On March 10, 2023, Silicon Valley Bank was seized, an event that went beyond financial mechanics to scrutinize the very essence of venture capital's "founder-friendly" posture. While much attention focused on duration risk and uninsured deposits, the bank's collapse acted as a stark trial for how venture firms behave when markets sour.
In prosperous times, every firm touts its commitment to entrepreneurs, promising long-term alignment and "value-add" services. But when SVB fell, founders faced imminent payroll deadlines and trapped cash. The true test emerged: would investors step in with immediate liquidity, or would they leverage the crisis to demand steep discounts, punitive terms, or control through so-called "rescue" capital?
Crisis Exposes True Incentives
The immediate aftermath saw a flood of "rescue" capital offers, many structured to exploit founders' precarious situations with harsh terms and asymmetric control. This crisis stripped away the marketing gloss, revealing the underlying incentives of investors. As Khosla Ventures noted, "Crisis removes marketing — and exposes incentives."