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View Full Version : 2 CO Banks Closed today by the Feds



theGinsue
07-08-2011, 23:01
I hope none of you here banked (past tense) with Colorado Capital Bank in Castle Rock, Colo., and Signature Bank, in Windsor, Colo.

http://finance.yahoo.com/news/Regulators-shut-banks-in-apf-2503758314.html?x=0



WASHINGTON (AP) -- Regulators shut down a bank in Illinois and two in Colorado on Friday, boosting to 51 the number of U.S. bank failures this year.

The latest closings come even as the overall pace of bank failures has slowed as the economy gradually improves and banks work their way through the bad debt accumulated during the financial crisis. Through July 9 last year, regulators had closed 90 banks.

The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. on Friday seized First Chicago Bank & Trust in Chicago and Colorado Capital Bank in Castle Rock, Colo., and Signature Bank, in Windsor, Colo.

Northbrook Bank & Trust Co., based in Northbrook, Ill., agreed to assume the deposits and a majority of the assets of First Chicago, which had about $959.3 million in assets and $887.5 million in deposits.

Northbrook paid the FDIC a premium of 0.50 percent for the failed bank's deposits and agreed to buy about $880.7 million of First Chicago's assets.
In addition, the FDIC and Northbrook Bank agreed to share losses on $699.8 million of First Chicago's assets.

First Citizens Bank & Trust Co., based in Raleigh, N.C., assumed all the deposits and essentially all the assets of Colorado Capital, which had about $717.5 million in assets and $672.8 million in deposits.

The FDIC and First Citizens also agreed to share losses on $580 million of Colorado Capital's assets.

"We look forward to working with existing clients and establishing new relationships in the days to come," said B. Holding Jr., First Citizens Bank's CEO said in a statement. The bank is a unit of First Citizens BancShares.
Points West Community Bank, based in Julesburg, Colo., agreed to assume Signature Bank's $64.5 million in deposits and essentially all of its $66.7 million in assets.

The two bank failures are expected to cost the deposit insurance fund $590.4 million, combined.

In all, four banks have failed in Colorado this year. First Chicago is the fifth lender to collapse this year in Illinois.

In 2010 regulators seized 157 banks, the most in a year since the savings-and-loan crisis two decades ago.

The FDIC has said that 2010 likely would mark the peak for bank failures.

There were 140 bank failures in 2009, costing the insurance fund about $36 billion. The failures last year cost around $21 billion, a lower price tag because the banks that failed in 2010 were smaller on average. Twenty-five banks failed in 2008, the year the financial crisis struck with force; only three were closed in 2007.

From 2008 through 2010, bank failures cost the fund $76.8 billion. The deposit insurance fund fell into the red in 2009. With failures slowing, its deficit narrowed in the first quarter of this year and stood at about $1 billion as of March 31.

The FDIC expects the cost of resolving failed banks to total around $52 billion from 2010 through 2014.

Depositors' money -- insured up to $250,000 per account -- is not at risk, with the FDIC backed by the government. That insurance cap was made permanent in the financial overhaul law enacted last July.

The number of banks on the FDIC's confidential "problem" list edged up to 888 in the January-March quarter from 884 as of Dec. 31. The 888 troubled banks is the highest number since 1993, during the savings-and-loan crisis. But that doesn't mean the pace of bank failures is likely to accelerate again because, historically, only 19 percent of the banks on the "problem" list actually fail.

CrufflerSteve
07-08-2011, 23:45
As long as nobody here had accounts of over $250K with them it shouldn't be a big deal. From the little I know, the FDIC has been about the only decent federal agency. When it finds a bank going bust it shows up on a Friday and shuts it. The feds have a busy weekend and it opens Monday with a new name and your accounts are there. The depth of this recession might breaks this but is has worked for decades.

Steve

trlcavscout
07-09-2011, 08:20
I have done work in the windsor bank that sucks!

Ah Pook
07-09-2011, 10:46
Interesting. I'm surprised more are not closing.

For every new building that goes up, in Boulder, it seems a financial institution moves in.

Jer
07-09-2011, 10:47
Do they completely restaff these locations over the weekend as well and if so do they have candidates for them picked in advance?

jmg8550
07-09-2011, 12:28
I banked at Signature Bank. I also banked at New Frontier. I hate the feds. Now I gotta find a new bank that isn't some giant "too big to fail" I'm just a number to them bank. Getting harder and harder with the f***ing feds shutting them down all the time.

Irving
07-09-2011, 12:38
Have you considered a Credit Union?

jmg8550
07-09-2011, 12:54
There aren't any good credit unions in Windsor, and I'm not willing to drive to Greeley, Fort Collins or Loveland to do business at one. Also not willing to move to one of those cities to be closer to a credit union.

Irving
07-09-2011, 12:57
That makes sense. If there are any credit unions in Windsor though, there is a chance that they are part of the Credit Union network, and once you set up at a Credit Union that you like, you can just do business at the ones in Windsor. That's the way I understand it anyway.

jmg8550
07-09-2011, 12:59
I'll have to look into that. Thanks for the info Irving

bryjcom
07-09-2011, 16:15
I banked at Signature Bank. I also banked at New Frontier. I hate the feds. Now I gotta find a new bank that isn't some giant "too big to fail" I'm just a number to them bank. Getting harder and harder with the f***ing feds shutting them down all the time.

I already told you to go to FirstBank! They aren't one of those mega global banks yet they aren't some some little one thats going to become insolvent tomorrow.

They have always been fair with me and they have even admitted a banking error before I even knew a banking error occurred . A lot better then Chase, or any of those other of those criminal global banksters.

funkfool
07-09-2011, 17:24
Always bank with the "Bank of funkfool"... now accepting deposits...er.. ONLY.
ENT.

jmg8550
07-09-2011, 18:27
I already told you to go to FirstBank! They aren't one of those mega global banks yet they aren't some some little one thats going to become insolvent tomorrow.

They have always been fair with me and they have even admitted a banking error before I even knew a banking error occurred . A lot better then Chase, or any of those other of those criminal global banksters.


You do your thing, I'll do mine when it comes to choosing banks. Thanks