BENTONVILLE, Ark.(AP)
Federal regulators says they've closed ANB Financial
National Association banks after discovering "unsafe and
unsound" business practices there.
David Barr, a spokesman for the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.
says many customers served by the bank's nine locations had
accounts under $100,000, which will be fully insured by the
government. Barr says customers can continue to write checks and
draw money from ATMs through the weekend.
Barr says Pulaski Bank and Trust Co. agreed to assume control
over ANB Financial's bank locations, which will be open
Monday.
As of Jan. 31, federal regulators say ANB Financial had about
$2.1 billion in assets and $1.8 billion in total deposits.
It was the third closure this year of an FDIC-insured bank.
Douglass National Bank, a Missouri bank with $58.5 million in
assets, was shut in January; another Missouri institution with
assets of $18.7 million, Hume Bank, was shut down in March.
Both were dwarfed in size of ANB Financial, where regulators
found lax lending standards, mostly for construction and
development loans for projects in Utah, Idaho and Wyoming, as well
as Arkansas.
Observers have been watching for signs of bank distress
resulting from the mortgage crisis. Profits at federally insured
U.S. banks and thrifts plunged to a 16-year low in the fourth
quarter as institutions set aside a record-high amount to cover
losses from sour mortgages.
The FDIC is planning to beef up its staff, including temporarily
hiring up to 25 retired FDIC employees who worked in the
agency's more than 200-person division that handles failed
banks. They will handle an anticipated increase in bank
failures.
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