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Business Banking & Insurance

Elon Musk shows 'interest' in buying collapsed Silicon Valley Bank

The billionaire was responding to a tweet by Razer CEO Min-Liang Tan



A sign hangs at Silicon Valley Bank’s headquarters in Santa Clara, California.
Image Credit: AFP

San Francisco: Twitter boss Elon Musk on Saturday said that he is open to the idea of buying the collapsed Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) and turning it into a digital bank.

Min-Liang Tan, co-founder and CEO of Razer (a consumer electronic company), tweeted: "I think Twitter should buy SVB and become a digital bank".

To which Musk replied: "I'm open to the idea".

US regulators on Friday shut down Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) and took control of its customer deposits in the largest failure of an American bank since 2008.

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Read more about the SVB collapse

The moves came as the firm, a key tech lender, was scrambling to raise money to plug a loss from the sale of assets affected by higher interest rates, BBC reported.

SVB faced "inadequate liquidity and insolvency", banking regulators in California, where the firm has its headquarters.

The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), which typically protects deposits up to $2,50,000, said it had taken charge of the roughly $175 billion in deposits held at the bank, the 16th largest in the US.

Silicon Valley Bank was the US's 16th largest bank, with a total of 17 branches in California and Massachusetts.

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