Federal Deposit Insurance, Silicon Valley Bank Failure and You 

As you are undoubtedly aware, Silicon Valley Bank was taken over by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) this past Friday, shocking the banking industry and the economy as a whole.  On Sunday afternoon, the Federal Government stated the “all deposits by all depositors would be available on Monday March 13th

Crisis averted?  Hopefully, but bank stocks continue to lose value during Monday trading.

The purpose of this memo is to review your insured cash limits as provided for by FDIC insurance and what you can do to strengthen that. 

“The standard insurance coverage amount is $250,000 per depositor, per insured bank, for each account ownership category.”

By example, a married couple could have up to $250,000 insured in an account in one spouse’s name, $250,000 insured in an account in the other spouse’s name and $250,000 each in various retirement accounts and all of it would be insured.

Covered Accounts Up to $250,000:

Checking Accounts, Savings Accounts, Money Market Accounts, Certificates of Deposit, Cashier’s Checks

Non-Covered Accounts:

Stocks, Bonds, Mutual Funds, Crypto Assets, Life Insurance Policies, Annuities, Safe Deposit Box Contents, U.S. Treasury Bills, Bonds and Notes (However, these are backed by the full faith and guarantee of the United States Government)

What can you do to maximize your protection?

First, ask the question, “is my account insured by the FDIC?” Second, if you are among the few to have account values over $250,000, consider maximizing the insurance by utilizing multiple banks or types of accounts, such as trusts.

Please contact us if you have questions.

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Internal Revenue Service

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Mass Tax Connect

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