
|  | | 2009 News and Press Releases | | | HEADLINE NEWS: Bank Closure Pace Quickens Kevin LaCroix
The D & O Diary. November 2, 2009 _________________________________________________________________________
EXCERPT: In what is the largest number of banks closed on a single day in years, this past Friday night the FDIC seized nine related lending institutions. The nine banks, based in California, Illinois, Texas and Arizona, had been owned by FBOP Corp., a privately held Illinois-based bank holding company. U.S. Bancorp agreed to assume all of the combined banks assets of $19.4 billion and deposits of $15.4 billion. The latest round of closures brings the 2009 YTD total number of bank closures to 115, already the highest annual total since 1992, when 181 lending institutions failed during the S&L crisis. 31 banks failed just in September and October 2009 alone, more than the 25 banks that failed during all of 2008. Indeed, the FDIC has closed 16 banks just in the last two weeks. […] Though certain states have seen higher numbers of bank failures this year, the current banking woes are not contained to just one state or region. The failed banks are quite dispersed geographically. 31 different states have had at least one bank closed this year. The states with the highest numbers of bank failures are Illinois (20), Georgia (19), California (13), Texas (5) and Minnesota (5). The Wall Street Journal has a nifty interactive map of the U.S. showing the location of the bank failures, with scaled markers indicated the relative size of each failed bank. One of the banks closed this past Friday night was California National Bank. With assets of $7.8 billion and $6.2 billion in deposits, CNB is the fourth largest bank to fail this year, according to the Los Angeles Times. | | |