5 • 1.2K Ratings
🗓️ 13 March 2023
⏱️ 48 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
This is episode 1,117 of the Arete Coach Podcast with host Severin Sorensen, with a special episode that Explores Financial Contagion Risk and the Collapse of Silicon Valley Bank. As of 6:30 PM EDT, 12 March 2023, the Federal Goverment had intervened to guarantee depositor funds, allowing bank customers to access funds in time to make payroll on 3/15; the 'ides of march.' If those words cast a dark omen of the future, they ought to.
In this episode, we explore what economic and financial contagion risks are and what are the causes, roots, and factors that seem to set wildfire to human behavior.
We explore the happenings this past week with the death spiral and failure of Silicon Valley Bank, one of the oldest and largest banks serving the private equity and venture capital community. We revisit a play-by-play of the collapse of SVB from the point of view of the CEO and a customer depositor at the bank, and their different experiences.
Importantly, we revisit prior financial crises to explore similarities and differences, and, review what the research suggests business leaders can do to prepare and protect themselves from foreseeable events. A list of 10 action items is provided for executive coaches, business owners, CEOs, and C-level executives to navigate at this time.
Severin Sorensen is an economist, executive coach, and serial entrepreneur with a keen curiosity for business and economic trends. Severin is CEO of ePraxis LLC, a premier-level executive headhunting, talent selection, and executive coaching company. Severin is a highly sought Vistage Speaker with over 300+ presentations worldwide on hiring top talent, innovation, and economic trends. Severin was a Vistage Chair (2010-2018) of three Vistage Groups in Salt Lake City, UT, and during this period he was a repeat Mentor Chair and awarded the 2011 Vistage Rookie Chair of the Year Award. Prior to Chairing, Severin was a Vistage/TEC member in Washington DC (1999-2004) while he owned and operated a company he founded called Sparta Consulting Corporation (1994-2005), a management consulting, security systems integration, and remote video monitoring company; Severin sold this company in 2005 and it continues today as part of Interface Security Systems, the 7th largest security systems integrator in the US (2018). Severin was a former “Special Assistant to the President” at the White House where he had the high honor to work for President George H.W. Bush (POTUS 41) (1992-93). Severin earned a graduate degree (M.Phil.) in economics from King’s College, Cambridge, University, England, and two undergraduate degrees in economics and political science from the University of Utah. While an undergraduate, Severin was the Editor in Chief of the Utah Forum: A journal on international political economy. Severin is the author of Economic Misery and Crime Waves (2009), a book that chronicles the Great Depression (1929-42) and the situation leading up to the Great Recession (2007-2009). Today, Severin prepares a quarterly economic overview for business coaches and business owner/operators on the economy, identifying key behavioral economic trends that impact businesses and their opportunity frontiers.
More on the topic of the economy and executive coaching insights are available at AreteCoach.io.
The Arete Coach Podcast seeks to explore the art and science of executive coaching. You can find out more about this podcast at aretecoach.io.
This episode was produced on March 12, 2023
Copyright © 2023 by Arete Coach™ LLC. All rights reserved.
Click on a timestamp to play from that location
0:00.0 | This is the Arctic Coach podcast with Severin Sorcen and an episode that explores financial |
0:05.1 | contagion risk and the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank. This session was recorded on March 12, 2023. |
0:13.2 | You are listening to Severin Sorcen, executive coaching curator of the Arctic Coach podcast, |
0:18.5 | where we explore excellence in the art and science of executive coaching. |
0:23.5 | Well, it's been quite a weekend. The Wall Street Journal posted an article on Saturday, |
0:28.9 | March 11, 2023 that summed up succinctly the issues that led to the demise of Silicon Valley Bank |
0:35.8 | this week. From the Wall Street Journal quote, Silicon Valley Bank's failure boils down to a |
0:42.2 | simple misstep. It grew too fast using borrowed short-term money for depositors who could ask to |
0:49.0 | be repaid at any time and invested it in long-term assets that it was unable or unwilling to sell. |
0:56.6 | When interest rates rose quickly, the bonds it held at lower fixed rates added losses. These |
1:02.6 | losses ultimately forced it to try to raise fresh capital, spooking depositors who yanked their funds |
1:09.1 | in two days. On Friday, March 10, 2023, Silicon Valley Bank failed after a bank run, |
1:17.2 | causing the largest bank failure since 2008 financial crisis and the second largest failure in |
1:23.5 | US history. The collapse of the Silicon Valley Bank has had a significant impact on startups |
1:30.0 | with many unable to retrieve money from the bank. We will return to the topic of Silicon Valley Bank |
1:36.4 | and its collapse later in this program. Right now, I'd like to review an important topic in |
1:41.5 | economics called economic contagion. Economic contagion refers to the spread of financial instability |
1:48.6 | or crises for one market or country to another. In the context of banking, it can occur when the |
1:54.5 | failure of one bank or a group of banks triggers a chain reaction of defaults and bankruptcies |
2:00.4 | in the banking system leading to a broader financial crisis. From an important article from |
2:06.4 | Gracila L. Kaminsky, Carmen M. Reinhardt and Carlos A. Beggie, the unholy trinity of financial contagion, |
2:15.2 | we read the following powerful opening, quote, for reasons that are not always evident at the time, |
... |
Transcript will be available on the free plan in -741 days. Upgrade to see the full transcript now.
Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from Arete Coach Podcast, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.
Generated transcripts are the property of Arete Coach Podcast and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.
Copyright © Tapesearch 2025.