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Tran Hung Dao's avatar

Why do startups use SVB? This is according to a friend whose startup has their money at SVB and are currently extremely worried:

Their VCs tell them to. Don't forget that most founders have no idea what they are doing when it comes to this. Have you ever had someone wire you $20 million? The whole point of VCs is to help with this kind of thing. Every single Marc Andreessen startup uses it, for instance.

Better rates and packages than other banks would offer a revenue less business account. I've heard stories about how founders can't even get a credit card from other banks.

They offer incentives like 1 year of free AWS credit. Startup packages on SFDC. Stuff like that.

My understanding is that most startups keep some operational cash at a bigger bank like Chase, to handle international payments and payroll. But keep the bulk of their funding at SVB. So they're not necessarily worried about liquidity on Monday but more like what happens in two or three weeks.

In retrospect it is obviously dumb to keep way too much money above the FDIC limit at a single bank. (Though, having been a startup founder, I'm not sure I'd be super happy to have to also take on the burden of managing a T-bill portfolio when I'm also trying to hire, market, find product fit, blah, blah, blah.) But I blame the VCs who are supposed to be smart for giving bad advice to founders who don't know any better.

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Elixir's avatar

The true sign of intelligence is being able to explain complex topics in the simplest way possible. Great post 🙌

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