More stories

  • in

    SEC and Justice Department are investigating SVB’s collapse, including insider stock sales

    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.

    People queue up outside the headquarters of Silicon Valley Bank to withdraw their funds on March 13, 2023 in Santa Clara, California. 
    Liu Guanguan | China News Service | Getty Images

    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.
    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.
    CNBC reported Monday that regulators could make a second attempt to sell the failed SVB after the auction over the weekend led nowhere.

    WATCH LIVEWATCH IN THE APP More

  • in

    SVB’s new CEO urges clients to ‘help us rebuild our deposit base’

    Tim Mayopoulos, who was appointed by regulators to run SVB, sent an email to clients on Tuesday telling them the bank is “open for business.”
    Mayopoulos urged clients who moved their deposits elsewhere to “please consider moving some of them back as part of a secure deposit diversification strategy.”
    SVB was seized by regulators on Friday after a run on the 40-year-old bank.

    A view of Silicon Valley Bank headquarters in Santa Clara, CA, after the federal government intervened upon the bankâs collapse, on March 13, 2023. 
    Nikolas Liepins | Anadolu Agency | Getty Images

    SVB’s new leader told clients in a Tuesday message that the seized bank was “open for business” and ready to receive and hold customer deposits, a call for venture capital firms and other tech customers to come back home.
    “If you, your portfolio companies, or your firm moved funds within the past week, please consider moving some of them back as part of a secure deposit diversification strategy,” wrote Tim Mayopoulos, who was appointed by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation as CEO of the bank, now called Silicon Valley Bridge Bank.

    related investing news

    In an email to clients that was also posted on SVB’s website, Mayopoulos told the bank’s client base that “depositors have full access to their money,” adding that both fresh inflows and existing deposits were fully protected by the FDIC.
    “The number one thing you can do to support the future of this institution is to help us rebuild our deposit base, both by leaving deposits with Silicon Valley Bridge Bank and transferring back deposits that left over the last several days,” Mayopoulos wrote.
    Over $40 billion in deposits exited SVB last week, as startups and venture funds fled the failing institution just after a mid-quarter report that showed it had sold $21 billion worth of securities at a loss. SVB’s failure was the second-largest ever for a U.S. bank, behind the 2008 collapse of Washington Mutual. Federal regulators intervened over the weekend, guaranteeing that depositors would not suffer losses as the contagion threated to spread to other banks.
    In the post, Mayopoulos didn’t specify a limit on FDIC protection, in line with federal regulators’ comments that the backstop would be structured in a “manner that fully protects all depositors.” The FDIC is only mandated to insure $250,000 worth of deposits per customer.
    WATCH: Regional bank stocks rebound

    WATCH LIVEWATCH IN THE APP More

  • in

    Tyson Foods to lay off 1,700 workers, close two chicken plants

    Tyson Foods will close two chicken plants in May as part of a plan to strengthen its poultry business.
    In its latest quarter, the meat giant said its chicken business underperformed expectations.
    Other food suppliers, including PepsiCo and Beyond Meat, have laid off workers in recent months to cut costs.

    A package of Tyson Foods Inc. chicken is arranged for a photograph in Tiskilwa, Illinois.
    Daniel Acker | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Tyson Foods will close two chicken plants in May, affecting nearly 1,700 employees.
    “While the decision was not easy, it reflects our broader strategy to strengthen our poultry business by optimizing operations and utilizing full available capacity at each plant,” Tyson said in a statement to CNBC.

    In its latest quarter, Tyson’s chicken business underperformed expectations as its operating income was halved compared with the year-ago period.
    The company’s plants in Van Buren, Arkansas, and Glen Allen, Virginia, will close May 12. Demand will be shifted to other Tyson facilities. The Wall Street Journal first reported the upcoming closures.
    Tyson said it is helping affected employees apply for open jobs and offering relocation assistance to other plants. The Glen Allen plant has 692 employees, while the Van Buren facility has 969 workers.
    The meat giant is the latest food supplier to lay off workers in an effort to cut costs.
    Beyond Meat and Impossible Foods, both of which make alternative meats, have cut more than a fifth of their workforces as demand wanes for their products and the companies look to conserve cash. Coca-Cola offered voluntary buyouts to North American workers, while PepsiCo cut jobs in its Frito-Lay and North American beverage units. Spice giant McCormick said it would offer buyouts and lay off workers as part of a plan to save $75 million.

    WATCH LIVEWATCH IN THE APP More

  • in

    Here’s the inflation breakdown for February — in one chart

    The consumer price index rose by 6% from a year earlier, according to the February inflation report from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.
    The annual inflation rate is slowly but steadily declining from its pandemic-era peak of more than 9%.
    Inflation began rising in early 2021 due to a supply-and-demand imbalance. Now, it’s largely fueled by strong demand for labor, economists said.
    The failures of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank raised fears of a so-called “hard landing.” That scenario, which isn’t assured, would reduce inflation more quickly but at the cost of a recession.

    A customer shops at a grocery store in Brooklyn on Feb. 14, 2023.
    Michael Nagle/Xinhua via Getty Images

    The annual inflation rate in February continued its gradual cooling trend, though it remained well above policymakers’ target.
    Inflation is a measure of how quickly prices are rising or falling in the U.S. economy.

    related investing news

    5 hours ago

    2 days ago

    The consumer price index, a key inflation barometer, rose by 6% in February relative to a year earlier, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics said Tuesday. The index accounts for price changes across a broad basket of consumer goods and services, in categories such as energy, food, housing and entertainment.  

    February’s reading was in line with economists’ projections. It follows a 6.4% annual gain in January and 6.5% in December and was the smallest 12-month increase since September 2021.
    “It’s still high, obviously,” Mark Zandi, chief economist of Moody’s Analytics, said of the annual inflation rate. “It’s slowly but steadily receding.”
    “There are some good reasons to be optimistic inflation will continue to fall back over the next year.”
    More from Personal Finance:What two bank failures mean for consumers and investorsHere’s what to know about FDIC-insured bank depositsThere’s a quicker, cheaper way to go to college, but few try it

    A positive but declining inflation rate doesn’t mean consumer prices are falling; it signals that they’re increasing more slowly.
    Inflation will likely be close to 3% by year’s end, Zandi said. However, that estimate assumes the U.S. avoids recession, which would rein in inflation more quickly but trigger negative side effects such as rising unemployment. Fear of this so-called “hard landing” scenario increased in recent days after failures in the banking sector, though regulators are trying to contain the fallout.

    Here’s what drove February inflation

    Housing prices jumped by 8.1% in the past year, according to the BLS — accounting for more than 60% of inflation after stripping out food and energy prices, which can be volatile.
    Other “notable increases” included motor vehicle insurance (up 14.5%), household furnishings and operations (up 6.1%), new vehicles (up 5.8%) and recreation (up 5%). Grocery prices are up 10.2%, and dining out is up 8.4%. Energy prices jumped 5.2%.
    Overall inflation has moderated from June’s pandemic-era peak of over 9% but remains higher than at any point since the 1980s.

    “The pervasiveness of inflation is an ongoing issue,” said Greg McBride, chief financial analyst at Bankrate.
    “This is not confined to one or two categories or limited to discretionary spending,” he added. “It’s broad-based across categories that are absolute necessities in the household budget.”
    But it appears new car prices will soften as China reopens and supply chains normalize, housing inflation is poised to slow, and wage growth is cooling in the labor market — all of which should translate to tamer inflation, Zandi said.

    Inflation a byproduct of supply-and-demand imbalance

    Consumer prices began rising rapidly in early 2021 as the U.S. economy started to reopen after the pandemic-related shutdown.
    The increase resulted from supply-and-demand dynamics, economists said.
    Americans who’d been confined to their homes for a year unable to spend on dining out, entertainment and vacations unleashed a flurry of pent-up demand, aided by savings that had been amassed from government relief.
    The rapid reopening snarled global supply chains, a dynamic exacerbated by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. In other words, supply couldn’t keep up with consumers’ willingness to spend.

    Inflation was initially confined to physical goods such as used cars and trucks. Goods inflation has retreated, but inflation has spread to the services sector largely due to businesses’ high demand for workers, economists said.
    That labor demand has put upward pressure on wages, feeding into higher services prices, said Paul Ashworth, chief North America economist at Capital Economics.
    “That appears to be the bigger [inflation] factor now,” Ashworth said.

    SVB failure spurred ‘hard landing’ fears

    It’s unclear how quickly inflation will retreat from here, economists said.
    The Federal Reserve aims for a long-term rate of around 2%. The central bank has been raising interest rates aggressively to tame inflation. Higher borrowing costs for consumers and businesses are expected to slow the economy, feeding into reduced demand for labor, slower wage growth and, ultimately, lower inflation.
    The Fed is trying to manufacture a so-called “soft landing,” whereby inflation slows but the economy doesn’t tip into a recession.
    Fears of a “hard landing” have risen in recent days, after Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank failed, triggering concerns that the contagion could spread to other financial institutions. SVB’s failure was the biggest since the 2008 financial crisis and the second-biggest in U.S. history.

    A lot of this is based on irrational fear.

    Paul Ashworth
    chief North America economist at Capital Economics

    The federal government stepped in on Sunday to alleviate concern. Regulators backstopped uninsured consumer deposits at the banks and offered short-term loans to other institutions affected by market instability.
    “A lot of this is based on irrational fear,” Ashworth said of customers rushing to take their money out of banks, known as bank runs.
    Inflation would come down more quickly in a “hard landing” scenario but at the expense of an economic downturn, he said. One example of how that could play out is if consumers continue to pull deposits from banks, constraining banks’ ability to lend money, thereby tightening credit for businesses, which might pull back on hiring, slashing confidence across the economy.
    It’s too early to tell whether the government’s efforts will bolster consumer confidence and stem the contagion or irrational behavior will persist, Ashworth said.

    WATCH LIVEWATCH IN THE APP More

  • in

    Stocks making the biggest moves midday: BuzzFeed, First Republic, Meta and more

    Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading Tuesday.

    MENLO PARK, CALIFORNIA – FEBRUARY 02: A security guard stands next to a sign at Meta headquarters on February 02, 2023 in Menlo Park, California. Facebook’s parent company Meta reported better-than-expected fourth quarter earnings with $32.17 billion in revenue. The company’s stock surged 23 percent for its best trading day in close to a decade. (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)
    Justin Sullivan | Getty Images News | Getty Images

    BuzzFeed — Share of the internet media company lost about 10% on a weak first-quarter revenue outlook. Buzzfeed expects first-quarter revenue of $61-$67 million, compared to expectations of $83.6 million, according to FactSet. The company beat sales expectations in its fourth quarter results.

    Meta Platforms — Meta shares gained 6% after CEO Mark Zuckerberg said Tuesday the social media company plans to cut 10,000 employees. The announcement comes just months after the tech giant announced layoffs off more than 11,000 employees in November.
    United Airlines — Shares dropped about 5 after United forecast a first-quarter loss, citing weaker demand than other months, and higher fuel costs. The airline expects an adjusted quarterly loss of between 60 cents and $1 per share, against a previous forecast of adjusted earnings of 50 cents to $1 per share.
    First Republic, PacWest Bancorp, Western Alliance Bancorp, Comerica — Regional banks rallied sharply Tuesday after being hit hard last Friday and Monday. Shares of San Francisco-based First Republic rose about 50%, while PacWest jumped more than 60% and Western Alliance Bancorp gained more than 40%. Comerica, KeyCorp and Zions Bancorp all climbed more than 10%. The moves came as several banks reported only modest depositor withdrawals and Ken Griffin’s Citadel hedge fund took a large stake in Western Alliance following the failure of Silicon Valley Bank.
    Charles Schwab Corp., Morgan Stanley, Wells Fargo — Shares of larger financials were in the green on Tuesday as the entire sector attempted to rebound from the past week’s losses. Charles Schwab jumped 9%, Morgan Stanley rose 3% and Wells Fargo gained almost 5%. Deutsche Bank earlier reiterated Charles Schwab as a buy, saying liquidity risks are overblown.
    Match Group — Match gained 6.1% following an upgrade to overweight from equal weight at Barclays, noting the dating platform owner has become a value stock in recent years.

    Cvent Holding Corp. — The software company rose more than 12% after Blackstone agreed to buy it for $8.50 a share in a deal valued at about $4.7 billion. The transaction is expected to close in the middle of this year.
    GitLab — The project planning software maker plunged 27% after issuing a softer-than-expected outlook. Gitlab sees revenue in the year ending Jan. 2024 of $529 million to $533 million, lower than a Refinitiv forecast of $586.4 million. The company reported a beat on the top and bottom lines in its fiscal fourth quarter just ended results.
    Uber, Lyft, DoorDash — Uber and delivery company Doordash rose more than 5% each, while Uber’s ride-sharing peer Lyft rose about 3% after a California appeals court overturned a previous ruling and said the companies can continue to treat drivers as independent contractors. 
    — CNBC’s Alex Harring, Jesse Pound, Tanaya Macheel, and Michelle Fox Theobald contributed reporting

    WATCH LIVEWATCH IN THE APP More

  • in

    Boeing sells 78 Dreamliner planes to Saudi airlines

    Demand for wide-body planes has picked up in recent months.
    Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman announced the launch of a new airline, Riyadh Air, over the weekend.

    An employee works on the tail of a Boeing Co. Dreamliner 787 plane on the production line at the company’s final assembly facility in North Charleston, South Carolina.
    Travis Dove | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Boeing said Tuesday that it has reached a deal to sell 78 of its 787 Dreamliner planes to two Saudi Arabian airlines, the latest large order for the wide-body jets in the past few months.
    The jetliners will go to Saudi Arabian Airlines, or Saudia, and a new airline, called Riyadh Air, which Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman announced over the weekend. Saudia ordered 39 of the planes, with options for 10 more, and Riyadh Air will get 39, with options for 33 more.

    The sale shows a pickup in demand for wide-body aircraft, planes that are used for long-distance flights and fetch a higher price than the more-common narrow-body jets.
    Riyadh Air is owned by the country’s sovereign wealth fund and will be helmed by Tony Douglas as CEO, a longtime industry veteran and former CEO of Etihad Airways.
    In December, United Airlines agreed to buy at least 100 Dreamliners from Boeing and last month, Air India placed an order for 460 Boeing and Airbus planes.
    This is breaking news. Check back for updates.

    WATCH LIVEWATCH IN THE APP More

  • in

    Amazon gives a first look at the satellite internet antennas for its Project Kuiper network

    Amazon revealed a trio of satellite antennas, as the company prepares to take on SpaceX’s Starlink with its own Project Kuiper internet network.
    The tech giant will offer a standard, ultra-compact and pro versions of its antennas, with speeds ranging from about 100 megabits per second to as much as 1 gigabit per second.
    Amazon said the “standard” version is expected to cost less than $400 each to produce.

    The company’s “standard” customer terminal, the middle of the trio of Project Kuiper satellite antennas at under 11 inches square and weighing under five pounds.

    WASHINGTON — Amazon revealed a trio of satellite antennas on Tuesday, as the company prepares to take on SpaceX’s Starlink with its own Project Kuiper internet network.
    The tech giant said the “standard” version of the satellite antenna, also known as a customer terminal, is expected to cost Amazon less than $400 each to produce.

    “Every technology and business decision we’ve had has centered on what will deliver the best experience for different customers around the world, and our range of customer terminals reflect those choices,” Rajeev Badyal, Amazon vice president of technology for Project Kuiper, said in a statement.
    Project Kuiper is Amazon’s plan to build a network of 3,236 satellites in low Earth orbit, to provide high-speed internet to anywhere in the world. The Federal Communications Commission in 2020 authorized Amazon’s system, in which the company has said it will “invest more than $10 billion” to build.

    Sign up here to receive weekly editions of CNBC’s Investing in Space newsletter.

    The “standard” design measures under 11 inches square and 1 inch thick, and weighs under 5 pounds. Amazon says the device will deliver speeds to customers of “up to 400 megabits per second (Mbps).”

    The “ultra-compact” version of the Project Kuiper

    An “ultra-compact” model, which Amazon says is its smallest and most affordable, is a 7-inch square design that weighs about 1 pound and will offer speeds up to 100 Mbps. In additional to residential customers, Amazon plans to offer the antenna to government and enterprise customers for services like “ground mobility and internet of things.”
    Its largest “pro” model, at 19 inches by 30 inches, represents a high-bandwidth version for non-residential customers. Amazon says this antenna will be able to “deliver speeds up to 1 gigabit per second (Gbps)” via space.

    The company’s “Pro” customer terminal, the largest of the trio of Project Kuiper satellite antennas at 19 inches by 30 inches.

    Amazon has yet to say what it expects the monthly service cost for Project Kuiper customers will be.
    Last year, Amazon announced the biggest corporate rocket deal in the industry’s history, and has booked up to 92 launches from three different companies to deploy the satellites fast enough to meet regulatory requirements.
    On Tuesday, Amazon said it expects to begin mass-producing commercial satellites by the end of this year, with launches of production satellites beginning in the first half of 2024 and service slated to begin by the end of 2024.

    The company’s prototype Project Kuiper satellites shipping for launch.

    The company’s first two prototype satellites are scheduled to launch on the debut mission of United Launch Alliance’s Vulcan rocket, set for May.

    WATCH LIVEWATCH IN THE APP More

  • in

    First Republic shares jump 50% as regional banks try to rebound from Monday’s sell-off

    First Republic rose sharply after falling more than 60% on Monday.
    PacWest, KeyCorp and Charles Schwab were also moving higher.
    In addition the backstopping the deposits at SVB and Signature Bank, which was closed on Sunday, federal regulators also announced efforts on Sunday to stabilize the wider banking system.

    A First Republic Bank branch in New York, US, on Friday, March 10, 2023.
    Jeenah Moon | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Shares of First Republic were up sharply in early Tuesday trading as concern over the state of the regional bank appeared to ease after a day of heavy selling.
    The stock traded 52% higher in the premarket and was one of the best-performing names in the SPDR S&P Regional Banking ETF (KRE) — which was up 8%. Shares of other regional banks also surged before the bell. PacWest jumped 44%, KeyCorp gained 16%, and Zions Bancorp advanced 21%.

    related investing news

    Charles Schwab was also rebounding, gaining more than 13% in premarket trading after dropping nearly 12% on Monday.
    Those moves come after regional banks fell sharply on Monday, even after U.S. regulators took extraordinary measures to backstop all depositors in the now-failed Silicon Valley Bank. The KRE suffered its biggest one-day loss since March 2020, losing 12.3%.
    First Republic led the way lower, losing 61.8%. Executive Chairman Jim Herbert told CNBC’s Jim Cramer that the bank was not seeing big outflows and was operating as usual. The bank also announced Sunday it received additional liquidity from JPMorgan and the Federal Reserve.
    In addition the backstopping the deposits at SVB and Signature Bank, which was closed on Sunday, federal regulators also announced efforts on Sunday to stabilize the wider banking system. One of those is the Fed’s Bank Term Funding Program, which will allow banks to exchange certain high-quality assets for cash without booking mark-to-market losses.
    And while the declines for regional bank stocks on Monday showed that many investors were not convinced the regulators’ moves would be enough to stop more bank runs, there does not appear to have been widespread withdrawals from banks in recent days, according to Raymond James analyst Daniel Tamayo.

    “Outflows did not accelerate during the last few days and, in fact, some banks have seen net inflows given movement in deposits from SVB and Signature Bank,” Tamayo said in a note to clients.
    Correction: The Fed on Sunday announced the Bank Term Funding Program. An earlier version misstated the name of the program.

    WATCH LIVEWATCH IN THE APP More