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Friday, October 28, 2011

Bank Failure Friday: FDIC Seizes 1 Bank! (Charts) *2011 losses near $7 billion*


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2010 bank failures were 157 and 2009 bank failures were 140

The FDIC closed 1 bank on Friday, October 28, 2011, which increased total bank failures for 2011 to 85. This was the 34th week of the 43 weeks in 2011 to-date that the FDIC has seized at least 1 bank.  Annual charts of USA Bank Seizures, FDIC Deposit Insurance Fund Cost of Failed Banks, and the FDIC Problem Bank List are below. States where banks have been closed in 2011 are (in alphabetical order): Alabama 2, Arizona 2, California 4, Colorado 6, Florida 12Georgia 22Illinois 9, Indiana 1, Kansas 1, Michigan 2, Minnesota 2, Mississippi 1, Missouri 1, Nevada 1, New Jersey 1, New Mexico 1, North Carolina 2, Oklahoma 2, Pennsylvania 1, South Carolina 3, Texas 1, Virginia 2, Washington 3, Wisconsin 3.

#85 All American Bank, Des Plaines, IL
* International Bank of Chicago, Chicago, IL to assume all of the deposits
* As of June 30, 2011, All American Bank had approximately $37.8 million in total assets
* International Bank of Chicago agreed to purchase essentially all of the assets
FDIC and International Bank of Chicago did not enter into a loss-share agreement
* FDIC estimates that the cost to the Deposit Insurance Fund (DIF) will be $6.5 million
* The last FDIC-insured institution closed in the state was Country Bank on October 14, 2011

FDIC Losses The total estimated cost to the FDIC Deposit Insurance Fund for the 2011 bank closures year-to-date is $6.96 billion (see chart below). The most costly banks to the Deposit Insurance Fund in 2011 year-to-date:
1) The Park Avenue Bank, Valdosta, GA $306.1 million
2) Lydian Private Bank, Palm Beach, FL $293.2 million
3) Chicago Bank and Trust, Chicago, IL $284.3 million
4) Colorado Capital Bank, Castle Rock, CO $283.8 million
5) Atlantic Southern Bank, Macon, GA $273.5 million
6) Bank of the Commonwealth, Norfolk, VA $268.3 million
7) First Community Bank, Taos, NM $260.0 million
8) Superior Bank, Birmingham, AL $259.6 million
9) FirsTier Bank, Louisville, Ky $242.6 million
10) Community Banks of Colorado, Greenwood Village, CO $224.9 million
11) Bank of Choice, Greeley, CO $213.6 million

The next FDIC bank closings, if any, will most likely be announced on Friday, November 4.

USA Failed Banks by Year Bank failures, and therefore FDIC seizure of banks, dramatically increased in 2009 and 2010 - a 2-year total of 297 compared to 0 in both 2005 and 2006. As noted below regarding total problem banks, bank failures in 2011 are expected to continue at a high rate and be 100+. The chart below is the data from 2004 through 2010. Bank failures for 2011 are estimated by extrapolating 2011 actual closures based on a 52-week year.
Year, Total Bank Failures
2004: 4
2005: 0
2006: 0
2007: 3
2008: 25
2009: 140
2010: 157
2011: 85 actual, 103 estimated


FDIC Deposit Insurance Fund Cost of Failed Banks Failed banks and the seizure by the FDIC cost money. The seized banks' deposits are usually assumed by another bank as are most of the assets. However, not all assets of the failed bank have value (usually the worst performing loans, non-performing loans, repossessions, and foreclosures). The FDIC may enter into a loss-share agreement with another bank to manage the questionable assets or take direct possession of the assets and attempt to dispose of them. Upon seizure of a bank, the FDIC estimates the loss to the Deposit Insurance Fund. The Deposit Insurance Fund is normally funded by the banking community through FDIC assessments to each FDIC insured bank based on insured deposits, plus special assessments. Below is a chart of the estimates by the FDIC of costs (losses) incurred upon seizure of banks in 2011. The chart is by week for 2011 and shows the accumulated losses as the year goes along.


FDIC Problem Banks by Quarter The FDIC problem bank list dipped slightly from 888 at 3-31-11 to 865 at 6-30-11. The total problem banks remain elevated. The total assets of the problem banks from the year-ends 2004 through 2010 were $28B, $7B, $8B, $22B, $159B, $403B, $390B, respectively. The total assets of the current (6/30/2011) 865 problem banks is $372B, or an average of $430 million in total assets per problem bank. The FDIC reports the total problem banks on a quarterly basis.
Date, Total Problem Banks
12/31/2005: 52
12/31/2006: 50
12/31/2007: 76
12/31/2008: 252
12/31/2009: 702
12/31/2010: 884
6/30/11: 865


About the FDIC
Congress created the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation in 1933 to restore public confidence in the nation's banking system. The FDIC insures deposits at the nation's 7,513 banks and savings associations and it promotes the safety and soundness of these institutions by identifying, monitoring and addressing risks to which they are exposed. The FDIC receives no federal tax dollars – insured financial institutions fund its operations.

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