Advice for small businesses to choose a bank


Advice for small businesses to choose a bank

For small businesses that have been keeping their money at Silicon Valley Bank — which collapsed last week — the good news is that they will be made whole. The same holds true for customers of Signature Bank, which was shut down by regulators Sunday.

Yet they now need to find another place to keep their money — and they and other small firms may fear a similar calamity elsewhere.

“They probably are thinking they need to use a bank where they’ll have confidence that their deposits are safe, that they won’t go through this again,” said certified financial planner Douglas Boneparth, president of Bone Fide Wealth in New York.

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“I know there are plenty of regional and smaller banks that are in fine financial health and would love to be the recipient of new relationships with small businesses,” said Boneparth, who serves on CNBC’s Financial Advisor Council. “But a lot of people’s knee-jerk reaction will be to go to one of the big names in banking.”

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However, on Sunday, regulators approved a plan to ensure that clients of SVB — which just a week ago was the nation’s 16th-largest bank — will get all their deposits back. The plan also applies to Signature Bank, whose customers also withdrew funds en masse.

For small-business banking clients, the plan should offer some reassurance.

For starters, the message is that when a bank fails, customer deposits will be covered for an unlimited amount, Boneparth said.

“How temporary or permanent that is, we’ll find out,” he said. “But for right now, that’s welcome news.”

FDIC coverage may be enough for some firms

Additionally, for some small businesses, the FDIC coverage at their bank should be sufficient.

“If you’re a small business with never more than $250,000 in deposits, and your bank fails, it won’t be an issue, other than a big inconvenience,” Boneparth said.

Consider multiple banks, check financial stability



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