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News Code
: TTime-
210315
Print Date :
Sunday, December 20, 2009
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First Federal Bank of California and Imperial Capital Bank of La Jolla closed
Two more loss-battered Southern California banks were shut down by regulators Friday and immediately sold to two of the largest financial institutions based in the region.
Stung by defaults on tricky adjustable mortgages, 80-year-old First Federal Bank of California was closed by federal savings and loan regulators, with its 39 branches to reopen today as part of OneWest Bank.
Pasadena-based OneWest, created early this year from the ashes of collapsed home lender IndyMac Bank, agreed to assume all of First Federal's deposits, so no customers will lose money, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. said.
In Friday's other California failure, Imperial Capital Bank of La Jolla, rocked by troubled loans for apartments and commercial mortgages, was dealt off by the FDIC to City National Bank of Los Angeles, which is emerging as one of the survivors of the banking industry's near-meltdown.
Like OneWest, City National agreed to assume all of the acquired bank's deposits, even amounts that exceeded the FDIC's caps on insurance coverage.
Imperial Capital's nine branches -- six in California, one in Maryland and two in Nevada -- are to reopen Monday as City National offices.
City National was the largest commercial bank with headquarters in Southern California until Pasadena's East West Bank agreed last month to take over a failed rival in the Chinese American niche, San Francisco's United Commercial Bank. That deal beefed up East West, giving it $19 billion in assets to City National's $18 billion.
The latest combinations gives City National more than $21 billion in assets and OneWest about $24 billion, although such comparisons matter little given the fact that the acquirers will have to spend much of their time downsizing by working through portfolios of distressed loans.
(Source: Latimes)
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