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Monday Morning Update 3/13/23

March 11, 2023 News 12 Comments

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Silicon Valley Bank, a major player in tech company financing, collapses and is taken over by federal regulators in the biggest US bank failure since 2008.

SVB has business relationships with half of all venture-backed technology and healthcare companies.

SVB failed as higher interest rates devalued its long-term, low-interest bond portfolio even as venture capital deposits dwindled in a down market, with the unrealized losses raising fear in depositors who created a bank run in trying to withdraw their money.

Notes:

  • Deposits are FDIC insured up to $250,000, meaning that 95% of the money held by SVB is uninsured.
  • Tech companies that can’t get their deposits out of SVB are expressing doubt that they can meet payroll and pay bills in the short term.
  • Venture capital firms used their now-frozen SVB lines of credit to make investments quickly. However, they also triggered the SVB bank run by advising their portfolio companies to pull their money out, which created a liquidity event that forced SVB to convert unrealized losses to actual losses in an attempt to cover withdrawals.
  • Some of the VCs issued their SVB warnings on Twitter, which created a panic that one investor summarized as, “If you are in a movie theater and it’s not on fire and you yell fire, and then you congratulate yourself for being out first while other people are laying on the floor, do you sleep well tonight?”
  • SVB supporters note that the bank has been an ally of innovation, didn’t mishandle deposited funds, and instead chose a conservative investment approach involving government-backed funds that was derailed by interest rate hikes. The company held so much startup money deposited from fundraising proceeds that it couldn’t originate enough profitable loans to invest it, so it turned to low-interest but safe investments.
  • FDIC is expected to pressure another bank to buy SVB, which holds enough assets – albeit long-term and discounted — to cover deposits if it can continue operation.
  • Long-term observers question the involvement of the Federal Reserve in first holding interest rates artificially low, then raising them repeatedly. They also worry that fear will drive companies to move their money from banks to other investments, which will cause other banks to fail as depositors withdraw their funds.
  • Private equity investor Bijan Salehizadeh, MD, MPH, MBA worries that portfolio companies whose funds are tied up in SVB can’t count on their VCs to provide an emergency bridge loan since many or most VC funds also bank at SVB and can’t get their money either, and opening new accounts at overwhelmed banking competitors is not a quick process. He also notes that some companies are funded under terms that require banking with SVB, which means other banks may be wary of taking them on. He says that the federal government needs to force a big bank to buy SVB over the weekend or else “we have not just an academic catastrophe, but an actual catastrophe.” He also urges affected companies to stop all accounts payable activity immediately to preserve cash for payroll.

I would welcome opinions from readers who are involved in venture capital or whose company is being affected by SVB’s collapse.


HIStalk Announcements and Requests

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One in five poll respondents have used telehealth to get a prescription they wanted knowing that the evaluation process would likely be superficial.

New poll to your right or here, following up on Dr. Jayne’ s impressions of ATA: what disappointed you most at the most recent in-person conference you attended? Someone told me once that the single most important item for attendees is food and the opportunities to socialize while consuming it, which brings back painful memories of waiting in endless food and coffee lines at HIMSS conferences only to end up sitting alone on the floor with my wildly overpriced purchase because of lack of seats.

Attention clock spring-forwarders, which is everybody in the continental US except those in Arizona. Avoid embarrassing yourself and mothball EST, CST, MST, and PST until November 5 since it’s all EDT, CDT, MDT, and PDT until then. You don’t get to pick which one you like better, but in a rare confluence of decreased effort accompanying increased accuracy, just write ET, CT, MT, and PT year round to always be correct (those of us in those time zones already know what time it is here). Perhaps unfairly, I assume that anyone who has lived their entire life under Daylight Saving Time but still writes it wrong can’t be all that bright or attentive to detail. TL;DR version – always abbreviate Eastern time as ET.

I keep seeing these clickbait articles in the form of “XXX hospital executives to know” whose selection methodology is whatever the fresh grad writer’s Google searches turn up. Does the “to know” encourage people to cold-call those who are named get acquainted? Otherwise, if they are so important that we should know them, wouldn’t we already?

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I don’t often do book reviews, but I found the new, physician-written novel “The Algorithm Will See You Now” to be worth reading and describing.


Webinars

None scheduled soon. Previous webinars are on our YouTube channel. Contact Lorre to present your own.


Acquisitions, Funding, Business, and Stock

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From the Oracle earnings call:

  • CEO Safra Catz says that “cloud is no longer about just renting commodity white boxes” and instead offers velocity and value that supports business transformation.
  • She says that Oracle has improved Cerner’s operating margin by more than five percentage points in its three quarters of ownership.
  • Chairman and CTO Larry Ellison says that Cerner’s healthcare contract base has increased by $5 billion since the acquisition. He called out wins at Ascension Health, Auxilio Mutio, Vandalia Health, Banner Health, VA, DoD, and NHS.
  • Ellison said that MD Anderson has reduced readmissions by 30% by using Project Ronin’s AI model running on Oracle Cloud.
  • Responding to an analyst’s question about “when does it become clear that Oracle is helping improve the quality of care and saving lives,” Ellison cited implementations at DoD, VA, and Nova Scotia, along with an NHS bid in progress.
  • Ellison stated that Oracle has built “one patient, one record in the database” at Stanford, UCLA, Mayo Clinic, and Cleveland Clinic, failing to note that all of those organizations user Oracle Cerner competitor Epic.

OptimizeRx reports Q4 results: revenue down 3%, adjusted EPS $0.25 versus $0.22.


Sales

  • An unnamed drug manufacturer hub services company will use OptimizeRx’s technology to determine patient drug eligibility and affordability.

People

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Laura Wilt, MBA (Ochsner Health) joins Sutter Health as SVP/CDO.

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Washington University in St. Louis hires Greg Hart, PhD (FTI) as its first CTO.


Announcements and Implementations

An AHA-commissioned report by Kaufman Hall finds that 53% of US hospitals expect to lose money this year, driven by high labor and supply costs.


Government and Politics

Rep. Matt Rosendale (R-MT), who was recently appointed chair of the VA’s subcommittee on technology modernization, says that he would like to cancel the VA’s Oracle Cerner contract, claw back some of the money that the company has been paid, and focus instead on improving the VA’s legacy VistA system. He says VistA is a better system for supporting safe, high-quality care, citing high dissatisfaction rates among the VA’s users of Oracle Cerner.

The former CEO of now-bankrupt medical device company Stimwave is indicted for selling a non-functional piece of plastic as a $16,000 implantable medical device for chronic pain patients. Stimwave settled for $10 million in October 2022. Doctors complained that the implantable part of the original nerve stimulator device was too big, and since the company knew that the technology could not be made smaller, created a plastic dummy component that could be cut to fit, enabling the doctor to bill for implanting the fake device.


Privacy and Security

Virtual mental health startup Cerebral notifies HHS that it use of pixel tracking has inadvertently exposed the information of 3.2 million users to third parties. The shared information includes website visitor responses to a mental health questionnaire that includes responses about panic attacks, alcohol abuse, and personality disorder.


Sponsor Updates

  • Wolters Kluwer launches the Outpatient Prospective Payment System Batch Grouper and Calculator Service within its MediRegs coding, reimbursement, and compliance solution.
  • Nordic releases a new In Network Podcast, “Designing for Health: Interview with Dr. Srinath Adusumalli.”
  • OptimizeRx announces a multi-million-dollar, three-year agreement with a leading Hub services company that will leverage its technology to accelerate patient access for its life sciences brands.
  • Pivot Point Consulting announces new appointments to its Managed Services, Data & Analytics, Clinical Systems/EHR, Business Systems, and Advisory Services segments.
  • Premier publishes a new success story, “Premier’s Pinc AI Clinical Intelligence: A Key to Reducing Clinical Variation and Improving Quality at St. Luke’s University Health Network.”
  • Redox releases a new podcast, “Automation’s Impact on the Patient/Provider Relationship with Mytonomy’s Vinay Bhargava.”
  • Spok earns top honors for the sixth consecutive year in a Black Book Market Research survey of healthcare industry clients on top-rated secure communications platforms.
  • Volpara Health highlights studies presented at the 2023 European Congress of Radiology that demonstrate the important role AI plays in objective breast density assessment, cancer risk assessment, and mammography quality evaluation.

Blog Posts


Contacts

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Currently there are "12 comments" on this Article:

  1. Time for a time change. I remember long ago when the overnight IT operator had to change the computer’s clock by hand at 1AM. Those of us in Support dreaded that weekend. There were instances where the operator mistakenly set the clock ahead by a day, or a week, or a month, causing daily room charges to be generated for the entire inpatient population for the elapsed time. We’d then spend the next few days reversing all of those charges. Ugh. We welcomed the day when the computers took care of the time change themselves. Of course, there’s still the weirdness of what appears to be an hour of missing info (medication administrations , for example), or a second hour of info between 1AM and 2AM in the fall.

  2. At our facility, a tired IT operator came in to change the time. He forgot the syntax so opened the manual and copied the example. He set the time back to the correct time but in the wrong year. Since all displays and reports used logic like display all results from NOW back 6 months, all inpatient data “disappeared”. He was called back to the hospital and fixed his mistake.

  3. Most fiscal folks I follow on Twitter have looked at SVB’s books and been shocked at the bet they took on interest rates staying low (essentially $80 billion) without any sort of hedge. This is especially egregious with how much the Fed has been signaling raises for the past year+ and with the fact that SVB’s CEO was literally a director at the San Francisco Fed; the danger of their investments should have been obvious.

    I have sympathy for the employees who are not getting paid through no fault of their own, but I don’t think we should pretend that this bank blew up because of random chance. There’s also an argument to be made that companies that deposit over $250,000 in a bank have a bit of a duty to look into the health of said bank and/or diversify their assets a bit. Hell, maybe they should make confirm whether said bank has a Chief Risk Officer (SVB was without one for nearly a year starting in early 2022).

    • The CEO also went public with SVB’s need for capital without having a firm commitment to get it in place, in a shockingly badly written announcement. Then pleaded for people not to panic, which of course is what you say when they have good reason to panic. He created the bank run not only by poor investment decisions, but also by poor communication decisions.

  4. Re: Oracle’s Epic comment – the only realistic thing I can think Larry was going on about was those organizations reporting databases?

  5. Time Change – I think a facet of billing for Anesthesia involves the start/stop time, and I seem to remember issues with the ‘change’ – emergency surgery starts at 1:30 am and ends an hour later … at 3:30??

  6. Re: SVB, and this comment specifically:

    “Long-term observers question the involvement of the Federal Reserve in first holding interest rates artificially low, then raising them repeatedly”

    Wow. Just Wow!

    OK, so the Fed kept rates low to stimulate the economy. There was a Pandemic, maybe you’ve heard of it? And lots of other things over the years, the list is far too long to recount.

    The bottom line is, the Fed was doing their job, and everyone knows what that job is. Disagreements over “how much” the interest rates should be are commonplace. There are endless arguments over the rate of change and I read them all the time. Yet only the Fed is actually paid and empowered to make those calls.

    The job of any business with financial exposure is to make wise, profitable decisions. A bank would seem to be ideally placed to have the knowledge required. The Fed may have “involvement”, but only to the extent that customers have “involvement”, employees have “involvement”, and competitors have that same “involvement”.

    In short, it’s a poor excuse to blame the Fed.

    • It’s puzzling why SVB loaded up on low-yield bonds, not only because everybody and his brother knew that interest rates would be going up to devalue those bonds, but also SVB’s own CEO was on the board of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco and surely couldn’t have missed that point. It wasn’t just SVB, though, and the Fed is signaling smaller interest rate increases and the likelihood of reductions later this year, probably deciding that the risk of bank failures outweighed long-term economic considerations. They are also allowing banks to transfer some of their risk caused by high interest directly to the Fed itself, which might buffer the effect of an increase and thus make them more likely to pursue higher rates.

      • Oh, I agree.

        Looking at a (far more) plausible list of reasons why SVB may have gotten caught in the interest rate squeeze:

        1). Interest rates have been incredibly low for a very, very long time. We’re talking 20-25 years now, which is a generational time period. Perhaps SVB got complacent due to this;

        2). This is Silicon Valley Bank. Their business is presumably loaded up with Tech ventures, which is VC territory. That’s a High Risk, High Reward marketplace. I can easily imagine SVB wanting a risk counterweight to that, to add more certainty to their portfolio. However this traded capital investment risk against interest rate risk (oops!);

        3). SVB seems to have had excess investment capital on their hands (Point #5 in the OP alludes to this). They may have had an intention of parking some money in some “safe harbour” until a better investment environment appeared. Classic examples of this might include T-Bills, Government Bonds, AAA Corporate Bonds and certain Blue Chip stocks. Maybe ABCP too.

        There is no investing without risk however. Ultimately, investing is an act of faith in the future. And the old investing homilies are as true as ever:

        – Higher Risk provides opportunities for Higher Reward;
        – Lower Risk limits opportunities, but limits disaster too;
        – The market runs on Fear and Greed;
        – The Bulls make money, as do the Bears. The Pigs get slaughtered.

      • I came across an article in the Sydney Morning Herald about SVB. The findings essentially fall in line with what I expected:

        – in 2021, the Fed issued 6 citations against SVB. No action by SVB;
        – in 2022, the Fed put SVB into a supervisory review. The Fed found that SVB had bad risk models with respect to rising interest rates;
        – in 2023, just before the failure, the Fed put SVB into a horizontal review. By this time it was too late to save SVB.

        https://www.smh.com.au/business/banking-and-finance/before-collapse-of-silicon-valley-bank-the-fed-spotted-big-problems-20230320-p5ctgy.html







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