BFF=Bank Failure Friday 2010

There was a meeting today where I work that was focused on local banking issues. Central Oregon area.

As I sat there biting my tongue as it was not my place to voice an opinion I listened to a bank officer describe to the group their meetings, in DC, with our Sen's Merkley and Wyden (I apologize for my state electing them, we've been invaded) in which they are trying to put together a TARP type bailout for regional banks that are in trouble. A way to stop the closures by the FDIC.

Insanity...

This particular bank drank more than it's share of cheap FRN's during the housing bubble with easy mortgages and real estate developer loans. My area just had record foreclosures last month. I'm sure the bank is upside down on lots of property. They have been served a Cease and Desist demand by the FDIC and last I saw their Texas ratio was at 91.

Talking about bailing out smaller banks with SmallBank-TARP? This particular bank had poor business practices and lack of foresight probably clouded by greed.

Epic fail.
 
G,

Thank you for posting it last night. We didn't get home until after 12:30 last night.

Merk, thank you for your information. The losses are out there and the FDIC is just postponing by closing only one small bank yesterday.
 
Let's see if they do more than one bank tonight.

let's see if they do any at all:eek:

bank holiday coming later in the year? They are in a massive hiring mode right now for FDIC employees; could be they're waiting for their ranks to swell before they go on a closin' spree
 
let's see if they do any at all:eek:

bank holiday coming later in the year? They are in a massive hiring mode right now for FDIC employees; could be they're waiting for their ranks to swell before they go on a closin' spree

DC has been shut down for the better part of the last week due to record snow. I assume the FDIC was included. Probably just no time to initiate any closures this week.
 
DC has been shut down for the better part of the last week due to record snow. I assume the FDIC was included. Probably just no time to initiate any closures this week.

do their regional offices have to get the go-ahead from Bair?
 
do their regional offices have to get the go-ahead from Bair?

This is the Feds we're talking about here. They don't take a shit without approval from DC. ;)

But seriously, I don't know for sure. Seems like a logical explanation if there's no closures announced this week.
 
Zip for the week. I wonder what they do if they still have snow a month from now?
 
Marco Community bank in Marco Island, Florida. This is a well to do community. I wonder what the cost to the FDIC will be.
 
Thank you for updating the list. We came over to our sons house last night and I did not get time.

Marco Bank looks to cost the FDIC 38.1M from their press release. Likely will cost more.
 
Just a few hours from that time again. I saw one article this am. saying we could see up to 1k banks go under. The guy was saying 300 to 400 this year. The FDIC needs to swing into high gear to get that many done this year.
 
Just a few hours from that time again. I saw one article this am. saying we could see up to 1k banks go under. The guy was saying 300 to 400 this year. The FDIC needs to swing into high gear to get that many done this year.


They are... look at this new program by the FDIC... Mortgage underwater at a failed FDIC insured bank? Coming Soon... reduced mortgage principles and 40 year mortgages, courtesy of the FDIC's Bank Fees and the new Reserve US Treasury "Rainy Day Bankroll" . Damn, time to move your mortgage contract to a failed bank. This is ridiculous... but that's because Sheila Bair and the FDIC won't have the money for all the bank failures due to MBS/CMBC/real estate related.

FDIC to Test Principal Reduction for Underwater Borrowers

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dy...02/25/AR2010022505817.html?hpid=moreheadlines

By Renae Merle
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, February 26, 2010


The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. is developing a program to test whether cutting the mortgage balances of distressed borrowers who owe significantly more than their homes are worth is an effective method for saving homeowners from foreclosure.


The program would be aimed at a growing population of homeowners who are underwater on their loans, estimated at more than 20 percent of borrowers, or 11 million homeowners. Economists consider these borrowers among the most vulnerable to foreclosure, and some industry officials worry that more of them will simply walk away from their mortgages, or "strategically default," rather than spend a decade or more trying to regain positive equity.
Under the FDIC program, borrowers would be eligible for a reduction in their mortgage balances if they kept up their payments on the mortgage over a long period. The performance of those borrowers would be compared with borrowers given more traditional mortgage relief packages, such as those that cut the interest rate on loans.


"We're thinking about it in terms of earned principal forgiveness. If you stay current on your mortgage, you would earn a principal reduction. It would only be for loans significantly underwater," said FDIC Chairman Sheila C. Bair.
The program would have a small reach and apply only to loans acquired from a failed bank seized by the FDIC. That would be less than 1 percent of mortgages currently outstanding. The initiative could be launched later this year, FDIC officials said, but a date has not been set.


The effort adds to the growing debate about whether principal reductions should become a larger part of mortgage-relief efforts. Another government program, known as Hope for Homeowners, sought to reduce mortgage balances of underwater borrowers but has floundered since its launch, and legislation to allow bankruptcy judges to cut the principal on a borrower's loan failed in the Senate last year.
Treasury officials have said they are considering proposals to address negative equity but have not offered any specifics. Under the federal foreclosure relief program known as Making Home Affordable, borrowers can receive up to $5,000 to lower their loan balance if they keep up their payments. But that amount would make only a small dent in the problem facing millions of homeowners, housing advocates said. During the fourth quarter of last year, the average underwater borrower owed $70,700 more than the value of their home, according to First American CoreLogic data released this week.
"Whether homeowners have equity in their home is a key predictor of whether they will default on their mortgage or redefault on a loan modification," said Julia Gordon, policy director of the Center for Responsible Lending. "That's why any serious plan to prevent foreclosures has to include principal reduction for those who owe more than their home is worth."
Lenders have been reluctant to cut the principal balance owed by distressed borrowers, arguing that it would encourage homeowners to become delinquent even if they can afford their mortgage. Instead, the industry has focused on providing mortgage relief by lowering a borrower's interest rate or extending the terms of a mortgage to 40 years. In some cases, a portion of the principal balance is put into a second mortgage that does not have to be paid off until the borrower sells the home or refinances.

Yet, some in the industry have started to relent. During the third quarter of 2009, 13 percent of loan modifications included a reduction in the borrower's principal, according to a report by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency. That was up from about 10 percent during the second quarter.
Wells Fargo, for example, has increasingly used principal reductions for homeowners with a risky mortgage, known as "option" ARMs. These loans, also called "pick-a-pay" mortgages, allow borrowers to choose how much to pay each month. Many of these borrowers pay less than the amount of interest due, and the unpaid interest is tacked on to the balance. These loans also tend to be concentrated in places where home prices soared and then plunged precipitously, leaving many homeowners significantly underwater.

Wells Fargo, which acquired many of these loans as part of its 2008 purchase of Wachovia, says it forgave $2.6 billion in borrowers' principal balances for these types of mortgages last year. But even when principal reduction is offered, it will not necessarily be enough to bring a borrower back to full equity, company officials said.



"It needs to be done on a case-by-case basis, either in certain geography types, or with certain customer types," said Mike Heid, co-president of Wells Fargo Home Mortgage. "I do not believe that you can do a programmatic-wide or country-wide principal forgiveness [program]. You end up with many problems if you try to do this across the board."
 
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H,

I think it is going to be commercial real estate defaults that are going to cause most of the smaller banks to be taken over vs. houses from what I have been reading. Time will tell.
 
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