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HSBC Bosses Were Aware Of Plan To Steal SVB Secrets, First Citizens Alleges

Silicon Valley Bank collapsed last year after concerns about its finances led customers to pull their money. First Citizens agreed to buy the bank later that month.

<div class="paragraphs"><p>A Silicon Valley Bank office in Napa, California, U.S. (Photographer: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg)</p></div>
A Silicon Valley Bank office in Napa, California, U.S. (Photographer: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg)

Senior executives at HSBC Holdings Plc were aware of an alleged plan by a US unit to poach employees and steal trade secrets from Silicon Valley Bank shortly after First Citizens Bank & Trust Co. bought the failed lender last year, according to a revised lawsuit filed Wednesday in San Francisco. 

First Citizens initially sued in May, claiming HSBC’s David Sabow, a former SVB executive, spearheaded a scheme called “Project Colony” to hire 42 SVB employees and obtain confidential information. First Citizens now alleges HSBC Chief Executive Officer Noel Quinn and Michael Roberts, the head of the bank’s Americas unit, were among those who also knew about the plan.

Even before First Citizens acquired SVB in March 2023, Sabow told HSBC UK’s head of commercial banking that the “Project Colony” plan had been shared with the UK firm’s senior leadership, including Roberts, CEO of Global Banking & Markets Greg Guyett and HSBC UK’s CEO Ian Stuart, according to the court filing. 

“I know the team was also discussing with Noel (believe there was a meeting yesterday),” Sabow said in the March 19 communication.

Sabow had worked in a health-care and technology banking practice at SVB before jumping to HSBC, which acquired SVB’s UK assets on March 13. HSBC announced in April that Sabow would head a new healthcare and technology banking practice at its US unit. 

HSBC has said it wasn’t barred from hiring the former SVB employees.

Silicon Valley Bank collapsed last year after concerns about its finances led customers to pull their money. First Citizens agreed to buy the bank later that month.

The case is First Citizens Bank v. HSBC Holdings, 23-cv-02483, US District Court, Northern District of California (San Francisco).

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