(Source: Tulsa World)

By STEPHEN BERNARD
NEW YORK -- Regulators shut down two banking units of Irwin
Financial Corp. on Friday, marking the 93rd and 94th failures this
year of federally insured banks.
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. was appointed receiver of
Louisville, Ky.-based Irwin Union Bank FSB and Columbus, Ind.-based
Irwin Union Bank and Trust Co.
As of Aug. 31, Irwin Bank FSB had $493 million in assets and $441
million in deposits, while Irwin Union Bank and Trust had $2.7
billion in assets and $2.1 billion in deposits.
The FDIC said Friday both bank's deposits will be assumed by
First Financial Bank in Hamilton, Ohio.
First Financial also agreed to purchase essentially all of the
two banks' assets. The FDIC and First Financial Bank reached a loss-
share agreement covering about $2.5 billion of the two banks'
combined assets.
The 27 combined branches of Irwin Union Bank FSB and Irwin Union
Bank and Trust will be reopened beginning Saturday as branches of
First Financial Bank.
The FDIC estimates the failure of the two banks will cost its
insurance fund about $850 million.
Hundreds more banks are expected to fail in the next few years
largely because of souring loans for commercial real estate. The
number of banks on the FDIC's confidential "problem list" jumped to
416 at the end of June from 305 in the first quarter. That's the
highest number since June 1994, during the savings-and-loan crisis.
Last month, Guaranty Bank became the second-largest U.S. bank to
fail this year after the big Texas lender was shut down and most of
its operations sold, at a loss of billions of dollars for the
government, to a major Spanish bank. The failure, the 10th-largest
in U.S. history, is expected to cost the insurance fund an estimated
$3 billion.
The sale of most of Austin, Texas-based Guaranty's operations to
the U.S. division of Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria SA, the No. 2
bank in Spain, marked the first time a foreign bank has bought a
failed American bank during the current financial crisis.
The insurance fund has been so depleted by the epidemic of
collapsing financial institutions that some analysts have warned it
could sink into the red by the end of this year.
The FDIC board will meet at the end of the month, when it is
expected to discuss several options to replenish the fund.
Congress in May more than tripled the amount the FDIC could
borrow from the Treasury if needed to restore the insurance fund, to
$100 billion from $30 billion.
Originally published by STEPHEN BERNARD Associated Press.
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