Lucky Number 99 in 2009? 99 FDIC Insured Bank Closures That Is…
Courtesy of Travis
The FDIC was appointed receiver of San Joaquin Bank of Bakersfield, California, a bank which had $775 million in assets and some $631 million in deposits just a few weeks ago.
The bank’s deposits will be assumed by Citizens Business Bank of Ontario, California, with five branches opening as Citizens.
The San Joaquin Bank failure will cost the FDIC’s insurance fund some $103 million.
’09 is sure to be a banner year. 99 bank failures so far this year, compared to just 25 last year and a paltry three in 2007. 2009 will yield the highest number of bank closures since the savings and loan crisis circa 1992- when 120 collapsed. Closures peaked in 1989, when 534 banks were closed.
Some think up to 400 banks could fail in the next couple of years.
But this is small potatoes, really. WaMu fell last year, a $307 Billion operation. IndyMac too, a $10.7 Billion loss for the FDIC.
Alabama based Colonial Bank is the biggest failure this year, and among the largest in history with about $25 billion in assets- a $2.8 Billion loss for the FDIC.
I’m just marking the milestone. Almost triple digits. Numbers not seen in the better part of two decades.

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