Its extremely easy to criticise Thiel without making weak arguments like this. Criticise his investment choices or his company or his political affiliations, there's actual substance there. Blaming someone for doing the stock market thing correctly is just dumb.
* Did it necessarily doom others to losses by timeliness and first-come-first-served? Yes
* Did he have equity of access with others? Hell no. he's head of the queue.
It's not "wrong" in a narrow sense but most people are on point #2, they dislike Thiel (as I do) and so "judge" him to political philosophy, not to legalism.
He's not markedly more wrong than other people in his situation. He may well be significantly smarter and asymmetry in the economics space, is held to be counter-productive overall. Of course, you're naieve or a fool or both if you don't exploit it.
Maybe you have a different interpretation of "wrong" ? And, I can't fault his logic: This is basic 'win' thinking. Why hang around? What's in it for him, long or short term to wait?
What would you have had him do? It doesn't seem like his other options would have been logical knowing the bank was insolvent. I guess silently take his money out and not encourage any one else, is that actually worse?
What ggm and others like him want to say (but don't because they know how stupid it sounds), is that Thiel should have told everyone what he had learned/deduced about SVB's stability ... and not taken his own money out.
It's what everyone who becomes aware of a liquidity crisis in a bank should want, because the alternative is what Jimmy Stewart faces in "it's a wonderful life" or George Darling in "Mary Poppins"
I sat through a social media shitstorm over a bank run here in Australia and listening to randoms phoning me with a "hot tip I'll thank them for" was insane. Read other pieces on HN to see other people's "I dodged a bullet" posts: no.. you didn't dodge a bullet you were part of the magazine of bullets which brought it on.
You're implying that actors should've stared down the barrel of a loaded gun, hoped that everyone else on the line would hold, and not flinch.
Is this HN? Is this real life? These actors might collude and self-prote t each other often, but they're not a national army, theyre not some unified body. I feel like people just canNOT accept that a bunch of their peers are vultures and that by bumping elbows with them, they're complicit. But that's exactly the truth.
Yes. As you say it arguably is actually worse to act this selfishly silently. Thiel didn't cause the losses at SVB, he is astute enough to understand how to be informed to the risks and rewards of acting regarding his money. If he speaks to that wisdom, he's being informative and helpful to his listeners.
I'm trying to be objective here, since my dislike of his political philosophy is pretty extreme.
Wearing the loss would be stupid. His ability to survive the losses isn't really material. If he had custody of other people's money and acted to preserve it, he acted wisely to their needs too. What he did I believe hastened the end for less wise people, with less ability to weather the risk and has downstream consequences which follow a run on a bank, in terms of impact on operating business. Stripe and other payment systems suspending clearing, payroll not happening is going to cause problems at large.
He's no more "wrong" than Pelosi or her husband or many other US senators and representatives are, trading against their heightened sense of awareness of the market. If Pelosi trades on inside information she may actually be worse than Thiel in this case (my belief is she has no prior knowledge which would exceed the insider-trading limits, and is technically not in breach of law even when I think what she does is totally reprehensible and inappropriate for an elected leader)
Withdrawing one's own money from a bank is not wrong in any sense, not legally or morally. Your attempt to conflate his actions with elected officials skating around insider-trading laws (even if not technically crossing them, as you presume) is nonsensical and unfair.
What he did was the right thing to do. He realized SVB was having significant issues receiving/sending funds and protected himself and the companies he's involved with by withdrawing all his capital from the bank. He also publicly informed others of the issues and recommended they do the same.
I'm not exactly sure what actions people think he should have taken. Thiel is not responsible for the poor risk management on the part of SVB.
Also the claim that he was "actively dooming hundreds of startups to failure" is inaccurate. It looks at this time like everyone who was in SVB will be made whole. Nobody is an asshole for withdrawing their money from the bank.
There are plenty of valid criticisms of Thiel. This is not one of them, and makes the claimant look like a fool.
It's a cheap shot that can be dismissed as just "pointing out facts you can clearly see", most importantly trying to capitalise on already aggravated on racial matters people who might stumble across this in good faith and get misdirected.
From what I have seen, they were not insolvent before the bank run. They were in trouble from a bad bet on interest rates, but were attempting to restructure their holdings to get liquidity.
Bank runs are a psychological construct, not an economic one. They are based on rumors, not facts. Deposit insurance is intended (and usually successful) to prevent runs by ensuring that depositors will be made whole even if the institution does become insolvent, because a run will destroy any banking institution.
The failure of SVB was caused by those who rushed to get their money out based on fear.
I find it really amusing that everyone seems to just find it normal, okay, chill, that our banking infra is based on semi-blind confidence and people not expressing concerns or warnings, or you know taking their own money out of the bank.
Hour by hour I am in horror at the standard of "normal" that people will defend because they can't see it for what it is or imagine an alternative. Capital capital jobs jobs! Hoorah! This is the way.
If the money Thiel moved was of interest to other partners, as well as himself, he just did his fiduciary duty, right? It is a real duty.
It sucks to see powerful people getting a better deal than regular people, but the unfairness in this situation was caused by bank (mis-) management, not Thiel.
SV pissed when Thiel's scummery affects them. So sad for them.
Funny enough, much as I detest the guy, I think the hate directed at him for this is pure cognitive dissonance and refusal to see the bigger picture+problem.
Should we feel bad when we sell a stock and it goes down?