For markets Silicon Valley Bank’s demise signals a painful new phase
The Fed’s tightening is starting to bite
To quell inflation, goes the adage, central bankers must tighten monetary policy until something breaks. For much of the past year this cliché has been easy to dismiss. Starting in March 2022, America’s Federal Reserve has raised rates at the fastest clip since the 1980s. Even as markets plunged, the world’s financial system stayed wreckage-free. When British pension funds wobbled in September, the Bank of England swiftly helped right them. The most notable collapse—that of ftx, a disgraced former crypto exchange—was well outside the mainstream and, regulators say, caused by fraud rather than the Fed.
This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline “Fed bound”
Finance & economics
March 18th 2023- How deep is the rot in America’s banking industry?
- For markets Silicon Valley Bank’s demise signals a painful new phase
- The search for Silicon Valley Bank-style portfolios
- What the loss of Silicon Valley Bank means for Silicon Valley
- Credit Suisse faces share-price turbulence, as fear sweeps the market
- Is the global investment boom turning to bust?
- The Fed smothers capitalism in an attempt to save it

From the March 18th 2023 edition
Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents
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Even his concessions are less generous than expected
Why silver is the new gold
Safe-haven demand and solar panels have sent its price soaring
Trump’s new tariffs are his most extreme ever
America targets its three biggest trading partners: Canada, Mexico and China
El Salvador’s wild crypto experiment ends in failure
Its curtailment is the price of an IMF bail-out. And one worth paying
America is at risk of a Trumpian economic slowdown
Protectionist threats and erratic policies are combining to hurt growth
India has undermined a popular myth about development
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