Silicon Valley Bank chief sold $5.5m in stock two weeks before collapse
Silicon Valley Bank chief executive officer Greg Becker sold $US3.6 million ($5.5 million) of company stock under a trading plan less than two weeks before the firm disclosed extensive losses that led to its failure.
The sale of 12,451 shares on February 27 was the first time in more than a year that Becker had sold shares in parent company SVB Financial Group, according to regulatory filings. He filed the plan that allowed him to sell the shares on January 26.
Silicon Valley Bank CEO Greg Becker sold shares in the bank lats month. Credit:Bloomberg
On Friday, Silicon Valley Bank failed after a week of tumult fuelled by a letter the firm sent to shareholders that it would try to raise more than $US2 billion in capital after taking losses. The announcement sent shares in the company plunging, even as Becker urged clients to stay calm.
Neither Becker nor SVB immediately responded to questions about his share sale, and whether the CEO was aware of the bank’s plans for the capital raise attempt when he filed the trading plan. The sales were made through a revocable trust controlled by Becker, filings show.
Democratic Representative Ro Khanna, whose district includes the city where the bank has its headquarters, told The Washington Post that Becker should give the money back.
“There should be a clawback of any of that money,” Khanna said. “It should be going to the depositors.”
Prearranged plans
There’s nothing illegal about corporate trading plans like the one Becker used. The plans were set up by the Securities and Exchange Commission in 2000 to thwart the possibility of insider trading. The idea is to avoid malfeasance by limiting sales to predetermined dates on which an executive can sell shares, and the timing could merely have been coincidental.
However, critics say the prearranged share-sale plans, called 10b5-1 plans, have significant loopholes, including that they lack mandatory cooling-off periods.
“While Becker may not have anticipated the bank run on Jan. 26 when he adopted the plan, the capital raise is material,” said Dan Taylor, a professor at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School who studies corporate trading disclosures.
Police officers exit Silicon Valley Bank in Santa Clara on Friday.Credit:AP
“If they were in discussion for a capital raise at the time the plan was adopted, that is highly problematic.”
In December, the SEC finalised new rules that would mandate at least a 90-day cooling-off period for most executive trading plans, meaning that they can’t make trades on a new schedule for three months after they take hold.
Executives are required to start complying with those rules on April 1.
Meanwhile, a Fed spokesman confirmed that Becker is no longer a director of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco.
The change was effective on Friday, the same day SVB-owned Silicon Valley Bank failed and was taken over by state and federal regulators. He became a Class A director of the San Francisco Fed’s head office board in 2019 and his departure leaves a vacant seat on the nine-member board.
Bloomberg, AP
The Business Briefing newsletter delivers major stories, exclusive coverage and expert opinion. Sign up to get it every weekday morning.
Most Viewed in Business
From our partners
Source: Read Full Article