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The parent company of the collapsed Silvergate Bank will be delisted from the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) and 230 staff will be let go, Silvergate Capital has disclosed.
In a May 11 filing to the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), Silvergate Capital said 230 staff will be âseparatedâ starting May 12. The NYSE also suspended trading in its stock with delisting to commence âshortly.â

After the staff cut âapproximately 80 officers and employeesâ will be left behind to continue Silvergate Bankâs liquidation process.
More cuts are on the horizon. At least three more headcount cuts are slated for June 30, Aug. 30 and Nov. 30 âor laterâ the filing states.
Silvergate estimated staff drawdown costs would land around $13.6 million with expenses on severance, retention and bonus pays along with job placement programs.
No more financial updates
In a separate May 11 SEC filing, Silvergate said itâs unable to file legally required financial reports for the 2022 fiscal year and the first quarter of 2023 and âdoes not expect to be ableâ to file any similar reports in the future.
The firm cited âchallengesâ due to âcontinuous developments relating to the regulatory and other inquiries and investigations that are pending,â and liabilities from legal action and the bankâs liquidation process.
Silvergate says it is done filing 10-Ks, 10-Qs and proxy statements, in large part because of “the continuous developments relating to the regulatory and other inquiries and investigations that are pending with respect to the Company and the Bank” https://t.co/1EpkRKAixt pic.twitter.com/i1D6S1daGP
â Bank Reg Blog (@bank_reg) May 11, 2023
Silvergate determined itâs in the âbest interestsâ of stakeholders to âminimize costs and expensesâ to preserve value. Some of the staff to be cut include those that are âcriticalâ in preparing these filings, the firm added.
Related: GAO cites exposure to digital assets in exploring collapse of Signature Bank
On March 8, Silvergate Capital first announced it would voluntarily liquidate Silvergate Bank.
Days earlier, a line-up of crypto firms including Gemini, Coinbase, Galaxy Digital and BitStamp severed ties with the bank as it faced a Justice Department investigation over alleged ties to the collapse of FTX.
Magazine: Unstablecoins: Depegging, bank runs and other risks loom
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