(Source: Record, The; Bergen County, N.J.)

By RICHARD NEWMAN
New Jersey bankers expect to grin and bear another request for
cash from the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. to keep the reserve
fund that protects depositors afloat.
From their perspective, the premium prepayment option the FDIC
chose Tuesday to save the fund was not the worst of the rescue plans
being considered. The agency rejected options to hit banks with a
second special fee or to borrow from the Treasury Department.
The FDIC's five-member board voted unanimously Tuesday morning to
have lenders prepay more than three years of insurance premiums on
Dec. 30 to raise about $45 billion in sorely needed funds. The
agency is asking for public comments on the proposal and is expected
to issue a final ruling after the 30-day comment period.
Under the proposed payment plan, bankers can account for the
insurance premiums in such a way that the payments will not show up
all at once on income statements and take a big bite out of
earnings, as the special assessment did in the second quarter. The
special assessment paid by Valley National Bancorp in Wayne was $6.5
million, for example, and Paramus-based Hudson City Bancorp paid
$21.1 million, the banks said in July.
"There should be relief that [banks] won't be hit with another
special assessment that will hurt earnings," said James Silkensen,
co-president of the New Jersey Bankers Association.
"We're positive on it," said Matthew Breese, research associate
at Sterne Agee & Leach Inc.'s Portland, Maine, office. "The last
time around [regulators] compromised bank profitability at a bad
time."
The insurance fund will run a deficit as of today after 120 banks
failed in the past two years, the agency said.
Two New Jersey banks are among the 95 to fail so far this year --
Citizens Community Bank in Ridgewood and First BankAmericano in
Elizabeth. The hit to the FDIC insurance fund for those failures was
estimated at $18 million and $15 million, respectively. They were
the first New Jersey depositories to implode since Newark-based
Dollar Savings Bank failed in 2004.
The cost of the nationwide surge in bank failures is expected to
rise to $100 billion through 2013 by the FDIC's estimation.
The federal agency is required by law to rebuild the fund when
the reserve ratio, or the balance divided by insured deposits, falls
below 1.15 percent. It was 0.22 percent on June 30. The fund, which
had $10.4 billion at the end of the second quarter, is expected to
erase its deficit by 2012, the FDIC said.
From 1996 through 2006, a federal law allowed well-capitalized
banks to pay no insurance premiums, so no cushion was built when
times were good. In recent years, the FDIC returned to a system
where all institutions pay regular premiums.
Bankers have concerns about the prepayment plan.
"Will the [FDIC] pay interest?" is what Gerald Lipkin, Valley
National's chairman and chief executive officer wanted to know after
he heard on the radio of the regulator's decision. He said bank
earnings will be affected somewhat because money set aside for
insurance premiums is money that will not be used to make loans and
investments.
"That did come up," said John McWeeney, co-president of the New
Jersey Bankers Association, who along with other banking industry
representatives participated Tuesday afternoon in a conference call
in which FDIC Chairwoman Sheila Bair and other agency officials
fielded questions
"Their answer was, 'no,' and the reason was they were told by
their accountants if they paid interest it would be treated as a
loan and it would be charged to earnings," McWeeney said.
Gilles Gade, chairman of Cross River Bank in Teaneck, said he
would rather the FDIC turn to the Treasury for funding.
"The FDIC says they have the full faith of the U.S. government,"
said Gade. "So why do they have to keep coming to us? What if 100
more banks fail next year?"
***
(SIDEBAR)
Putting a premium on insurance
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. has been increasing banks'
deposit insurance premiums to try to keep up with the rising number
of bank failures.
* Amount raised in 2009 annual premiums: $12 billion.
* Amount raised in second-quarter special assessment: $5.6
billion.
* Amount to be raised this year in premium prepayments: $45
billion.
* Projected cost of bank failures through 2013: $100 billion.
Source: Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., as reported by Bloomberg
News
***
This article contains material from Bloomberg News. E-mail:
newman@northjersey.com
(c) 2009 Record, The; Bergen County, N.J.. Provided by ProQuest LLC. All rights Reserved.
A service of YellowBrix, Inc.