It Started With A Tweet

Share this post

Moral hazard for thee but not for me

startedwithatweet.substack.com

Moral hazard for thee but not for me

Why are people mad at me? An explainer for VCs.

Aram Zucker-Scharff
Mar 13
4
Share this post

Moral hazard for thee but not for me

startedwithatweet.substack.com

The tech startup bros are up on Twitter right now mockingly talking about how suddenly everyone is an expert in finance when it's time to hate on the tech world. I wouldn't go too far out on that branch friends, some of these very defensive VCs were supposed to be experts in finance and apparently couldn't figure out what was going on. But also... that is missing the point.

Twitter avatar for @uspsveteran
pendejoe @uspsveteran
weird how it’s ok to bail some people out but not others
Image
Image
10:31 PM ∙ Mar 10, 2023
66,094Likes13,761Retweets

The issues with Silicon Valley Bank that have derived from it's involvement with startup culture are clearly fairly unique to the particulars of how that bank is involved deeply in that culture. Matt Levine's piece on SVB's double exposure is an excellent dive into this. That isn't the reason that the tech community is suddenly under critique nor is it the reason a whole bunch of people on Twitter are talking about why venture capital and their startups shouldn't be bailed out.

It Started With A Tweet is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

Twitter avatar for @JuddLegum
Judd Legum @JuddLegum
Venture capitalists should not be bailed out by taxpayers
11:31 PM ∙ Mar 10, 2023
3,530Likes530Retweets

No, the problem is the hypocrisy. Of course no one wants to see the line employees of these companies in trouble. Not to mention, SVB isn't just a bank for startup cash, it has regular employees, standard bank users, housing, and businesses of all types. Generally, most critics don't want to see these depositors underwater.

On the other hand we’ve spent years watching Palo Alto types, VCs and the residents of Silicon Valley constantly arguing against exactly the regulation that might have helped prevent this problem to begin with.

Twitter avatar for @MaxKennerly
Max Kennerly @MaxKennerly
.@nytimes, if you're quoting a VC saying Silicon Valley Bank was a “systemically important financial institution,” you should note that SVB lobbied to make sure it was not considered one, and nobody in the VC world said otherwise. nytimes.com/2023/03/10/tec… theintercept.com/2023/03/11/sil…
Image
Image
12:48 PM ∙ Mar 12, 2023
1,955Likes485Retweets
Twitter avatar for @moorehn
Heidi N. Moore @moorehn
How it started/how it's going (via @ThomasAFink)
Image
Image
10:05 PM ∙ Mar 10, 2023
630Likes183Retweets

Surely you can see how those outside the startup bubble might perceive this sudden turnaround in economic philosophy? When this crew of capitalist ghouls are begging for bailouts it seems a clear statement that their previous political positions weren't really based in any sort of philosophical or economic theory, but instead in a firm belief that there should be two Americas:

In SV's first America there are the home owners, the student loan takers, and the average man on the street. Apparently these people should not benefit from regulation, protection, or the funds of the US government. This first America should, in the view of the Startup Elites, lose money and garner no protections.

Then there's Silicon Valley's other America. In this other America they don't need to pay taxes or face regulations. They get to extract more money up and up into the already wealthy pockets of VCs while making it harder and harder for everyone else to make a living.

Twitter avatar for @ddayen
David Dayen @ddayen
What @DavidSacks and these other hype men for special treatment don't get is that the country solved the problem of uninsured deposits for small business, unless you happened to be a Silicon Valley Bank customer. They disrupted banking as well as they disrupted everything else.
2:34 PM ∙ Mar 12, 2023
3,546Likes757Retweets

The VCs are flipping their position on government bailouts after spending years arguing that they shouldn't be constrained by any regulations or rules, financial or otherwise. People, both with and without a historical understanding of the marketplace, are understandably upset when they perceive a clear and certian statement that for all the talk of “wealth generation” and the moral burden of taking loans and running a buisness that VCs have done over the years these same self-identified gurus clearly feel no particular ethical requirements themselves. Apparently the moral hazard of the market is for us lesser beings, not the startups and their funders.

Twitter avatar for @TheStalwart
Joe Weisenthal @TheStalwart
A dimension to this story that we can’t forget. Many of the leading folks in the industry that now wants Powell to step up and protect them spent the last 5 years telling lies and breeding cynicism about the Fed as pretext to sell cryptocurrencies to retail bagholders.
3:55 PM ∙ Mar 12, 2023
4,496Likes823Retweets
Twitter avatar for @LeverNews
The Lever @LeverNews
Here are all the Republican and Democratic U.S. Senators who voted to deregulate Silicon Valley Bank 👇
Image
Twitter avatar for @davidsirota
David Sirota @davidsirota
Quick reminder: 50 Republican senators and 17 Democratic senators voted to ignore warnings and weaken risk regulations for Silicon Valley Bank. Donald Trump signed the bill into law. And now the bank is the 2nd biggest bank collapse in American history. https://t.co/a8XEifQidA
4:25 PM ∙ Mar 11, 2023
1,910Likes653Retweets

Those folks in the tech world who have any emotional intelligence (perhaps this is a narrow minority) surely can stop faking-it-to-make-it long enough to see where the sudden backlash is coming from. The behavior of their loudest voices is not earning them any sympathy.

Twitter avatar for @SilvermanJacob
Jacob Silverman @SilvermanJacob
It's basically a threat: promise a full bailout now -- today -- or the disaster might spread. But it doesn't seem based on facts or evidence, just protecting the bags of billionaires.
9:13 PM ∙ Mar 11, 2023
109Likes14Retweets
Twitter avatar for @moorehn
Heidi N. Moore @moorehn
Where we are now: Influential investors are threatening a wider crisis just to get paid out at SVB. The equivalent of "nice banking system there, would be a shame for anything to happen to it." https://t.co/Q4Gjpgd7y5
Twitter avatar for @BillAckman
Bill Ackman @BillAckman
From a source I trust: @SVB_Financial depositors will get ~50% on Mon/Tues and the balance based on realized value over the next 3-6 months. If this proves true, I expect there will be bank runs beginning Monday am at a large number of non-SIB banks. No company will take even a… https://t.co/2BoqtCDKJt
9:24 PM ∙ Mar 11, 2023
90Likes24Retweets

This is apparently quite a surprise to the tech world. However, it isn't a surprise to me. There are the busses that transport SF employees to tech campuses that must reroute against angry opposition. Don't forget the loud "disruption" startups that meet with immediate anger and refuse to back down. I shouldn't even have to mention the crypto startups that have crashed and burned with millions in normal Americans' money on the promise of startup culture delivering big profits to the normal person.

Twitter avatar for @faineg
Faine Greenwood @faineg
watching tech guys realize for the very first time that MANY peasants think they’re arrogant assholes who deserve what they get has been truly fascinating (enjoyable) https://t.co/YlztUNubK5
Twitter avatar for @Austin_Federa
Austin Federa @Austin_Federa
Watching people delight in the collapse of a bank that’s been vital to the greatest wealth generation engine this country has had for the last 2 decades is really disheartening to see. I think this is a Twitter problem.I’m gonna be spending less time here. https://t.co/HrU6X2LAsl
6:17 AM ∙ Mar 12, 2023
286Likes43Retweets

America has been in an open class crisis that started with Occupy Wall Street and basically hasn't stopped. It has been hard to see at times over the last decade-plus because this class conflict has been successfully disrupted by the Right and basically split into two sides: the type of Q-anon, Jan 6., internet-weirdos who backed Trump to get one over on "the elites" and identify as the alt-right; and the rising labor and DSA movement that sits on the left. But both of these movements--when you talk to the average citizens on the ground--are about class conflict.

The future of this conflict is exactly this type of discussion: who gets regulated, who doesn't, and who is clearly willing to throw their strongly argued economic decisions out the window when their own wallet, or the wallet of their buddies, might be threatened.

Twitter avatar for @moorehn
Heidi N. Moore @moorehn
Asking the government for a national bailout because the Founder's Fund decided to create a panic is...not it. At the very least there should be more direct blame laid at Thiel's feet for literally destroying a huge swath of the industry based on absolutely nothing.
4:04 PM ∙ Mar 11, 2023
63Likes7Retweets

It's easy to look at the fall of Silicon Valley Bank and spin out theories about the future of the tech world, startup culture, Northern California, etc...

It's also easy to say “but we created wealth” as so many startup culture “geniuses” have apparently fallen back upon to defend themselves.

It's a lot harder to adjudicate just how much startup culture is responsible for the uneven flow of that wealth. The rest of us are out here seeing rents go up, grocery prices go up, the price of living go up, and we're not getting bailed out. Instead, housing is purchased by rich people to rent on AirBnB. Getting around has been hijacked and priced up by Uber while it argues against any regulation or public transport. Groceries with reasonable prices are being pushed out by 15-minute delivery hubs whose lack of profitability is held off by VC funding. Living outside of Northern California, it sure seems like startups have been getting their bailouts continually for years. It can feel like karmic balance for the tech world to take its turn on the banking crisis-based rack. Maybe it is, maybe it isn't.

One thing is for sure, no one is going to forget just whose libertarian politics suddenly went on pause to protect their own wallets. Perhaps Startup Culture should stop being so defensive and listen for once. Maybe they could use this as an opportunity to be a little humble, to realize that their tactics and politics might not hold up quite so well to the real world outside of their now-popped bubble.

Twitter avatar for @moorehn
Heidi N. Moore @moorehn
A really good way to protect deposits is not to provide limitless insurance to right-wing billionaires. It's to insulate deposits from a bank's speculative activities like investing in MBS That was the point of the Glass-Steagall Act of 1933, which banks forced the repeal of.
Image
5:16 PM ∙ Mar 12, 2023
181Likes37Retweets

Perhaps they could use this time to reconsider how harmful they've been--how bad their: economic philosophy; austerity politics; lobbying; badly thought-out and unprofitable startups--can be.

Twitter avatar for @JordanUhl
jordan @JordanUhl
Whoops
Free markets > free stuff
YOU SHOULD BE ABSOLUTELY TERRIFIED RIGHT NOW  — THAT IS THE PROPER REACTION TO A BANK RUN & CONTAGION 

@POTUS & @SecYellen MUST GET ON TV TOMORROW AND GUARANTEE ALL DEPOSITS UP TO $10M OR THIS WILL SPIRAL INTO CHAOS
5:18 PM ∙ Mar 12, 2023
5,477Likes483Retweets
Twitter avatar for @popespeed
austin @popespeed
you're laughing...charter schools and the wine industry are in trouble and you're laughing...
Image
4:02 PM ∙ Mar 12, 2023
12,450Likes1,072Retweets
Twitter avatar for @wideofthepost
austerity is theft @wideofthepost
Image
Twitter avatar for @MittRomney
Mitt Romney @MittRomney
Silicon Valley Bank’s shareholders and executives lose it all, as they should. Depositors in good faith, however, should recover and have access to their deposits in order to meet their payrolls, pay their suppliers, and to prevent contagion.
3:34 AM ∙ Mar 12, 2023
4,790Likes774Retweets
Twitter avatar for @moorehn
Heidi N. Moore @moorehn
There has been a lot of attention to this thread so let me just say: What happened to SVB and happens now has nothing to do with "journalists, legislators and pundits" did. It was the result of hubris, and self-inflicted destruction, by VCs who are rich, white and arrogant.
Twitter avatar for @lcmichaelides
Lindsey Michaelides @lcmichaelides
Demand more from our journalists, legislators, and pundits. Share my story and the story of other founders and early stage builders. The odds have always been stacked against us, we’re used to it. But this time, we could really use your support. (23/23)
4:03 PM ∙ Mar 12, 2023
416Likes101Retweets
Twitter avatar for @PatBlanchfield
inverted vibe curve: burgertown must be defended @PatBlanchfield
starting to think a lot of VC guys want their risk without risk and also have some interesting attitudes about how behavior happens, how it should or shouldn't be incentivized, what should be celebrated or ensured or preserved and what shouldn't, etc etc etc
Image
Image
Image
Image
Twitter avatar for @DavidSacks
David Sacks @DavidSacks
I’m not asking for a bailout. I’m asking for banking regulators to ensure the integrity of the system. Either deposits in the US are safe or they’re not. If not, look out below. We have a very big problem on our hands. https://t.co/57437vv7gu
2:34 PM ∙ Mar 12, 2023
968Likes164Retweets
Twitter avatar for @oneunderscore__
Ben Collins @oneunderscore__
I'm telling you, they're actually running with the "woke banks" thing. They're already using scary placeholder acronyms ESG and DEI, which to them mean "diversity." It serves to obfuscate the reality: there was a panicky bank run, frontrun by some of the GOP's biggest donors.
Twitter avatar for @atrupar
Aaron Rupar @atrupar
"They were one of the most woke banks" -- James Comer on SVB Bank https://t.co/nGw6GvZTRs
4:34 PM ∙ Mar 12, 2023
10,128Likes2,584Retweets

It sure would be nice to see these VCs express the same level of concern for the rest of America’s citizens as they have for themselves and their drinking buddies. It would be a great time for the tech-wealthy to step back and realize they are looking down on most of America and offering cake via drone.

But I sort of fucking doubt they’ll think to apply their concerns to the rest of us. After all, when you live in the America of VCs and the ultra-rich, there are never any consequences.

Additional sources, reference, and reading.

It Started With A Tweet is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

///

This post represents my **personal** opinion and does not reflect the position of my current, past, or future employers, this platform, or anyone other than me singularly.

Share this post

Moral hazard for thee but not for me

startedwithatweet.substack.com
Comments
TopNewCommunity

No posts

Ready for more?

© 2023 Aram Zucker-Scharff
Privacy ∙ Terms ∙ Collection notice
Start WritingGet the app
Substack is the home for great writing