Becker's first job out of college was at a Comerica branch in Detroit.[5] Initially, the bank's records erroneously showed that he held a Master of Business Administration; he corrected the error, but it opened up opportunities for him.[8] His manager offered him an opportunity to spend nine months working in the bank's branch in Pleasanton, California. Drawn by the weather, he stayed and worked at a small bank that Comerica had acquired in San Jose.[5]
In 1993, Becker followed his manager to Silicon Valley Bank (SVB).[5] One of his first deals as a loan officer there was to lend $350,000 to a company that would get acquired by Cisco for $100 million. In 1996, he opened the bank's branch in Boulder, Colorado.[8]
In 1999, he returned to Silicon Valley to found SVB Capital, the group's venture capital fund management division.[8][9] He rose through the ranks to become the bank's chief banking officer, chief operating officer, and, in 2008, its president. He was promoted to president of parent company SVB Financial Group in 2010, then became the chief executive officer of both companies on April 21, 2011.[10][11][12]
On February 27, 2023, Becker sold 12,451 shares of company stock, worth a total of $3.6 million. The sale was made through an executive trading plan filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on January 26, 2023.[13] Following news of SVB's dire financial circumstances on March 9, 2023, Becker urged venture capitalist firms to avoid panic in order to stave off a collapse.[14]
Following news of SVB's failure on March 10, 2023, Becker was reportedly no longer on the board of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco.[15] In the aftermath of SVB's collapse, Becker received criticism from Senator Elizabeth Warren,[16] Representative Ro Khanna of California, and Mayor Matt Mahan of San Jose, who called for money from the stock sale to be clawed back and given to depositors.[17][18] Reports and photos show that immediately after the SVB collapse, Becker flew first class to his $3.1 million cottage in Hawaii, leaving his colleagues to deal with the failure.[19] Becker stated during his Senate testimony that, "We decided we were going to go to one of two places to be with family. Either we would be with my family in Indiana or her family in Hawaii."[20]
Following the failure of Silicon Valley Bank, Becker remained a board member and the CEO of Silicon Valley Financial Group, the former parent of Silicon Valley Bank, until April 19, 2023 when he resigned both roles.[2]
Affiliations
Becker is on the West Coast Advisory Board of the Johnson Center for Entrepreneurship & Innovation at the Kelley School of Business[21] and, since 2021, the Guiding Council of One Mind at Work, a group that advocates for workplace mental health.[22][23]
He was on the executive advisory board of the Alliance for Southern California Innovation from 2017 to 2018[12][23] and on the United States Department of Commerce's Digital Economy Board of Advisors from 2016 to 2017.[3]
Personal life
Becker is a competitive cyclist. In 2010, he raised $500,000 for Best Buddies on a 100-mile (160 km) ride in California.[26]