The only way to make back the $100 they spent on a 1.25% 10 year $100 treasury was to wait 8 more years.
Those 8 years they'd either have to become slowly become insolvent by offering their depositors 3-4% savings accounts like every other bank, or become illiquid because what depositor would keep their money in an account earning 0.5% so that SVB can keep the lights on. They had to sell and book the loss eventually.
If it were only illquid, it would be far easier to find a buyer and it would have already been sold by now.
[1] https://dfpi.ca.gov/2023/03/10/california-financial-regulato...
So, only after the run did they become insolvent. The change from illiquid to insolvent happened quickly, but without those withdrawals, the illiquidity could have likely been managed to avoid an outright insolvency (probably through a sale).
If you’re going to take a loss by selling an asset prematurely, it is illiquid. Otherwise you’d have to say things like the houses people own are liquid because the person could sell it in a day if they were willing to do so for 80 cents on the dollar.
That is not the financial world’s definition of “liquid”
Things one can sell at fair value in a few mins are liquid, and things one has to sell slowly or take 80 cents on the dollar to get rid of it fast (like a house in your example) are illiquid. It's a function of buyers and process, not my accounting treatment or tax treatment or whatever other treatment might make me not like the idea of selling right now.
What's next? The FX markets aren't liquid because I don't feel like realizing a gain from a tax perspective?
>> That is not the financial world’s definition of “liquid”
Yeah, it is, to us in the financial world.
>Yeah, it is, to us in the financial world.
I get the feeling we're talking around each other, your response indicates that we (probably) agree, and I'll assume it was my own communication failure, so I won't otherwise remark on this snarky & somewhat inaccurate (in its implications) comment.
At a simple scale, If I own a $200k home outright and have $50k in credit card debt that I cant pay then I file for bankruptcy, negotiate with creditors to sell my home and pay the debts, and come out with $150k in assets with no liabilities. I was always solvent.
This happens daily in the business world’s bankruptcy courts. (Of course some of them are also insolvent)
My small scale example illustrated the concept, my large-scale citation of bankruptcy courts show a bit of how it plays out in real life & validates the analogy.