>From Caroline Botsford:

Hello, Mark, yes, they are closing the banks. Our 
financial system is being reorganized, wouldn't
you agree? Aren't central bankers simply wringing 
in all the money to retool our banking system
into a cashless society? There was something on 
the news earlier this week on WorldForum, a
news program on PBS, where the President of 
Estonia was promoting Estonia's new social 
experiment: a cashless society. See if you can 
find it on the PBS website. It is clear to me that
the world governments are preparing to move in 
this direction. They're already fine tuning it
before they introduce it worldwide. Watching the 
market these days, I am "comforted" so long
as Congress keeps dishing out the $billions 
because I see it as "buying" time, delaying the
inevitable march toward the new world economy. It 
is when they "stop" dealing out the $billions
that I begin to worry!

Best,
CB


----- Original Message -----
From: <mailto:mark.mil...@nyu.edu>Mark Crispin Miller
To: 
<mailto:newsfromunderground@googlegroups.com>newsfromunderground@googlegroups.com
Sent: Friday, July 03, 2009 1:06 PM
Subject: [MCM] 52 US banks closed so far this year

U.S. regulators close seven banks
Fri Jul 3, 2009 12:15am EDT
By JoAnne Allen

<http://www.reuters.com/article/ousiv/idUSTRE56165S20090703>http://www.reuters.com/article/ousiv/idUSTRE56165S20090703

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. bank regulators 
closed seven institutions on Thursday, including 
six banks in Illinois controlled by one family 
and a small bank in Dallas, bringing the total 
number of U.S. bank failures to 52 so far this 
year.

Founders Bank, of Worth, Illinois, was the 
largest of the financial institutions seized. The 
Federal Deposit Insurance Corp said Founders had 
$962.5 million in assets and approximately $848.9 
million in deposits.

The PrivateBank and Trust Co of Chicago (PVTB.O: 
Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) will assume 
all of the deposits of Founders Bank.

The failure is expected to cost the FDIC deposit 
insurance fund an estimated $188.5 million.

The six failed Illinois banks were all controlled 
by one family and followed a similar business 
model, the FDIC said. The failures were related 
to losses that included soured investments in 
collateralized debt obligations.

According to a website of one of the Illinois 
banks, they were part of the Campbell Group of 
privately owned banks.

Also on Thursday, the FDIC ordered City Bank 
(CTBK.O: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz), 
of Lynnwood, Washington, to cease and desist 
"operating with management whose policies and 
practices are detrimental" to the bank and 
"jeopardize" deposits.

The FDIC said the community bank operated with 
inadequate capital, inadequate loan valuation 
reserve and a large volume of poor quality loans.

Under the cease and desist agreement signed with 
the regulator and the state of Washington, City 
Bank must produce a plan to reduce its 
nonperforming loans and foreclosed real estate. 
The bank is also required to reduce the level of 
brokered deposits, City Bank said.

The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp said the other 
bank closings in Illinois on Thursday were:

-- First National Bank of Danville, with assets 
of $166 million and total deposits of 
approximately $147 million. First Financial Bank, 
of Terre Haute, Indiana will assume all the 
deposits of First National. The estimated cost of 
the failure to the FDIC is $24 million.

-- Elizabeth State Bank in Elizabeth. It had 
total assets of $55.5 million and total deposits 
of approximately $50.4 million. Galena State Bank 
and Trust of Illinois, a unit of Heartland 
Financial (HTLF.O: Quote, Profile, Research, 
Stock Buzz) assumes all of the deposits of 
Elizabeth State Bank. Cost of the failure to the 
FDIC estimated to be $11.2 million.

-- Rock River Bank in Oregon, Illinois. Rock 
River had total assets of $77 million and total 
deposits of approximately $75.8 million. The 
Harvard State Bank, of Harvard, Illinois, will 
assume all of the deposits. The failure will cost 
the FDIC an estimated $27.6 million.

-- John Warner Bank of Clinton. John Warner had 
total assets of $70 million and total deposits of 
about $64 million. State Bank of Lincoln is 
assuming all of the John Warner deposits. The 
cost to the FDIC is estimated to be $10 million.

-- First State Bank of Winchester. It had total 
assets of $36 million and total deposits of about 
$34 million. The First National Bank of 
Beardstown, Illinois, will assume the First State 
Deposits. The FDIC estimates the cost to the 
agency will be $6 million.

Regulators also closed Millennium State Bank of 
Texas in Dallas. Millennium had total assets of 
approximately $118 million and total deposits of 
$115 million, the FDIC said.

State Bank of Texas will assume all of the 
deposits of Millennium. The failure of Millennium 
will cost the FDIC an estimated $47 million.

The FDIC insures up to $250,000 per account at member institutions.

The agency has a running tally of problem banks 
that its examiners closely monitor. At the end of 
the first quarter, 305 unidentified financial 
institutions were on that list.

The FDIC has faced a sharp uptick in failed banks 
as loan portfolios continue to deteriorate 
following the bursting of the housing bubble. In 
2008 there were 25 bank failures, and just three 
in 2007.

(Additional reporting by Karey Wutkowski; Editing 
by Richard Chang, Tim Dobbyn, Gary Hill and Eric 
Walsh)

© Thomson Reuters 2009. All rights reserved. 
Users may download and print extracts of content 
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