stronger dollar and banking woes.BHP facing the largest class action in history of claims of GBP36bnTune in to Henry Jennings' Pre-Market Podcast to get in the know for the day ahead. Why not sign up for a free trial? Get access to expert insights and research and become a better investor.
Carleton English and MarketWatch's editor-in-chief Mark DeCambre discuss the continued fallout from the collapse of SVB Financial and Signature Bank and how this crisis may affect the Federal Reserve's rate-hiking path.
Link to slide deck: https://bit.ly/3ZFKGew - We follow up on Friday's big event with SVB Financial failing as a financial institution which set in motion a US government backstop of uninsured deposits over the weekend which extended to Signature Bank which was also taken over by the US government yesterday. We focus on the market reaction across equities, US bonds, interbank spreads, and gold with our main message being that nobody knows what will happen next. It is all one big guessing this week on fallout from the failure of SVB Financial. Today's pod features Peter Garnry and Ole S. Hansen. Read daily in-depth market updates from the Saxo Market Call and Saxo Strategy Team here. Click here to open an account with Saxo - Intro and outro music by AShamaluevMusic
Discussing the latest on SVB Financial, also known as Silicon Valley Bank, and what it means for the banking industry, stock market, and you.
This week we feature a preview of the week ahead and new coverage alerts on FXI Holding and SVB Financial, potential restructurings on the horizon from National CineMedia, Flint Group, United Road Service and Heartland Dental, new Reorg analysis of Venator Materials, LifePoint Health, AMC Entertainment and major cruise operators, and crypto coverage of FTX. Chapters in this podcast include: 00:31 - Weekly recap 07:26 - Week's top-read stories 08:04 - Week ahead preview We're looking for feedback to improve the podcast experience! Please share your thoughts here: www.research.net/r/Reorg_podcast_survey #leveragedfinance #highyield
SVB Financial, parent of Silicon Valley Bank, is in talks to sell itself, sources told CNBC's David Faber. Attempts by the bank to raise capital have failed, the sources said, and the bank has hired advisors to explore a potential sale. Meanwhile, Wells Fargo scams it's customers again as multiple customer funds appear to go missing.~This episode is sponsored by iTrust Capital~iTrustCapital | Get $100 Funding Reward + No Monthly Fees when you sign up using our custom link! ➜ https://bit.ly/iTrustPaul50% OFF! Crypto Power Index CPI & Mastermind Group - FLASH SALE ENDS March 12th! - USE CODE "23SPRING50" ➜ https://www.paulbarronnetwork.com/store
This struggle shows the dangers of doing business with bad companies, says David Trainer. He discusses how stocks are volatile as the SVB Financial fallout continues. He talks about how issues show that companies, including banks, need to be much more discerning about whom they do business with. He notes that the deposit base from the major banks is much more diversified than SVB. He then goes over finding stock opportunities in a volatile market, highlighting Tesla (TSLA). Tune in to find out more about the stock market today.
Los reguladores estadounidenses se han apresurado a minimizar el impacto de la quiebra de Silicon Valley Bank, propiedad de SVB Financial, en el sector financiero en general tras algunos anuncios dados el fin de semana. Mañana será publicado el CPI de febrero. $FRC $SIVB $PACW $WALL $AMC $SGEN $ROKU
Ripple XRP - Garlinghouse - Ripple EXPSURE to SVB - Financial System Is Broken - BANK RUN COMING The recent banking crisis involving Silicon Valley Bank (SIVB) and the FDIC-insured deposits of its customers has drawn attention from Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse. Garlinghouse took to Twitter to criticize the broken banking system, stating that it cannot even move money 24/7/365. He also made a statement regarding Ripple's exposure to SIVB, but did not provide further details. Meanwhile, a live blog by Zero Hedge reports that the FDIC is currently holding an auction for SIVB's assets, with failed bids being the likely outcome. In related news, CNN reports that US banks are sitting on an unrealized loss of $620 billion, further highlighting the precarious state of the banking system. Meanwhile, the Zero Hedge Twitter account has criticized the Fed and Treasury for their regulatory failure in preventing billions in losses, instead focusing on board diversity and unrelated international travel. *SUPPORT ON THE CHAIN* JOIN THE CHANNEL https://otc.one/join OTC MERCH https://onthechain.shop BUY US A COFFEE https://otc.one/buy-us-a-coffee Support ON THE CHAIN https://otc.one/support -------------- *ON THE CHAIN* SUBSCRIBE TO THE OTC PODCAST: https://otc.one/podcast Subscribe to our other Youtube Channel: https://otc.one/onthechain On The Web: https://onthechain.io Follow OTC on Twitter: https://otc.one/otc Join On The Chain Community on Twitter https://twitter.com/i/communities/1599435678995062788 Join our FREE Telegram Roundtable channel: https://t.me/onthechain_roundtable -------------- *JEFF* Follow Jeff on Twitter: https://otc.one/jeff -------------- *CHIP* Follow Chip on Twitter: https://otc.one/chip Listen to Chip's music http://nojoyyet.com -------------- *DISCLAIMER:* _All opinions expressed by content contributors that appear on OTC are solely expressing their opinions and do not reflect the opinions of OTC, its affiliates, or sponsors. Content contributors may have previously disseminated information on a social media platform, website, or another medium such as a podcast, television, or radio. OTC, Content Contributors, Affiliates, or Sponsors are not obligated to update or correct any information. The content contributors are sharing the information which they believe to be reliable. OTC, its affiliates, or sponsors cannot guarantee the accuracy of the opinion shared, and viewers, readers, and listeners should not rely on it. Opinions expressed are not financial advice. Please consult a licensed financial advisor before making any financial decisions. You must research before you invest in anything. Do not invest based on what someone else is doing or not doing, or based on other people's opinions._ #XRP #Ripple
Straight from Benzinga newsdesk, hosts Brent Slava and Michael O'Connor bring you the market news and stocks to watch.Subscribe to our Stocks To Watch Newsletter here : https://go.benzinga.com/sales-page-187126583617110118712659$PACW $ILMN $COIN $ZI $GP PacWest Bancorp (PACW) -Shares of this Beverly Hills, California-based regional bank were down more than 80% over the last two trading sessions amid the fallout from SVB Financial (SIVB). Regional bank expert Tim Melvin appeared on Benzinga's YouTube channel on Friday of last week and suggested PacWest and Western Alliance (WAL) would not share the same fate as SVB given the banks "do not rely heavily on venture capital relationships."Illumina (ILMN) -The stock was up 8% Monday morning following a Wall Street Journal report activist investor Carl Icahn plans to wage a proxy battle with Illumina.Coinbase (COIN) -Analysts at Oppenheimer Monday noted issues with SVB Financial, Silvergate Capital (SI) and Signature Bank (SBNY) could be "jeopardizing blockchain development in the United States." The analysts lowered their sales estimate for Coinbase amid "heightened risks."ZoomInfo Technologies (ZI) -Shares fell 10% on Friday amid fallout from the SVB Financial collapse. ZoomInfo issued a filing Monday morning which showed the company has about $20 million in cash with SVB Financial.GreenPower Motor Company (GP) -A play on electric-powered transit buses. Shares of this low float penny stock were up about 20% amid news the company delivered its first electric refrigerated box truck to a client in the education industry.Hosts:Brent Slava Reach out to Brent at brent@benzinga.comSr. Reporter, Head of Benzinga NewsdeskMichael O'Connor Reach out to Michael at michaeloconnor@benzinga.comBenzinga Strategy Developmentpro.benzinga.comIf you have ideas for stocks we should cover or have feedback about the info or presentation, please drop us a line at newsdesk@benzinga.com or aslicoskun@benzinga.comAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
Dow Jones down 345 on Friday (-1.07%). Up 167 at best. Down 471 at worst. S&P 500 down 1.45%. NASDAQ down 1.75%. S&P 500 had its biggest weekly fall since September down 4.55%. The Dow Jones fell 4.44% and the NASDAQ 4.71% on the week. The S&P 500 has almost lost its 2023 gains.SPI Futures down 39. European markets lower, STOXX 600 down 1.35%, UK down 1.67%, with Deutsche Bank down 7.3% and most UK banks down 2.3% to 4.6%. Dow Jones on Friday - a late 100 point rally saves it closing on its low.Commodities - Gold jumped 1.94% as bond yields fell and as the US dollar dipped 0.66%. Metals mostly lower. BHP and RIO down 1.02% and 1.0% in the US.Wall Street tumbles, Treasury yields slide after jobs report as bank jitters spread.Fed under less pressure to speed rate hikes as wage gains cool.US jobs data can spare Fed rate ratchet.Strong US job growth persists; wage inflation shows signs of slowdown.Banking regulators shutter SVB, collapse unnerved investors.US bank stocks added to losses as regulators close SVB Financial.Californian tech bank SVB sews global fear about rising cost of money.Silicon Valley dies, but it's disease lives on.Concentration risk an old lesson from SVB collapse.US deficit grows to $262 billion in February as tax refunds search.Meta looking to launch rival for Twitter.Biden - Payrolls report shows economy headed in the right direction.Ukraine says Bakmut battle is grinding down Russia's best units.Tesla looks to Chinese and Korean material suppliers to help lower costs.Yellen warns U.S. House members of “economic collapse” if debt ceiling is not raised.Iran and Saudi Arabia moved towards the resumption of ties.Argentina set to hold interest rate at 75% in March as inflation nudges towards 100%.The aluminium price hits a two month low on higher rate expectations. (Aluminium is seen as being geared to economic growth more so than most other metals).Why not sign up for a free trial? Get access to expert insights and research and become a better investor.
Link zu unserer Discord Community https://discord.gg/TQrnHcnCFQ Unterstütze uns mit einer Mitgliedschaft oder einmalig per PayPal www.promilleprozente.de // https://paypal.me/promilleprozente US-Notenbankchef Jerome Powell hat bei einer Anhörung im Kongress weitere Zinserhöhungen angekündigt und damit die Aktienmärkte auf Talfahrt geschickt. Viel mehr Aufsehen erregte in der zweiten Wochenhälfte allerdings die Insolvenz von zwei US-Banken. Der Kollaps von Silvergate Capital und SVB Financial befeuert die Sorge vor einer neuen Finanzkrise und ist besonders für den Tech- und Krypto-Sektor bedrohlich. Im zweiten Teil dieser Folge schauen wir uns einige wichtige Bestandteile im Depot von Warren Buffett an. Besonders seine Positionierung in japanischen Aktien, in Dividendentiteln und Energieunternehmen lässt aufhorchen. Themen und Zeitmarker Begrüßung und Intro (0:15) Whisky der Woche (2:00) Jerome Powell stellt Zinserhöhungen in Aussicht (5:23) Mike Wilson wird Bulle (12:30) US-Bankensektor crasht (24:40) Was wird nächste Woche wichtig? (41:45) Blick ins Depot von Warren Buffett (46:10) Zock der Woche (58:40) Outro (64:05) Quellen, Links und Infos zu dieser Folge Japan-Aktien von Buffet: https://ohneaktienwirdschwer.podigee.io/500-buffetts-lieblingsaktien-in-japan-abercrombie-fitch-boomt-gefangnis-mit-rendite Kontakt Mail: fanpost@promilleprozente.de Instagram: www.instagram.com/promilleprozente Twitter: https://twitter.com/Promille_Pod Web: www.promilleprozente.de Risikohinweis Die im Podcast geteilten Inhalte stellen keine Anlageberatung dar! Wir informieren in diesem Podcast lediglich über unsere persönlichen Interessen und Investitionsentscheidungen. Wir weisen ausdrücklich darauf hin, dass ein Kauf von Aktien oder anderen Finanzprodukten im schlimmsten Fall zu Verlusten bis hin zum Totalverlust des eingesetzten Vermögens führen kann. Wir übernehmen keine Haftung für entstandene Verluste. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/promilleprozente/message
Job creation decelerated in February but was still stronger than expected despite the Federal Reserve's efforts to slow the economy and bring down inflation. Jason Furman, professor at the Harvard Kennedy School of Government and former CEA chair, discussed the latest job report and what we should expect from the Fed regarding rake hikes, and more. SVB Financial, parent of Silicon Valley Bank, was unable to find a buyer before a bank run caused regulators to shut it down. SVB was trying to find a buyer and hired advisors to do so after attempts by the bank to raise capital failed. Priscilla Sims Brown, Amalgamated Bank CEO, discussed the company's effort spearheading a merchant category code for gun stores, afer major credit card companies paused the effort.In this episode:Priscilla Sims Brown, @AmalgamatedBankRick Santelli, @SantelliRantsJason Furman, @jasonfurmanHugh Son, @Hugh_SonAndrew Ross Sorkin, @andrewrsorkinBecky Quick, @BeckyQuickKatie Kramer, @Kramer_Katie
Carl Quintanilla, Jim Cramer and David Faber focused on the two big stories of the morning: The SVB Financial meltdown and the key February jobs report. Sources told David that efforts by the parent of Silicon Valley Bank to raise capital have failed and its attempts to sell itself are in doubt. Shares of the tech-focused lender extended Thursday's rout and dragged regional bank stocks down with them -- including First Republic Bank losing half of its value. Where is the money going after rotating out of the regionals? As for the February jobs report: Employers added a better-than-expected 311,000 non-farm jobs, the unemployment rate ticked up to 3.6%, labor force participation rose and wage growth came in tamer than expected month-over-month. What does it all mean for the Fed?
Regulators just shut down Silicon Valley Bank, also known as ‘SVB Financial,' in the largest U.S. bank failure since the 2008 financial crisis. Shares were halted all day long as the bank's capital raise reportedly failed. And yet because of the strong jobs report this morning, some folks are still saying the Fed should hike by another half point at its next meeting in 10 days. But should they actually be slamming the brakes?We've got full team coverage of all that you need to know, and will explain what's at stake for markets, the economy and your money.
The economy added 311,000 jobs in February, while wage growth slowed; Investors sell bank shares amid concerns over SVB Financial; Mortgage rates rise for fifth week To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Link to slide deck: https://bit.ly/3Li0Ne9 - Markets got big jolt yesterday when Silvergate Capital announced a liquidation of the bank that has suffered from the implosion in cryptocurrencies. The event cascaded into SVB Financial (Silicon Valley Bank) plunging 60% in the main session and another 20% in extended trading as the bank has been forced to sell bonds at great losses. These moves cascaded further into other banking stocks and led equity futures lower in Asian and European trading. JD.com also announced a weaker than expected Q1 revenue outlook saying the Chinese consumer is weaker than estimated and that the extended lockdown has impacted behaviour. In today's podcast we go through the implications of the SVB Financial fallout and what it means for markets moves and especially with the large trading volumes in zero-day-to-expiry (0DTE) options. We also cover the JPY following the BoJ meeting and the moves in CHF on banking risk-off. Finally, we cover Fed Funds pricing, gold and other commodities, and next week's earnings releases which will focus on Volkswagen, BMW, Adobe, and Lennar. A warning shot has been fired yesterday. Be vigilant on risks today and stay safe. Today's pod features Steen Jakobsen, Peter Garnry, and Ole S. Hansen. Read daily in-depth market updates from the Saxo Market Call and Saxo Strategy Team here. Click here to open an account with Saxo - Intro and outro music by AShamaluevMusic
Higher rates have put deposits under pressure across the banking industry, but liquidity strains have been far more pronounced at a few banks, resulting in severe hits to their stock prices. Crypto-focused bank Silvergate announced plans to voluntarily wind down its operations after facing a liquidity crunch, but others like SVB Financial raised capital and purged its bond portfolio after seeing a higher cash burn among its clients. In the episode, Todd Baker, a senior fellow at the Richman Center for Business, Law and Public Policy at Columbia Business School and Colombia Law School, discussed the recent liquidity crunch at Silvergate, the asset/liability management lessons observers can learn from the turmoil and the risk that banks face when focusing on a given industry. Baker, who previously served as the chief corporate strategy and development officer at three large banks, also provided insight into the unfolding situation at SVB Financial.
S&P Futures are trading flat to lower but trending higher from being down 0.50% earlier this morning. The key event today will be the release of the Non-Farms payrolls report which is a key indicator used by the Fed when making monetary policy decisions. The health of the banking sector remains in focus as SVB Financial is facing an emergency capital raise. Asian market fell overnight and European markets are weak ahead of this morning's jobs report.
In den USA wurden im Februar 311.000 Jobs geschaffen, während die Wall Street im Schnitt mit 225.000 gerechnet hatte. Wie dem auch sei, lagen die Flüsterschätzungen bei 275.000 bis 300.000 Jobs. Die Arbeitslosenrate ist auf 3,6% gestiegen vs. die Wall Street von 3,4% ausging. Die Lohninflation verliert an Dynamik und lag bei 0,2% vs. der angepeilten 0,3 bis 0,4%. Wir sehen einen nur leichten Bounce an der Wall Street. Über 3% hat der S&P 500 bis zum gestrigen Closing diese Woche verloren. Neben dem Rechenschaftsbericht von FED-Chef Jerome Powell, und der Zurückhaltung im Vorfeld der Arbeitsmarktdaten, sorgt vor allem der kräftige Kursrutsch der Banken für Sorge. Auch wenn der Kollaps von Silvergate Capital und der Einbruch von SVB Financial aufgrund der Geschäftsfelder beider Finanzhäuser als Sondersituation zu verstehen ist, werden nun die ersten Folgen der aggressiven Geldpolitik sichtbar. Abonniere den Podcast, um keine Folge zu verpassen! ____ Folge uns, um auf dem Laufenden zu bleiben: • Facebook: http://fal.cn/SQfacebook • Twitter: http://fal.cn/SQtwitter • LinkedIn: http://fal.cn/SQlinkedin • Instagram: http://fal.cn/SQInstagram
J'imagine que personne ici ne connaît SVB Financial ? Moi non plus à vrai dire, jusqu'à ce matin. Cette banque californienne a semé la zizanie hier à Wall Street en étalant au grand jour ses difficultés. Avec un effet psychologique considérable qui a réveillé les vieux démons du marché. On verra bien s'il s'agit d'une variable de plus dans l'équation complexe sur les taux et l'inflation ou si la panique passe. En tout cas, c'est LE sujet du jour, à tel point qu'il a relégué tous les autres au second plan.
Exklusives Angebot für unsere Hörer: Testet Handelsblatt Premium 4 Wochen für 1 € und bleibt zu den Entwicklungen an den Finanz- und Aktienmärkten informiert. Mehr zum Vorteilsangebot der Handelsblatt-Fachmedien erfahrt ihr unter: www.handelsblatt.com/mehraktien * Ein Podcast - featured by Handelsblatt. Helfen Sie uns, unsere Podcasts weiter zu verbessern. Ihre Meinung ist uns wichtig: www.handelsblatt.com/zufriedenheit In den USA wurden im Februar 311.000 Jobs geschaffen, während die Wall Street im Schnitt mit 225.000 gerechnet hatte. Wie dem auch sei, lagen die Flüsterschätzungen bei 275.000 bis 300.000 Jobs. Die Arbeitslosenrate ist auf 3,6% gestiegen vs. die Wall Street von 3,4% ausging. Die Lohninflation verliert an Dynamik und lag bei 0,2% vs. der angepeilten 0,3 bis 0,4%. Wir sehen einen nur leichten Bounce an der Wall Street. Über 3% hat der S&P 500 bis zum gestrigen Closing diese Woche verloren. Neben dem Rechenschaftsbericht von FED-Chef Jerome Powell, und der Zurückhaltung im Vorfeld der Arbeitsmarktdaten, sorgt vor allem der kräftige Kursrutsch der Banken für Sorge. Auch wenn der Kollaps von Silvergate Capital und der Einbruch von SVB Financial aufgrund der Geschäftsfelder beider Finanzhäuser als Sondersituation zu verstehen ist, werden nun die ersten Folgen der aggressiven Geldpolitik sichtbar. Im vergangenen Jahr haben Kunden erstmals seit 1948 Geld von Banken abgezogen, und zwar laut der FDIC-Einlagenversicherung netto $278 Mrd. Das Geld fließt in Geldmarkt-Fonds oder in kurzlaufende T-Bills. Um Kundeneinlagen zu halten, müssen Banken den Kunden höhere Zinsen bieten. Ich selbst habe diese Woche einen Sparbrief von J.P. Morgan erworben, der einen Zins von über 4% zahlt. Banken parken die Einlagen hingegen in langlaufenden Staatsanleihen, die den Banken weniger Zinsen einbringen. Erschwerend kommt hinzu, dass die von Banken gehaltenen langlaufenden Staatsanleihen in den Bilanzen nicht zum Marktwert bewertet werden, sondern zum Wert, den die Anleihen zum Zeitpunkt aus Auslauftermins haben. Wenn Banken diese Anleihen liquidieren müssten, würden hohe Verluste entstehen. Abonniere den Podcast, um keine Folge zu verpassen! __________________________________________________ ► Zur Opening Bell+: https://bit.ly/3tUqoRm * ► https://www.instagram.com/kochwallstreet/ ► https://www.facebook.com/markus.koch.newyork ► https://www.youtube.com/user/kochntv ► https://www.markuskoch.de/ *Werbung
Today, Silicon Valley Bank, an institution with over $200 Billion worth of assets, failed. Chris Whalen, chairman of Whalen Global Advisors, returns to Forward Guidance to explain why. Whalen attributes the collapse in book value of SVB Financial (the entity that owns Silicon Valley Bank) to the Fed's rapid hikes in interest rates, which severely depressed the market value of the bank's holdings. Whalen argues that, unless the Federal Reserve cuts rates and opens the discount window, the U.S. is at risk of a banking crisis. -- Follow Chris Whalen on Twitter https://twitter.com/rcwhalen Follow Jack Farley on Twitter https://twitter.com/JackFarley96 Follow Forward Guidance on Twitter https://twitter.com/ForwardGuidance Follow Blockworks on Twitter https://twitter.com/Blockworks_ -- Use code GUIDANCE10 to get 10% off Permissionless 2023 in Austin: https://blockworks.co/event/permissionless-2023 Research, news, data, governance and models – now, all in one place. As a listener of Forward Guidance, you can use code GUIDANCE10 for a 10% discount when signing up to Blockworks Research https://www.blockworksresearch.com/ -- Get top market insights and the latest in crypto news. Subscribe to Blockworks Daily Newsletter: https://rb.gy/5weeyw Market commentary, charts, degen trade ideas, governance updates, token performance, can't-miss-tweets and more. Subscribe to the Blockworks Research “Daily Debrief” Newsletter: https://rb.gy/feusos -- Disclaimer: Nothing discussed on Forward Guidance should be considered as investment advice. Please always do your own research & speak to a financial advisor before thinking about, thinking about putting your money into these crazy markets.
Dallas Trading Floor No 706 - Mar 10 2023 WWW.DallasTradingFloor.com --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/dallastradingfloor/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/dallastradingfloor/support
MONEY FM 89.3 - Prime Time with Howie Lim, Bernard Lim & Finance Presenter JP Ong
Singapore shares struggled to advance at the open, following a retreat on Wall Street amid worries over the financial sector. The Straits Times Index headed down 0.6 per cent in early trade to 3,194.73 points, after 54.3 million securities changed hands. Some notable names seeing new developments include City Developments Limited, after the property developer completed its acquisition of the St Katharine Docks development in London for £395 million (S$636 million). But how significant is the acquisition for CDL? Another company to watch would be Del Monte Pacific, after the canned food brand posted a net profit of US$9.8 million for the third quarter ended Jan 31. That's down 62 per cent year on year despite higher turnover. Is this a cause for concern? On Market View, the Drive Time team got down to the details with Benjamin Goh, Head of Research and Investor Education, SIAS.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The Latest bank updates, specifically surrounding Silvergate Capital and SVB Financial, sparked broad weakness across the banking space today. The Market initially took some comfort from higher-than-expected weekly initial and continuing jobless claims as investors remain tightly focused on labor-market indicators ahead of Friday's nonfarm payrolls report. There were also a lot of headlines about Biden's budget released today, but more noise than news aside from some of the renewed attention it will put on the debt ceiling fight.
Peter Winter talks regional banks, saying that the 2022 outlook is very positive, while average loan growth accelerated in 4Q. His top picks in the space are Citizens Financial Group, Huntington Bancshares, and Fifth Third Bancorp - while his mid-cap top picks are Customers Bancorp, Signature Bank, East West Bancorp, SVB Financial, Silvergate Capital, and Western Alliance.
The Dow, S&P and Nasdaq all closed down and Jim Cramer is likening this market to fantasy football - hear what he is drafting, starting and benching. Then, Founding Partner of MoffettNathanson Craig Moffett breaks down the firm's deal with SVB Financial. After, CEO of MongoDB Dev Ittycheria joins Cramer to give more details on the company's latest quarter and where the company is headed. Plus, last week Starbucks employees in Buffalo made history by voting to become the first unionized Starbucks location in the U.S. - Cramer is talking to one of the baristas that led the union effort now getting national attention. Finally, Cramer said he expects the Fed to announce rate hikes to combat inflation – hear where he thinks it will make the biggest impact.
In this episode of Startup Hustle, Matt DeCoursey and Ryan Larson, VP of SVB Financial Group talk about the business of banking. Find Startup Hustle Everywhere: https://linktr.ee/startuphustle This episode is sponsored by Silicon Valley Bank: https://www.svb.com/ Learn more about SVB Financial: https://www.svb.com/ Learn more about Full Scale: https://fullscale.io/ See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.