Customers of Silicon Valley Bank’s Cayman Islands branch who counted on using their deposits to repay credit lines are in a bind after the FDIC seized the funds.
When SVB failed earlier this year, the FDIC stepped in to protect all of the California bank’s U.S. deposits and arranged a sale of the lender’s U.S. customer accounts, branches and loans to First Citizens Bancshares.
Left out of that deal was SVB’s branch in the Cayman Islands, which had deposits from the bank’s clients in China, Singapore and other parts of Asia, including venture-capital and private-equity firms with funds that domiciled in the British overseas territory. Those investment firms were stunned in late March when they found out their deposits weren’t protected, and the FDIC—acting as SVB’s receiver—had drained their bank accounts, The Wall Street Journal reported previously.
Businesses that moved to the Caymans (presumably to avoid paying taxes) should not expect the be bailed out by the FDIC
Businesses that moved to the Caymans (presumably to avoid paying taxes) should not expect the be bailed out by the FDIC
If you ask me none of them should have been bailed out above the set cap of $250,000.