<p>With hindsight, there were warning signs ahead of last week's spectacular collapse of Silicon Valley Bank, missed not only by investors but also by bank regulators.</p>.<p>Just why the oversight failed remained a hot question among banking experts Monday, with some focusing on the entrenched weaknesses in US rules.</p>.<p>The Federal Reserve announced Monday plans for a "thorough, transparent and swift" review of the supervision of SVB that will be publicly released on May 1, effectively acknowledging that it could have done better.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/business/asian-markets-sink-as-svb-contagion-fears-hit-banking-sector-1200065.html" target="_blank">Asian markets sink as SVB contagion fears hit banking sector</a></strong></p>.<p>President Joe Biden promised a "full accounting of what happened," adding that he would ask regulators and banking regulators to tighten rules on the sector.</p>.<p>Banking experts have been among those alarmed at the rapid collapse of SVB, the country's 16th biggest bank by assets and how its demise became a harbinger of Sunday's failure of another lender, Signature Bank.</p>.<p>The failures have "exposed the inadequacy of regulatory reforms that have been made since the global financial crisis," said Arthur Wilmarth, a law professor at George Washington University.</p>.<p>A once-over of the bank would have pointed to clear potential red flags in SVB's disproportionate exposure to tech startups, a risky area that can be likened to commercial real estate or emerging markets -- areas that have plagued lenders in the past.</p>.<p>Wilmarth noted that SVB grew very fast between 2020 and 2022 and that its exposure to long-dated fixed interest bonds made it especially vulnerable to the a shift in monetary policy by the Fed.</p>.<p>"That's almost a sure-proof formula for failure. If the economy turns you begin to have trouble," Wilmarth said.</p>.<p>"None of those would have been a mystery to the regulators."</p>.<p>Experts pointed as well to the eventual easing of US laws enacted soon after the 2008 crisis.</p>.<p>The original Dodd-Frank law of 2010 imposed higher capital, liquidity and other requirements on banks with at least $50 billion in assets.</p>.<p>In 2018, with support from former President Donald Trump, this requirement was raised to $250 billion, affecting fewer banks.</p>.<p>But that shift in law does not excuse regulators for these failures, according to Anna Gelpern, a law professor at Georgetown University.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/business/business-news/svb-collapse-causes-headache-for-us-fed-before-crucial-interest-rate-decision-1200018.html" target="_blank">SVB collapse causes headache for US Fed before crucial interest rate decision</a></strong></p>.<p>"When regulatory requirements are relaxed either by the premise that those institutions don't pose a risk to the system because of their size or that they are easier to supervise, that puts much more pressure on old-fashioned supervision because you don't have the automatic alarm that goes off with the requirements," she said.</p>.<p>"If this was clearly unsafe and unsound behaviour," the banks' official designation in the law "does not excuse a failure of supervision," she said.</p>.<p>Michael Ohlrogge, an associate professor of law at New York University, said regulators as a matter of course assign "very little to zero-risk weight" in terms of bank capital requirements for Treasury-linked securities because they are considered safe.</p>.<p>At the same time, regulators are also lenient with banks with regard to depositors with more than $250,000 -- the threshold for federally insured deposits -- believing the bank has a meaningful business relationship with such clients.</p>.<p>"That's probably going to warrant revisiting and thinking more seriously about the run risk of uninsured deposits," Ohlrogge said.</p>
<p>With hindsight, there were warning signs ahead of last week's spectacular collapse of Silicon Valley Bank, missed not only by investors but also by bank regulators.</p>.<p>Just why the oversight failed remained a hot question among banking experts Monday, with some focusing on the entrenched weaknesses in US rules.</p>.<p>The Federal Reserve announced Monday plans for a "thorough, transparent and swift" review of the supervision of SVB that will be publicly released on May 1, effectively acknowledging that it could have done better.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/business/asian-markets-sink-as-svb-contagion-fears-hit-banking-sector-1200065.html" target="_blank">Asian markets sink as SVB contagion fears hit banking sector</a></strong></p>.<p>President Joe Biden promised a "full accounting of what happened," adding that he would ask regulators and banking regulators to tighten rules on the sector.</p>.<p>Banking experts have been among those alarmed at the rapid collapse of SVB, the country's 16th biggest bank by assets and how its demise became a harbinger of Sunday's failure of another lender, Signature Bank.</p>.<p>The failures have "exposed the inadequacy of regulatory reforms that have been made since the global financial crisis," said Arthur Wilmarth, a law professor at George Washington University.</p>.<p>A once-over of the bank would have pointed to clear potential red flags in SVB's disproportionate exposure to tech startups, a risky area that can be likened to commercial real estate or emerging markets -- areas that have plagued lenders in the past.</p>.<p>Wilmarth noted that SVB grew very fast between 2020 and 2022 and that its exposure to long-dated fixed interest bonds made it especially vulnerable to the a shift in monetary policy by the Fed.</p>.<p>"That's almost a sure-proof formula for failure. If the economy turns you begin to have trouble," Wilmarth said.</p>.<p>"None of those would have been a mystery to the regulators."</p>.<p>Experts pointed as well to the eventual easing of US laws enacted soon after the 2008 crisis.</p>.<p>The original Dodd-Frank law of 2010 imposed higher capital, liquidity and other requirements on banks with at least $50 billion in assets.</p>.<p>In 2018, with support from former President Donald Trump, this requirement was raised to $250 billion, affecting fewer banks.</p>.<p>But that shift in law does not excuse regulators for these failures, according to Anna Gelpern, a law professor at Georgetown University.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/business/business-news/svb-collapse-causes-headache-for-us-fed-before-crucial-interest-rate-decision-1200018.html" target="_blank">SVB collapse causes headache for US Fed before crucial interest rate decision</a></strong></p>.<p>"When regulatory requirements are relaxed either by the premise that those institutions don't pose a risk to the system because of their size or that they are easier to supervise, that puts much more pressure on old-fashioned supervision because you don't have the automatic alarm that goes off with the requirements," she said.</p>.<p>"If this was clearly unsafe and unsound behaviour," the banks' official designation in the law "does not excuse a failure of supervision," she said.</p>.<p>Michael Ohlrogge, an associate professor of law at New York University, said regulators as a matter of course assign "very little to zero-risk weight" in terms of bank capital requirements for Treasury-linked securities because they are considered safe.</p>.<p>At the same time, regulators are also lenient with banks with regard to depositors with more than $250,000 -- the threshold for federally insured deposits -- believing the bank has a meaningful business relationship with such clients.</p>.<p>"That's probably going to warrant revisiting and thinking more seriously about the run risk of uninsured deposits," Ohlrogge said.</p>