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Bank Failure Rate Accelerating Much Worse Than in 2009



Lani Rosales | 2010/03/04  | 14 Comments

This is not good news

fdic Bank Failure Rate Accelerating Much Worse Than in 2009It could be argued that the market is surviving only the fittest and weeding out the weak, or in this case, all of those who bet on risks that turned bad, while others can argue that the market is poor all the way around no matter what industry. We’ve been watching the banking industry as an economic indicator and are astonished at how the recession has impacted the sector.

In 2007, only 3 banks were on the FDIC’s bank failure list (aka the FDIC shut down their operations), in 2008 there were 25 banks closed, but 2009 ended with 130 banks failed! If that isn’t startling, note that by March 3 of 2009, 16 banks had closed, but as of today, 22 banks have closed in 2010, a 37.5% acceleration rate over 2009. If the current rate of bank failures continues, 2010 could see over 178 failed banks.

Which banks have been shut down in 2010 so far?

  1. 01/08- Horizon Bank, Bellingham, WA
  2. 01/15- Barnes Banking Company, Kaysville, UT
  3. 01/15- St. Stephen State Bank, St. Stephen, MN
  4. 01/15- Town Community Bank & Trust, Antioch, IL
  5. 01/22- Bank of Leeton, Leeton, MO
  6. 01/22- Evergreen Bank, Seattle, WA
  7. 01/22- Charter Bank, Santa Fe, NM
  8. 01/22- Columbia River Bank, The Dalles, OR
  9. 01/22- Premier American Bank, Miami, FL
  10. 01/29- First Regional Bank, Los Angeles, CA
  11. 01/29- American Maine Bank, Bainbridge Island, WA
  12. 01/29- First National Bank of Georgia, Carrollton, GA
  13. 01/29- Florida Community Bank, Immokalee, FL
  14. 01/29- Marshall Bank, N.A., Hallock, MN
  15. 01/29- Community Bank & Trust, Cornelia, GA
  16. 02/05- 1st American State Bank of Minnesota, Hancock, MN
  17. 02/19- George Washington Savings Bank, Orland Park, IL
  18. 02/19- La Jolla Bank, FSB, La Jolla, CA
  19. 02/19- Marco Community Bank, Marco Island, FL
  20. 02/19- The La Cost National bank, La Cost, TX
  21. 02/26- Rainier Pacific Bank, Tacoma, WA
  22. 02/26- Carson River Community Bank, Carson City, NV

Want to know how your state is faring? Check out our breakdown of closures by state:

fdic bank closures Bank Failure Rate Accelerating Much Worse Than in 2009

What now?

Forecasting failed banks is difficult, according to Ben Goheen, Realtor and Appraiser with Bridge Realty in Stillwater, MN. “Banktracker is tracking the troubled asset ratio of these banks. This is gathered from public information that banks submit to the FDIC every quarter,” said Goheen. “The FDIC doesn’t make the list of banks they’re going to shut down available to the public, so this is the best resource of how safe any lending institution is.”

Goheen wrote about the FDIC closing banks and at the time wrote, “the FDIC sees this as more of a short-term problem.”

Could this be so? Time will tell, but it’s a tricky economic health indicator to monitor due to closed doors.

UPDATE: to round out the third quarter, March saw a slew of bank closures as listed below but not accounted for in the stats graphic above:

  1. 03/05- Centennial Bank, Ogden, UT
  2. 03/05- Waterfield Bank, Germantown, MD
  3. 03/05- Sun American Bank, Boca Raton, FL
  4. 03/05- Bank of Illinois, Normal, IL
  5. 03/11- LibertyPointe Bank, New York, NY
  6. 03/12- Statewide Bank, Covington, LA
  7. 03/12- The Park Avenue Bank, New York, NY
  8. 03/12- Old Southern Bank, Orlando, FL
  9. 03/19- State Bank of Aurora, Aurora, MN
  10. 03/19- First Lowndes Bank, Fort Deposit, AL
  11. 03/19- Bank of Hiawassee, Hiawassee, GA
  12. 03/19- Advanta Bank Corp, Draper, UT
  13. 03/19- American National Bank, Parma, OH
  14. 03/19- Century Security Bank, Duluth, GA
  15. 03/19- Appalachian Community Bank, Elijay, GA
  16. 03/26- Key West Bank, Key West, FL
  17. 03/26- Unity National Bank, Cartersville, GA
  18. 03/26- Desert Hills Bank, Phoenix, AZ
  19. 03/26- McIntosh Commercial Bank, Carrollton, GA


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This article published on Thursday, March 4th, 2010 at 12:36 am | Contact the editor

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About this Columnist (Full Profile)

AGBeat Editor-in-Chief: Lani, named one of Real Estate’s 100 Most Influential, as well as 12 Most Influential Women in Real Estate, is a business writer hailing from the great state of Texas in the city of Austin. As a digital native, Lani is immersed not only in advanced technologies and new media, but is also a stats nerd often burried in piles of reports. Lani is a proven leader, thoughtful speaker, and vested partner at AGBeat.

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Comments (14)

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  1. Fred Griffin:

    RT @agentgenius: #agnow Haven't we been hearing and reading for a few years now that CRE will hit the Regional and local banks very … http://bit.ly/cyVuEv

  2. AgentGenius:

    #agnow Looking over that list, though, I don't see Bank of America on there anywhere. If this was really weeding o… http://bit.ly/cyVuEv

  3. Realty Infusion:

    2010's bank failure rate is already running higher than it was in 2009 –> http://bit.ly/aLft8y

  4. Nathan Bangs:

    RT @RealtyInfusion: 2010's bank failure rate is already running higher than it was in 2009 –> http://bit.ly/aLft8y

  5. Roland Estrada:

    Let's get this over with ASAP. Bank Failure Rate Accelerating Much Worse Than in 2009 – http://bit.ly/bK3qSV #realestate #ocrealestate

  6. AgentGenius:

    #agnow Banking will look like a different industry in another year or two, just as it is different than it was 3 ye… http://bit.ly/cyVuEv

  7. BHG Real Estate:

    Bank Failure Rate Accelerating Much Worse Than in 2009 http://ow.ly/1ehGY

  8. AgentGenius:

    #agnow As a former commercial lender and having lived through the S&L failures in Texas, this is just part duex… http://bit.ly/cyVuEv

  9. FDIC calls bank closures a short term ill but closure rates remain high:

    [...] We predicted that at the acceleration rate over 2009 that 2010 would experience 178 closed banks and so far, we’re still on track for 2010 to see as many bank closures as 2007, 2008 and 2009 combined. [...]

  10. AgentGenius:

    #agnow [...] We predicted that at the acceleration rate over 2009 that 2010 would experience 178 closed banks and s… http://bit.ly/cyVuEv

  1. Mike says:

    Haven’t we been hearing and reading for a few years now that CRE will hit the Regional and local banks very hard? Perhaps it is happening. How bad will it get? It’ll be interesting.

  2. Looking over that list, though, I don’t see Bank of America on there anywhere. If this was really weeding out the weak and punishing bad risks, I don’t think we’d be seeing so many community banks going under.

    Hopefully when the dust from the housing crisis settles and the economy starts to turn around, Washington DC will take a serious look at the FDIC and their behavior during this time. I know responsibility and rational thought is an awful lot to ask from our elected representatives, but a boy can dream.

  3. Al Lorenz says:

    Banking will look like a different industry in another year or two, just as it is different than it was 3 years ago. Hopefully more folks will start making sure that they don’t have deposits at risk. The reduced number of banks in the longer term will mean fewer choices and less competition. I suppose we’ll find out that works.

  4. Jay Ferguson says:

    As a former commercial lender and having lived through the S&L failures in Texas, this is just part duex. tradional lender is needed, back to the basics, and more time or distance from 2008-2009.

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