Tuesday, March 14, 2023


Signature Bank seized to send US banks a warning on cryptocurrency business, director says

Geoff Mulvihill
 Mar 14 2023

A regulatory takeover of a New York-based bank was intended to send a message to US banks to stay away from the cryptocurrency business, a former member of Congress who was on the bank’s board says.

Former US Representative Barney Frank said that he believes the state officials behind the action were trying to make an example of Signature Bank.

“This was just a way to tell people, ‘We don’t want you dealing with crypto,’” Frank told The Associated Press in a telephone interview.

Frank, a Democrat who served in Congress from 1981 until 2013, co-authored the Dodd-Frank act that boosted US government oversight of banks following the 2008 financial crisis.

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He was a director at Signature Bank until the New York Division of Financial Services took it over Sunday and gave control of it to the FDIC, the federal agency that insures bank deposits, until the bank can be sold.

Signature's takeover came two days after regulators seized California-based Silicon Valley Bank. Both followed a rush of withdrawals from the banks, which catered to technology businesses.

New York Governor Kathy Hochul described the takeover as a way to avert a bigger crisis that could have affected more banks.


SETH WENIG/AP

US President Joe Biden is telling Americans that the nation's financial systems are sound.

“Our view was to make sure that the entire banking community here in New York was stable, that we can project calm,” Hochul said in a news conference Monday.

Signature, which was founded more than two decades ago, has about 40 offices across the US and says it focuses on banking for privately owned businesses, their owners and senior managers.

The bank said it was the first FDIC-insured bank to launch a blockchain-based digital payments platform.

As worries mounted about Silicon Valley Bank last week, Signature put out a statement seeking to reassure clients and investors that it was stable.

The statement included a reminder that despite its efforts to cater to cryptocurrency holders, it “does not invest in, does not trade, does not hold, does not custody and does not lend against or make loans collateralised by digital assets.”


YUKI IWAMURA/AP
New York Governor Kathy Hochul addresses the media during a press conference in response to the Signature Bank's closure in New York.

But by Friday, there were more withdrawals, which Frank said were “based solely on the contagion from SVB.”

He said the situation had stabilised by the time Sunday that New York regulators took it over.

The bank had more than US$110 billion in assets, making it the third-largest banking failure in US history.

Unlike Frank, Hochul did not point to cryptocurrency as a factor in the bank's shuttering over the weekend. She said withdrawals were continuing, making the action necessary.

And the state regulator went even further, saying Signature wasn't a crypto bank.

“This is not about a particular sector in the case of Signature Bank, but we moved quickly to make sure depositors were protected,” said New York Financial Services Superintendent Adrienne Harris.

The bank's top executives were ousted and it reopened Monday under operational control of the FDIC as Signature Bridge Bank.

Also Monday, the FDIC announced that those with deposits in both banks would have full access to them – even the amounts that exceed the regular US$250,000 insurance limit.


BOBBY CAINA CALVAN/AP
Regulators announced that the New York-based bank had failed and was being seized.

Frank said that if the FDIC had agreed to insure the entire deposits on Friday rather than waiting until Monday, Signature would not have been taken over.

He said the insurance limit for businesses should also be raised permanently by Congress to an amount high enough to cover a few months' worth of payroll for most firms.

Frank said the former bank operators have no recourse.

But he said he expects some vindication when the bank is sold eventually.

“I believe they’re going to get a very good price,” Frank said, “proof that it was not a bank problem.”

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