First Priority becomes eighth bank failure this year!
Insured deposits of small Florida bank assumed by
SunTrust
SAN FRANCISCO, Kalifornia - August 1, 2008 - First Priority
Bank was shut down by regulators on Friday, making the small Florida lender the
eighth bank failure in the U.S. so far this year.
Banks agreed to take on the deposits of First Priority, the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation said in a statement late Friday. The six branches
of First Priority will reopen on Monday as branches of SunTrust, it added.
At the end of June, First Priority had $259 million in
assets and total deposits of $227 million. There were roughly $13 million in
uninsured deposits held in about 840 accounts that potentially exceeded
insurance limits, the FDIC estimated. However, this amount will probably change
after the FDIC gets more information from customers.
SunTrust also bought about $42 million of the failed bank's
assets. The FDIC sold another $14 million of First Priority's assets to LNV
Corporation, a unit of Beal Bank Nevada. The FDIC said it will keep the
remaining assets and sell them later.
This bank failure will cost the FDIC's insurance fund $72
million, the regulator estimated.
"Despite the challenges facing all banks today, the
current environment also presents opportunities for strong institutions like
SunTrust to expand our client base," James Wells III, chief executive of
SunTrust, said in a statement.
The number of bank failures is expected to surge in
coming years as the credit crunch slows economic growth and hammers some
lenders that grew too fast during the recent real-estate boom.