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FDIC Needs Put Pinch on Small Banks
Sunday, November 01, 2009 4:52 PM


(Source: The Fresno Bee)trackingBy Tim Sheehan, The Fresno Bee, Calif.

Nov. 1--Just when the local economy could use a shot in the arm, banks large and small are being forced to divert money to shore up the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.

For institutions like Security First Bank, a one-branch community bank in Fresno, it means hundreds of thousands of dollars that now won't be available for small-business loans, car loans or mortgages -- the lifeblood of the local economy.

"Many of our loans are to small businesses," said Robert Hemsath, Security First's CEO. "And those are the ones who need credit now more than ever."

More banks have already failed in 2009 than in any year since the savings-and-loan crisis of the early 1990s. There are 106 so far, and more are expected.

The FDIC takes a hit for each closure -- sometimes in the millions of dollars -- because it insures deposits.

FDIC officials predict their Deposit Insurance Fund reserve -- which comes from premiums paid by banks -- will be in the red by the time the agency reports its third-quarter results.

Failed banks already have cost the insurance fund nearly $27 billion in 2009, with hundreds more at risk of collapsing by the end of 2010.

Bankers are facing two extra charges as a result:

Advance payment of deposit-insurance premiums. These usually are paid quarterly, but banks now must pay three years of assessments in advance, by the end of this year.

A special assessment, over and above regular quarterly premiums, was levied in May.

The prepaid assessments would bolster the FDIC reserve by about $45 billion -- enough, FDIC officials say, to cover expected bank failures into 2014.

"Let's say it's a million bucks for a bank our size," Rick Whitsell, CEO of Fresno First Bank, said of the prepayment. "That takes a million bucks out of our ability to invest and make loans here locally."

Each bank's regular FDIC assessment is confidential and is based on a combination of factors, including assets, deposits and risks.

Security First's Hemsath said his bank's regular FDIC assessments this year came to about $200,000. "That's a very large number to us, but it's not something we can't handle," he said.

If that figure holds steady, it means Hemsath's bank must pay the FDIC about $600,000 in a lump sum by Dec. 31 to cover the next three years.

In Security First's overall loan portfolio of some $76 million, $600,000 may not seem like much. But among its small-business loans, the majority are for less than $250,000, with some below $100,000, bank reports show. That means the advance assessment could potentially deny as many as a half-dozen borrowers.




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