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US bank failures hit 100 for year

Business Materials 24 October 2009 07:51 (UTC +04:00)
The number of US bank failures this year has hit 100 after US federal regulators shut down the Florida-based Partners Bank, BBC reported.
US bank failures hit 100 for year

The number of US bank failures this year has hit 100 after US federal regulators shut down the Florida-based Partners Bank, BBC reported.

The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), which controls the banking sector, has taken over the bank that held $68.7m (£42.1m) in assets.

More US banks have now failed this year than in any year since 1992.

The number is expected to rise as banks continue to suffer from the bad loans that precipitated the financial crisis.

Savers' money is not in danger, as the FDIC, which is backed by the US government, insures deposits at failed banks for up to $250,000 per account.

Many of the banks that have failed have been small community banks, which were badly hit when loans to individuals and small businesses were not repaid after the onset of the crisis.

These were primarily deposit-taking banks, rather than investment banks that deal in complicated derivative products.

But these investment banks have also been hit hard, with the most high profile victim being Lehman Brothers, which collapsed in September last year.

Another of Wall Street's most famous banks, Merrill Lynch, was saved from collapse when it was bought out by Bank of America at the beginning of this year.

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