Goldman Says U.S. Is Investigating Its Work for Silicon Valley Bank
U.S. authorities are investigating the work Goldman Sachs did for Silicon Valley Bank in the weeks before it failed, including its advice that the smaller lender sell a large portfolio of securities at a loss, according to a regulatory filing by Goldman on Thursday.
Goldman said it was “cooperating with and providing information to various governmental bodies in connection with their investigations and inquiries” into Silicon Valley Bank, which collapsed suddenly on March 10, touching off a crisis of confidence that has led to the failure of two more regional lenders, and a panic in the stock market over the fate of others.
The investigations included “the firm’s business with SVB in or around March 2023, when SVB engaged the firm to assist with a proposed capital raise and SVB sold the firm a portfolio of securities,” Goldman’s filing to the Securities and Exchange Commission said.
Investment bankers at Goldman advised Silicon Valley Bank’s leaders to sell a $21 billion portfolio of U.S. government debt whose value had been greatly diminished by rising interest rates. Silicon Valley Bank did so in a matter of hours, then revealed it had taken a $1.8 billion loss on the move. Goldman also tried to arrange the sale of Silicon Valley Bank’s stock.
Silicon Valley Bank’s depositors withdrew billions of dollars in response to the news, a run that ended in its seizure by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. Days later another bank, Signature Bank, also collapsed, and this week regulators seized and sold First Republic Bank.
Since the crisis began, shares of a number of smaller banks have been hammered as investors try to bet on which might be the next to fall. The drop in share prices of companies like PacWest Bancorp and Western Alliance have come even as the lenders have tried to reassure investors that they are financially sound.
Goldman didn’t specify which regulators are conducting the investigation. In March, days after Silicon Valley Bank’s collapse, a group of Democratic lawmakers in the House of Representatives sent a letter to the heads of the S.E.C., F.D.I.C. and Justice Department, asking them to investigate Goldman Sachs’s role as an adviser to the smaller bank.
A spokeswoman for Goldman Sachs declined to comment further.
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