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Abstract:By Steven Scheer JERUSALEM (Reuters) – Israeli bank and insurance company shares were more than 2.5% lower on the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange (TASE) on Sunday following the failure of SVB Financial Group late last week, while the government vowed to help Israeli tech firms affected.
By Steven Scheer
JERUSALEM (Reuters) – Israeli bank and insurance company shares were more than 2.5% lower on the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange (TASE) on Sunday following the failure of SVB Financial Group late last week, while the government vowed to help Israeli tech firms affected.
With Israels trading week running Sunday through Thursday, it was the first opportunity for Tel Aviv investors to react to the failure of Silicon Valley Bank, the largest bank to fail since the 2008 financial crisis.
Israel‘s tech sector is the country’s main growth engine and its relationship with the Silicon Valley region is strong. Many Israeli startups had accounts at SVB although the amounts are not fully known.
Compugen Ltd said that through its U.S. subsidiary it currently held about 1.3% of its cash and cash equivalents with SVB, but “considers its exposure to any liquidity concern at SVB as immaterial.”
NextVision, a maker of micro stabilised cameras, said in a regulatory filing in Tel Aviv that it withdrew on Thursday almost all of the $2.7 million it held in SVB.
Qualitau Ltd, a developer of test equipment to the semi-conductor industry, said it had nearly $17 million at SVB and most of that was not federally insured.
It added it had “no information regarding the amounts of money it will be able to withdraw in the future from the balance of funds deposited in SVB and in relation to the timing when it will be possible to withdraw these funds.”
Qualitau added that given an existing backlog of orders, it was able to continue activities.
The Tel Aviv index of the five largest banks was down 2.5% at midday, while the index of eight insurers fell 4.2%. Government bond prices rose as much as 1.5%.
Currently visiting Rome, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he was monitoring the crisis and had been in touch with senior high-tech figures in Israel. When he returns, he said would discuss the scope of the crisis with the finance and economy ministers and the Bank of Israel governor.
“If necessary, out of responsibility to Israeli high-tech companies and employees, we will take steps to assist the Israeli companies, whose centre of activity is in Israel, to weather the cash-flow crisis that has been created for them due to the turmoil,” he said, adding Israels economy was “strong and stable.”
“We stand by the Israeli hi-tech companies and will accompany them even in moments of crisis,” said Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich.
Israel‘s two largest banks, Leumi and Hapoalim, said their tech banking arms would issue loans to startups and other tech firms that were without access to credit in the wake of SVB’s collapse.
Leumi said that it was able to help customers transfer about $1 billion to Israel from SVB prior to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) being named as receiver for later disposition of the U.S. banks assets.
(Reporting by Steven Scheer; Editing by Hugh Lawson and Frank Jack Daniel)
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