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UK Tech Banking Crisis Deepens: Bank of London Eyes Silicon Valley Bank Rescue!

Published 2 days ago4 minute read
UK Tech Banking Crisis Deepens: Bank of London Eyes Silicon Valley Bank Rescue!

This week’s global tech news roundup features a mix of major financial upheavals, new product releases, executive shifts, and innovative platform updates. The most significant event casting a shadow across global markets was the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) Financial Group, marking the largest retail bank failure since the 2008 financial crisis. This collapse has left companies and investors with billions of dollars stranded and resulted in substantial stock market value losses for U.S. and European banks. Amidst this turmoil, the Bank of London is reportedly exploring options to rescue the London arm of SVB.

Delving deeper into the SVB crisis, the tech lender collapsed on Friday, leading California regulators to close it down and place it under the control of the U.S. Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC). The FDIC, acting as a receiver, is tasked with liquidating the bank’s assets to repay customers, ensuring insured depositors would have full access to their funds by no later than Monday morning, with uninsured depositors expecting an advance dividend within the week. The crisis began unfolding when SVB announced a loss from selling securities and a plan to raise $2.25 billion in new shares, triggering panic among key venture capital firms that advised companies to withdraw their money. This led to SVB’s stock plummeting and dragging down shares of other banks like First Republic, PacWest Bancorp, and Signature Bank, which also experienced temporary trading halts. Separately, Sky News reported that British clearing bank The Bank of London has appointed investment bank Perella Weinberg Partners to advise on a potential rescue bid for Silicon Valley Bank UK Limited (SVB UK).

In the realm of Apple news, the company introduced a vibrant yellow iPhone 14 and iPhone 14 Plus, expanding its color offerings alongside existing options like midnight, starlight, red, blue, and purple. These new yellow models became available for preorder on March 10 and in-store and online from March 14. Simultaneously, Apple faced an executive departure with Michael Abbott, its vice president of cloud engineering responsible for iCloud services and infrastructure for iMessage and FaceTime, reportedly leaving the company in April. Abbott's responsibilities, which include managing iCloud.com, iCloud Mail, data encryption, and the platform powering key communication services and features like Find My and Emergency SOS, are slated to be taken over by Jeff Robbin, a highly regarded engineering leader credited with creating iTunes.

Adding to its service portfolio, Apple also announced the launch of a standalone app called Apple Music Classical, set to debut on March 28. This new app, available at no extra cost to existing Apple Music subscribers, promises "complete and accurate metadata" and enhanced search capabilities allowing users to find music by composer, work, conductor, or even catalogue number. The initiative stems from Apple's acquisition of Primephonic, a classical music streaming service, in August 2021. The catalog will launch with thousands of exclusive albums and over five million unique tracks, requiring an internet connection for access.

Meanwhile, Twitter, under Elon Musk's leadership, has continued to navigate significant financial challenges. The company reported a 40% drop in revenue and adjusted earnings for December, a direct consequence of numerous advertisers withdrawing their spending post-Musk’s takeover, with advertising research firm Standard Media Index indicating a 71% decline in ad spend during December. Furthermore, Amazon reportedly threatened to withhold ad payments due to Twitter's unpaid Amazon Web Services bills. Despite these difficulties and a recent significant outage, Musk remains optimistic, asserting that the company's finances are improving, potentially allowing the social media platform to achieve positive cash flow next quarter through aggressive cost-cutting measures and efforts to win back advertisers.

Finally, Spotify unveiled new features aimed at enhancing music discovery and user engagement. The Swedish music-streaming giant introduced a new TikTok-like video feed at its "Stream On" event, designed to recommend music, podcasts, and audiobooks through short clips, encouraging users to discover new artists directly on Spotify rather than other platforms. This was part of a broader app redesign that leverages its personalization technology investments, offering users access to vertically scrolling "discovery" feeds, a new "Smart Shuffle" mode for playlist recommendations (exclusive to subscribers), and a new podcast autoplay feature, with these functionalities rolling out at various intervals and in different markets.

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