Book contents
- Silicon Valley Bank
- Silicon Valley Bank
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- 1 The Bank for the Innovation Economy
- 2 The Origin of the Idea
- 3 Bank Atrophy and Outliers
- 4 The Stanford Professor and Two Bankers
- 5 Be Different from the Beginning
- 6 Against All Odds
- 7 Convincing the Banking Regulators
- 8 SVB Tech Lending and the Birth of Venture Debts
- 9 Leveraging the VC Relationships for Expansion
- 10 Into the Premature Future and Banks’ Almost Embrace of ESG
- 11 SVB’s Sudden Death and Lessons Learned from Banking Innovators
8 - SVB Tech Lending and the Birth of Venture Debts
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 February 2024
- Silicon Valley Bank
- Silicon Valley Bank
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- 1 The Bank for the Innovation Economy
- 2 The Origin of the Idea
- 3 Bank Atrophy and Outliers
- 4 The Stanford Professor and Two Bankers
- 5 Be Different from the Beginning
- 6 Against All Odds
- 7 Convincing the Banking Regulators
- 8 SVB Tech Lending and the Birth of Venture Debts
- 9 Leveraging the VC Relationships for Expansion
- 10 Into the Premature Future and Banks’ Almost Embrace of ESG
- 11 SVB’s Sudden Death and Lessons Learned from Banking Innovators
Summary
Roger Smith and his bankers from Wells Fargo’s Special Industries Group brought their experience in tech lending to Silicon Valley Bank (SVB). According to Smith, Bank of America (BOA) was the first bank to take warrants for the right to purchase shares as part of the loan cost that they charged tech companies who were backed by Venture Capitalists (VCs) in Silicon Valley’s early days. After both Bank of America and Wells Fargo exited tech lending, SVB became the sought-after bank for lending to tech companies. SVB perfected its tech lending practice to startups that were VC-funded entities. This practice would later be called venture lending, venture loans, or venture debts in the United States and overseas.1
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- Silicon Valley BankThe Rise and Fall of a Community Bank for Tech, pp. 165 - 193Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2024