The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. or FDIC, announced Friday the shuttering of one bank in Georgia, taking the count of total U.S. bank closures in 2012 to 39, after 92 in 2011 and the 157 bank closures in 2010. This is the ninth FDIC-insured institution to fail in Georgia this year.
The bank was closed on Friday by the regulators, with the assets of the failed banks beings assumed by other banks in FDIC assisted transactions. The FDIC estimates that the cost to the Deposit Insurance Fund or DIF, by the bank closure will be a total of $58.1 million.
St. Cloud, Minnesota-based Stearns Bank N.A. acquired the banking operations, including all the deposits, of Jasper, Georgia-based Jasper Banking Company, from the FDIC.
Jasper Banking was closed by the Georgia Department of Banking and Finance. As of March 31, 2012, the bank had about $216.7 million in total assets and $213.1 million in total deposits.
Stearns Bank agreed to purchase essentially all of the Jasper Banking's assets, while assuming all of the deposits of the failed bank. The FDIC and Stearns Bank also entered into a loss-share transaction on $106.0 million of Jasper Banking's assets.
The FDIC noted that all customers at the three branches of the failed bank can this evening and over the weekend access their money by writing checks or using ATM or debit cards. Checks drawn on the bank will continue to be processed, and loan customers should continue to make their payments as usual.
Customers of failed banks are protected, by the FDIC, which has insured bank deposits since the Great Depression, currently covering customer accounts up to $250,000. The FDIC insures deposits at the nation's 7,309 banks and savings associations.
Banks failures have continued at a relatively steady pace in mid-2012, though the size and number of closures are well below levels seen during the prior three years. At the same time last year, 61 banks had failed.
On an average, 13 banks have failed per month in 2010, with bank closures for 2011 averaging only nearly eight per month, and currently averaging just below six in 2012. The 92 bank closures in 2011 were down from 157 in 2010 and 140 in 2009, but nearly four times of the 25 bank failures in 2008. Only three banks failed in 2007. The highest and all time record for bank closures was in 1989 when 534 banks closed, followed by 181 bank failures in 1992.
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