The US banking system will lose some 1,000 institutions over the next two years, said John Kanas, whose private equity firm bought BankUnited of Florida in May.In other words, the small banks die, their assets get eaten up, we pay for the mess and the larger banks get bigger. But that's the way the forced consolidation of the financial industry rolls.“We’ve already lost 81 this year,” he told CNBC. “The numbers are climbing every day. Many of these institutions nobody’s ever heard of. They're smaller companies.”
Failed banks tend to be smaller and private, which exacerbates the problem for small business borrowers, said Kanas, who became CEO of BankUnited when his firm bought the bank and is the former chairman and CEO of North Fork bank.
“Government money has propped up the very large institutions as a result of the stimulus package,” he said. “There’s really very little lifeline available for the small institutions that are suffering.”
This comes at a time when the FDIC has established new rules on bank sales. Private equity, for instance, would have to hold double the capital of their competitors in order to buy such an institution, said Kanas.
“This will have somewhat of a chilling effect on our participation,” he said. “As a result of having to keep higher capital levels, we’ll see lower prices coming from that sector.”
If all printers were determined not to print anything till they were sure it would offend nobody, there would be very little printed. -- Benjamin Franklin
Thursday, August 27, 2009
This Could Possibly Be A Problem
If even the financial guys are saying there will be a massive numbers of bank closings, then there's a problem.
http://www.fdic.gov/bank/individual/failed/banklist.html
ReplyDeleteNot ALL of the Failed and Sinking Banks have been SMALL - see the FDIC Failed Bank List linked above - Guaranty Bank, Colonial Bank and IndyMac Bank were HUGE Fails - in the BILLIONS of $$$$.