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Monday, May 11, 2009

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Small banks hurt by housing bust

A BankUnited branch

Small banks in places like Florida are seeing their capital wiped out due to the housing bust. Dan Grech reports.

A BankUnited branch (halbachdietz.com)

More on Housing - Real Estate, America's Financial Crisis

TEXT OF STORY

We've heard so much about stress test this and stress test that concerning the nation's 19 biggest banks. But what about the smaller guys? And by smaller, I mean those that are just a hair short of really, really big. Those regional banks -- many of which are in Florida -- have seen their capital wiped out by a Sunshine State housing bust. From Miami, Marketplace's Dan Grech reports.


DAN GRECH: Foreclosures and falling house prices have already driven a slew of construction firms in Florida out of business. Florida banks could be next.

Jack McCabe runs McCabe Research, a company that tracks the South Florida lending market. He says Florida could face a dozen regional bank failures in the second half of the year.

JACK MCCABE: If you look at the banks with the largest real estate exposures in their portfolios, that's where the trouble lies.

Florida banks on average have double the level of bad loans compared to banks nationwide. It's second to only Georgia in the number of troubled banks.

BankUnited is Florida's biggest bank, with $14 billion dollars in assets. But its capital is wiped out by real estate losses. It's under orders from the feds to find a buyer or merge.

In Miami, I'm Dan Grech for Marketplace.

Comments

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  • By Tom Shillock

    05/11/2009

    The 19 largest banks get special treatment from the Obama regime, FED, FDIC etc. because of their enormous campaign bribes (aka 'contributions'). Regional and local banks suffer from federal largesse because they are not similarly members in good standing of the political donor class. Worse, the 19 zombie banks that may need anywhere from $2 trillion to $3.6 trillion to be bailed out are not lending. So while the Kabuki theater of "stress tests" tries to create the illusion of solvency in order to boost confidence until the economy rises, the economy is not rising in part precisely because the government is not forcing them to lend. Indeed, the financial oligarchs (cf. Simon Johnson's The Quiet Coup) are stalling recovery by raising interest rates on credit cards and blocking foreclosure workouts.
    See: Collateral Damage and Double Standards
    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/robert-kuttner/collateral-damage-and-dou_b_201373.html

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