Sunday, August 22, 2010

Say What?: The ShoreBank 'Closure'

Mish shares this from the WSJ:

Regulators seized ShoreBank Corp. on Friday and agreed to sell assets to a team led by the community lender's executives and backed by several large U.S. financial firms.

The bank closure, among the 118 failures in the U.S. this year, caps months of uncertainty for a $2.16 billion Chicago bank that had ties to the Obama administration and deep roots on Chicago's South Side. The new institution will be known as Urban Partnership Bank and led by William Farrow, a former First Chicago Corp. executive who was ShoreBank's president and chief operating officer at the time of its failure.

The decision to sell to management is a rare move by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., which generally bars investors who own more than 10% of the failed bank from bidding on its assets. The FDIC also typically wants to know if bidders have "ever been an officer or director of a failed institution" and "participated in a material way in one or more transactions that caused a substantial loss to any such failed institution," according to an FDIC document.

The structure of the deal "is unusual," said Atlanta banking attorney Chip MacDonald.

The holding company will remain intact, according to a person familiar with the deal. Urban Partnership is backed by a consortium of large U.S. financial institutions, including Bank of AmericaCorp., Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Morgan Stanley.



This stinks to high heaven.

In the 1980's, Tennessee went through a bank scandal with Jake Butcher and his family and cronies. Jake went to the pen, spent seven years behind bars. Lost everything, had to rebuild his life from the ground up.

These folks get bailed, and handed the bank back.

Somebody owes Jake an apology. His only mistake was that he only stole millions, unlike the backers of Urban Partnership.

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