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Tag: First Citizens Bank

  • What is SVB like under Raleigh’s First Citizens Bank? We asked NC Triangle startups.

    What is SVB like under Raleigh’s First Citizens Bank? We asked NC Triangle startups.

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    First Citizens Bank headquarters in Raleigh, N.C. on Monday, March 27, 2023.

    First Citizens Bank headquarters in Raleigh, N.C. on Monday, March 27, 2023.

    kmckeown@newsobserver.com

    On March 27, Raleigh’s First Citizens Bank transformed its present and future by purchasing the remains of the failed Silicon Valley Bank. Overnight, it went from the 30th largest U.S. bank to the 16th, adding $56 billion in deposits and nearly doubling its loans.

    The move surprised many in the finance world. Silicon Valley Bank was the go-to bank for early-stage tech startups before a bank run sparked its collapse on March 10.

    “When you started one of these companies, you didn’t give another bank a second thought,” said Igor Jablokov, founder of the Raleigh AI management firm Pryon. “You just started working with SVB.”

    In reputation and portfolio, First Citizens was the opposite. It was a family-run bank founded more than 120 years ago in Johnston County. While First Citizens would eventually move north to the burgeoning technology hub of Raleigh, it never focused on the type of venture banking done by the Bay Area-based SVB.

    However, it did have a track record of buying distressed financial institutions. In that way, the acquisition made sense.

    “I was excited because they’re a local bank,” said Jud Bowman, a serial entrepreneur in Durham who had an SVB account and loan for his startup Sift Media.

    So, seven months later, how is Silicon Valley doing under First Citizens?

    Answers arrived last week when First Citizens released its latest earnings.

    In the five days following the sale, deposits in the SVB segment of First Citizens Bank fell $7 billion as clients moved money to larger banks that were perceived to be safer. By the end of April, deposits had fallen a total of $15.5 billion since First Citizens took over.

    Since May 1, however, the deposit exodus has largely ceased. The SVB division of First Citizens finished September with roughly the same deposit level it had six months prior — $40 billion.

    “From the data, it seems at least they’re not hemorrhaging (deposits),” said Qi Chen, an accounting professor at the Duke Fuqua School of Business.

    ‘They understand they have to convince us’

    First Citizens has put resources into reassuring startup founders that SVB is still a reliable banking option. It launched a nationwide “Yes, SVB” campaign and, despite laying off around 500 former SVB employees in May, First Citizens has retained several former SVB staffers in local markets.

    The SVB managing director in the Carolinas remains Chris Stoecker, who is based in Raleigh. Stoecker has been with SVB since 2010 and previously worked at Square 1 Bank in Durham.

    “I talk to Chris every few weeks,” Bowman said. “For SVB to survive and thrive under (First Citizens), they’ve got to hold on to that talent base.”

    Like founders nationwide, Bowman felt the chaos of SVB’s demise this spring. Silicon Valley was itself the 16th largest bank in the country, with a reputation for helping technology startups stretch their venture funding. But as interest rates rose, some grew anxious about the company’s significant holdings of long-term bonds. This ignited a bank run, which prompted the federal government to assume control.

    Bowman was unable to extricate Sift Media’s money before the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. froze SVB accounts.

    “Is this the end of the company?” he recalled thinking.

    A security guard looks out a door as customers line up at Silicon Valley Bank headquarters in Santa Clara, California, on March 13, 2023.
    A security guard looks out a door as customers line up at Silicon Valley Bank headquarters in Santa Clara, California, on March 13, 2023. Noah Berger/AFP TNS

    Under its business loan agreement, Sift Media was obligated to keep an account with SVB, he said. But Bowman is confident in SVB’s future regardless of this requirement.

    “They understand they have to convince us,” he said. “I think they’re back.”

    Bowman was further reassured a few weeks ago when he attended a dinner with First Citizens Bank President Peter Bristow, who married into the Holding family, which has led First Citizens since 1935. Bowman said he left the dinner feeling First Citizens would make a strong commitment to startups.

    While Sift Media only banks with SVB, others in the Triangle who had exclusively banked with SVB now diversify their deposits.

    “As a firm, we follow the same policies we suggested with our companies,” said Jason Caplain, general partner and cofounder of Bull City Venture Partners in Durham. “So we have a cash balance at SVB that’s now smaller in size and the rest we pushed off to another bank.”

    Jablokov said SVB under First Citizens has been more “liberal” in permitting his startup, which has an SVB loan, to store some of its deposits at other banks as well.

    “‘There’s no way any sort of (chief financial officer) in these startups is going to allow you to not have a backup (account),” he said. “So, we do have relationships with other banking providers now.”

    Like Bowman, Caplain and Jablokov described the transition of SVB to First Citizens as seamless.

    “For us, there’s been no change,” Caplain said. “Still the same account. Still the same software. Still the same people.”

    Others stick with the bigger banks

    Today, First Citizens is the 15th largest bank in the country with more than $200 billion in assets. Yet some Triangle entrepreneurs say they still prefer to keep funds with the handful of national banks more universally deemed to be “too big to fail.”

    For example, the largest U.S. commercial bank, JPMorgan, has $3.4 trillion in assets. Charlotte-based Bank of America is second with $2.45 trillion.

    “Since First Citizens purchased SVB, uncertainty has been largely diminished,” said Ben Scruggs, CEO of Altis Biosystems in Research Triangle Park. Still, he has decided to keep Altis’ primary accounts with bigger banks that he finds “understand small companies.”

    Compared to deposits, SVB loan levels have more consistently declined since the acquisition.

    A First Citizens Bank branch in downtown Raleigh.
    A First Citizens Bank branch in downtown Raleigh. Brian Gordon bgordon@newsobserver.com

    The bank added $68 billion in loans with the sale but had around $57 billion as of Sept. 30, a 17% drop. This decrease slowed over the summer, and in its Oct. 26 earnings presentation, First Citizens said that about half of its recent loan slide was due to winding down SVB’s global banking unit.

    Speaking to investors, First Citizens Bank CEO Frank Holding acknowledged that the current “private market investment landscape” continues to suppress fundraising activity, exits and deals.

    Higher interest rates have caused the entire sector to be more cautious, said Chen of Duke University.

    “The (loan) industry itself is in a quiet period,” he said. “Nobody wants loans, nobody’s getting loans. So, it’s not clear going forward whether those innovative small business startups, when they need money, will still come to SVB.”

    First Citizens flourishes on Wall Street

    First Citizens bought SVB’s deposits and loans in exchange for company stock worth up to $500 million. It’s a decision that appears to be paying off.

    Since the acquisition, the share price of First Citizens has soared. On the year, the bank’s stock is up 79%. In contrast, the Dow Jones U.S. Banks Index is down 16%.

    First Citizens beat analysts’ expectations last week, as the company ended September with around $146 billion in deposits. For comparison, the company had less than $88 billion in deposits the same time last year.

    Holding told investors the SVB purchase has given his bank access to new U.S. markets it was “already targeting.” Legacy SVB has a strong presence in Northern California, while First Citizens’ California branches were clustered in the southern part of the state.

    First Citizens seems to be hiring, too, at least locally. According to data provided to The News & Observer by the North Carolina Technology Association, First Citizens was the Triangle’s top hirer for tech jobs in September.

    “First Citizens has experienced significant growth over the past couple of years,” company spokesperson Frank Smith said in an email. “As a result, we continue to assess our tech talent requirements and positions to ensure we are meeting the needs of our growing enterprise.”

    Open Source

    Do you enjoy Triangle tech news? Subscribe to Open Source, The News & Observer’s weekly technology newsletter and look for it in your inbox every Friday morning. Sign up here.

    This story was originally published November 2, 2023, 7:00 AM.

    Related stories from Charlotte Observer

    Brian Gordon is the Technology & Innovation reporter for The News & Observer and The Herald-Sun. He writes about jobs, start-ups and all the big tech things transforming the Triangle. Brian previously worked as a senior statewide reporter for the USA Today Network and covered education for the Asheville Citizen-Times.

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  • Raleigh’s First Citizens Bank will buy Silicon Valley Bank

    Raleigh’s First Citizens Bank will buy Silicon Valley Bank

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    First Citizens Bank is photographed in Raleigh, N.C. on Monday, March 27, 2023.

    First Citizens Bank is photographed in Raleigh, N.C. on Monday, March 27, 2023.

    kmckeown@newsobserver.com

    Raleigh’s First Citizens Bank is buying most of Silicon Valley Bank, the tech-focused financial institution which collapsed earlier this month.

    First Citizens will acquire all deposits and loans of the former Silicon Valley Bank in exchange for company stock worth up to $500 million, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) announced Sunday. The FDIC had controlled Silicon Valley Bank since it failed following a bank run on March 10.

    In the agreement, all Silicon Valley depositors will automatically transfer to First Citizens, and on Monday, the 17 former Silicon Valley branches will open as First Citizens Bank locations.

    “First Citizens has a proud history of growing organically and through strategic acquisitions that build our core capabilities in a careful and deliberate manner,” First Citizens CEO Frank Holding Jr. said in a statement Monday. “This transaction leverages our solid foundation to add significant scale, geographic diversity, compelling digital capabilities and most importantly, meaningful solutions for customers throughout their lifecycle.”

    Holding added the deal will “accelerate” the company’s expansion goals in California and the Northeast.

    First Citizens and the FDIC entered a loss-share agreement which ensures both parties will share in the potential recovery and losses on loans, the government and bank announced.

    “We welcome the news, which comes at no cost to taxpayers,” White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said.

    “The banking system is safe,” Jean-Pierre added. “Americans can be confident, and we have seen deposits stabilize at regional banks throughout the country, and in some cases outflows have modestly reversed. What we have done these past 14 days has worked.”

    The FDIC had given bidders until Friday night to make offers for Silicon Valley Bank.

    First Citizens Bank is photographed in Raleigh, N.C. on Monday, March 27, 2023.
    First Citizens Bank is photographed in Raleigh, N.C. on Monday, March 27, 2023. Kaitlin McKeown kmckeown@newsobserver.com

    What is First Citizens Bank?

    According to a Federal Reserve database, First Citizens was the 30th largest bank in the country by consolidated assets at the end of last year. It operates 582 branches and offices nationwide, 60% of which were in North Carolina or South Carolina. It is the Carolinas’ fourth largest bank, behind Bank of America, Truist, and Wells Fargo, and employs more than 2,000 in the Triangle area, according to Wake County Economic Development.

    First Citizens was founded in Johnston County in 1898, and for most of the past century, it’s been helmed by three generations of the Holding family. The company’s headquarters are in the North Hills neighborhood of Raleigh.

    Silicon Valley isn’t the first major purchase First Citizens has made in recent years.

    In January 2022, its parent company First Citizens BancShares purchased New York-based CIT Group for approximately $2.2 billion. According to First Citizens spokesperson Angela English, First Citizens has bought more than 20 FDIC-backed banks since 2009.

    In its purchase of Silicon Valley, First Citizens will take on $110 billion in assets, $56 billion in deposits, and $72 billion in loans, the company said Monday.

    During an investor call Monday, Holding recognized his bank “is not well known for expertise in the digital innovation economy.” In the industry, First Citizens has been viewed as a more traditional bank, far from the profile of Silicon Valley Bank, which geared its services toward early-stage technology startups.

    But Holding pointed out “our home market in Raleigh” is a leader in innovation.

    “We are committed to continuing to help innovators, enterprises, and investors move bold ideas forward,” he said. “This acquisition positions First Citizens to support that growth both for Silicon Valley’s markets and right here in our own backyard in the Research Triangle Park by combining First Citizens’ traditional relationship banking, creativity and ability with the strengths, relationships, and expertise of legacy SVB.”

    As of midday Monday, First Citizens stock was trading up 50% from its previous closing.

    Washington correspondent Danielle Battaglia contributed to this report.

    ‘This story was produced with financial support from a coalition of partners led by Innovate Raleigh as part of an independent journalism fellowship program. The N&O maintains full editorial control of the work.

    Open Source

    Do you enjoy Triangle tech news? Subscribe to Open Source, The News & Observer’s weekly technology newsletter and look for it in your inbox every Friday morning. Sign up here.

    This story was originally published March 27, 2023, 7:11 AM.

    Related stories from Charlotte Observer

    Brian Gordon is the Innovate Raleigh reporter for The News & Observer and The Herald-Sun. He writes about jobs, start-ups and all the big tech things transforming the Triangle.

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