Factbox-Fed, FDIC reviews of US bank failures to spotlight problems, fixes
FILE PHOTO: The U.S. Federal Reserve building is pictured in Washington · Reuters

The failures of two large regional U.S. banks in mid-March blew a $22 billion hole in the nation's deposit insurance fund and shook confidence in the global financial system.

On Friday the banks' regulators - the Federal Reserve and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation - will publish their accounts of what happened at both institutions, and propose fixes to prevent a repeat. The FDIC will also publish a separate report on deposit insurance by Monday.

Here's what's expected:

THREE REPORTS

The U.S. central bank's report will focus on Silicon Valley Bank, which regulators shuttered on March 10 after depositors withdrew $42 billion in 24 hours and put in requests for another $100 billion that morning, amounts totaling 85% of the California-based lender's deposits. Fed Vice Chair for Supervision Michael Barr is leading that review.

The FDIC will publish two reports: One on its supervision of Signature Bank, which was closed a couple of days after SVB; the other focusing on the deposit insurance system that FDIC Chair Martin Gruenberg has said will include policy options for coverage levels, excess deposit insurance and the adequacy of the deposit insurance fund.

BANK SUPERVISION

When a new team of bank examiners at the San Francisco Fed took over day-to-day supervision of SVB in the second half of 2021, they began internally flagging issues at the bank: Liquidity risk, ineffective board oversight, deficient governance, and incorrectly modeled interest-rate risk.

The Fed's report could fill in gaps on when and how this litany of problems was communicated to the bank's management and board of directors, and up the central bank's own supervisory chain of command, including to staff at the Fed's Board of Governors in Washington.

Unanswered questions include whether SVB executives took steps to address the concerns, if supervisors called out other risks such as the bank's heavy reliance on uninsured deposits, and why examiners did not act more urgently or do more to force changes.

Barr has said the Fed's report will include confidential supervisory information, including citations and exam material not typically disclosed.

Although less is known about the FDIC's supervision of New York-based Signature, its report on Friday could lay out whether examiners had flagged issues prior to the bank's collapse, and if the lender's management had taken any steps in response.

At least in SVB's case, "flags had been raised, and why more was not done is not currently obvious to me," said Kathryn Judge, a professor at Columbia Law School. "We will get additional clues" in the reports, she said.