- The Securities and Exchange Commission and the Justice Department are investigating Silicon Valley Bank's failure, NBC News reported.
- Investigators are looking into stock sales that SVB executives conducted ahead of the tech-focused bank's collapse, people familiar with the matter told NBC.
- The investigations are separate and in preliminary phases.
The Securities and Exchange Commission and the Justice Department are investigating how Silicon Valley Bank became the second largest bank failure in U.S. history, NBC News reported Tuesday.
The probes, which are separate and in preliminary phases, include looking into stock sales that SVB executives conducted ahead of the tech-focused bank's collapse, according to people familiar with the matter.
The Northern District of California has the lead on the Justice Department's investigation, the people said.
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The demise of Silicon Valley Bank, as well as crypto-focused Signature Bank over the past few days, prompted extraordinary rescue action from regulators and caused a financial shock that rocked markets, especially shares of regional banks. In addition to backstopping the deposits at SVB and Signature Bank, federal regulators also announced an additional funding facility for troubled banks.
The Wall Street Journal first reported on the news Tuesday. That report cited people familiar with the matter who said the investigations were still at an early stage and may not lead to any charges.
Daniel Beck, CFO of SVB, sold 2,000 shares of SVB Financial on Feb. 27, the same day that CEO Gregory Becker exercised options on 12,451 shares and sold them, regulatory filings showed. The sales were done under prescheduled insider trading arrangements called 10b5-1 plans. The WSJ said Beck and Becker did not return calls for comment.
Money Report
CNBC reported Monday that regulators could make a second attempt to sell the failed SVB after the auction over the weekend led nowhere.