US Crypto Caution Adds a Hurdle to Silvergate’s Rescue Effort

Anyone working with US regulators to salvage Silvergate Capital Corp., the crypto-friendly bank, will have to reckon with a key variable — the wariness of those same officials about digital assets.

The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. can get involved when a bank is near the brink, which is where Silvergate said it stood last week when it raised questions about its stability. With that out in the open, Wall Street analysts including Wedbush Securities have been speculating that the bank won’t survive, and FDIC officials have been talking with management about ways to avert a collapse, according to people familiar with the matter.

If a bank fails, one typical remedy could involve the FDIC finding a healthy bank to take on the troubled firm’s deposits, so the agency doesn’t have to tap its insurance fund to pay off customers. Another possible option involves lining up crypto-industry investors to help Silvergate shore up its liquidity, one of the people said. The bank was still open and deciding how to move forward as of Tuesday evening.

The challenge for a crypto investor is that the FDIC, along with two other top regulators, has been publicly urging banks to beware of the sector. And after shutting down its main crypto platform last week, Silvergate doesn’t have much else to attract a traditional bank as a buyer.

Silvergate “has no real value beyond the charter at this point, as there’s no franchise or customer value once the crypto stuff is gone,” Todd Baker, a senior fellow at Columbia University’s Richman Center for Business, Law and Public Policy, said in an email. “It abandoned traditional banking years ago.”