Bankrupt BlockFi has at least $227 million at collapsed Silicon Valley Bank

BlockFi, which has been in bankruptcy since shortly after the November FTX collapse, appears to have exposure to the collapsed Silicon Valley Bank. According to a court filing, approximately $227 million in BlockFi funds has been kept in one of several accounts the company maintained at Silicon Valley Bank. The account is a money market mutual fund, meaning it is not FDIC insured.

The US Trustee reportedly warned BlockFi counsel on March 6 that the company needed to "immediately take steps to safeguard these funds in compliance with" the depository agreement, because a MMMF was not in compliance. BlockFi responded that the account was FDIC insured (up to the FDIC's $250,000 limit), but the Trustee maintains that that is not accurate.

Silicon Valley Bank collapse causes crypto contagion concerns

Although it doesn't seem that it was exposure to the crypto industry that did in Silicon Valley Bank (unlike with fellow failed bank Silvergate), the crypto industry has been showing signs of concern that SVB's collapse may impact crypto businesses. In particular, there are fears around the fact that Circle, the company that backs the major USDC stablecoin, kept some of its cash reserves with SVB. Circle disclosed that around $3.3 billion, or around one-third of USDC's $9.88 billion in cash reserves backing USDC, was kept with Silicon Valley Bank.

SVB was also the preferred bank for various giants in the crypto VC world, including Andreessen Horowitz and Sequoia Capital. Pantera Capital also used SVB as a custodian.

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