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  • The SVB banking mess complicates the Federal Reserve’s path forward on interest rates — there are concerns about higher rates putting stress on the financial system, but the latest Consumer Price Index shows that inflation is still too high. Jeffrey Cleveland of Payden & Rygel has more. The banking crisis has prompted questions around whether regulators failed to detect — or act upon — red flags in either of the failed banks, explains Wharton professor Peter Conti-Brown. And, last week’s jobs report showed that women are becoming increasingly involved in the labor force after a pandemic-era dip.

  • Regulators likely failed to curtail poor practices at Signature Bank (pictured) and Silicon Valley Bank, said Wharton professor Peter Conti-Brown.
    Ed Jones/AFP via Getty Images

    Regulators likely failed to catch and act upon red flags at both failed banks, argues Wharton professor Peter Conti-Brown.

  • The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, which insures bank deposits, said it will shoulder the load of covering deposits at the failed Silicon Valley and Signature banks.
    Getty Images

    The money’s coming from a fund run by the FDIC that derives most of its revenue from banks.

  • Since the government takeover of the failed Silicon Valley and Signature banks, questions have been swirling about where the money is coming from to ensure depositors’ money. We look at the agencies involved and how costs may eventually be passed on to consumers, despite officials’ assurances to the contrary. Amid the SVB crisis, there’s also been a reckoning about the rules and oversight that govern small and medium-sized financial institutions. And, schools in parts of Maine are seeing an unexpected drop in funding because of higher property values in surrounding communities. 

  • From the BBC World Service: With global markets still reeling from the failure of Silicon Valley bank, we hear from the CEO of HSBC who bought the UK arm for £1 on Monday. BBC Beijing correspondent Stephen McDonnell reports from China where the doors to foreign visitors will open from next week. Plus, is there hidden Nazi gold in a Dutch town? The BBC’s Anna Holligan has been to find out.

  • TechCrunch’s Natasha Mascarenhas says some of Silicon Valley Bank’s startup customers are wondering what to do next.

  • Fifteen years later, a strange sense of déjà vu.

  • Though Silicon Valley Bank had assets of $209 billion, some economists question whether its failure presented "systemic risk" to the banking system or the economy.
    Noah Berger/AFP via Getty Images

    The collapsed banks were granted a “systemic risk exception,” which means the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. can guarantee uninsured deposits.

  • Customers line up to retrieve funds from a Silicon Valley Bank in Santa Clara, California, on Monday. President Joe Biden partially blamed the rollback of Dodd-Frank banking regulations for SVB's failure.
    Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

    The rollback of Dodd-Frank reforms exempted many of the country’s largest banks from stricter regulations put in place after 2008.

  • The federal government announced it would ensure that depositors affected by Silicon Valley Bank's collapse would be made whole. "I'm really happy for them," said Laurie Stewart. "But here's the thing: we're gonna pay for it. Banks are going to pay for it."
    Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

    As the government moved to backstop depositors affected by the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank, surviving banks will end up footing the costs, says Laurie Stewart at Sound Community Bank in Seattle.

Banks in Turmoil