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Press Release

After Silicon Valley Bank failed, banks expanded deposit insurance using reciprocal deposits

During the banking turmoil of 2023, banks looking to soothe uninsured depositors capitalized on recent regulatory changes to help them get additional coverage.

A new Cleveland Fed report says the amount of reciprocal deposits exchanged between banks grew significantly following the failure of Silicon Valley Bank in March 2023.

Deposits in a typical bank account are insured up to $250,000, but banks can offer extra coverage by exchanging deposits beyond that amount with other banks.

The use of reciprocal deposits began to increase in 2019, following regulatory changes, and then grew significantly in 2023. Midsize banks account for most of the increase; small banks have fewer large depositors and large banks quickly run into regulatory caps.

The next time depositors are worried about bank failures, there will probably be another spike in demand for reciprocal deposits, according to the report’s authors, Edward S. Prescott and Grant E. Rosenberger.

“This behavior would mean that reciprocal deposits have, in effect, raised the deposit insurance limit,” Prescott and Rosenberger write.

Read the Economic Commentary: Reciprocal Deposits and the Banking Turmoil of 2023

Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland

The Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland is one of 12 regional Reserve Banks that along with the Board of Governors in Washington DC comprise the Federal Reserve System. Part of the US central bank, the Cleveland Fed participates in the formulation of our nation’s monetary policy, supervises banking organizations, provides payment and other services to financial institutions and to the US Treasury, and performs many activities that support Federal Reserve operations System-wide. In addition, the Bank supports the well-being of communities across the Fourth Federal Reserve District through a wide array of research, outreach, and educational activities.

The Cleveland Fed, with branches in Cincinnati and Pittsburgh, serves an area that comprises Ohio, western Pennsylvania, eastern Kentucky, and the northern panhandle of West Virginia.

Media contact

Chuck Soder, chuck.soder@clev.frb.org, 216.672.2798