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Business Strategy: Looking at 2009 U.S. Bank Failures and the Changing U.S. Banking LandscapePublished by: IDC Published: Feb. 11, 2010 - 17 Pages Table of ContentsTable of Contents Financial Insights Opinion In This Report Situation Overview Looking BackBank Failures Through the YearsBank Failures by NumbersImpact on FDICBank Failures, Fed Fund, and GDP — Any Relation?The Cost RatioFuture Outlook Managing RiskEssential Guidance Actions for Financial InstitutionsActions for VendorsLearn More Related ResearchSynopsisFigure: U.S. Bank Failures in the Top 10 Years for Failures, 1934–2009 Figure: U.S. Bank Failures, 2001–2009 Figure: U.S. Bank Failures by State, 2009 Figure: U.S. Bank Failures by Affected State, 2009 Figure: Number of U.S. Banks by Asset Size, January 2000–September 2009 Figure: FDIC Insurance Fund Outlay Share, 1Q09–4Q09 Figure: Cost of Bank Failures to the FDIC Insurance Fund by State, 2009 Figure: Cost of Bank Failures to the FDIC Insurance Fund by Affected State, 2009 ($M) Figure: Number of U.S. Problem Institutions Insured by the FDIC, 2005–2009 Figure: Reported FDIC Insurance Fund Balance, 2005–2009 Figure: U.S. Bank Failures, Federal Fund Interest Rate, and GDP Growth, 1955–2009 Figure: Bank Failure Cost Ratio Median by Asset Size, 2009 Figure: Bank Failure Cost Ratios, 1Q09–4Q09 AbstractThis Financial Insights report looks at the history of bank failures, with particular attention paid to the last decade in terms of the numbers and makeup of financial institutions and how the recent failures have changed the landscape. Bankers are certainly glad the first decade of the new century has drawn to a close. The period has been marked by some of the most challenging times seen in our lifetimes. However, despite all that could have happened, the system appears to have weathered the storm. "While the number of institutions worldwide will continue to shrink," says Marc DeCastro, research manager at IDC Financial Insights, "it appears that the pace of failures is slowing and that the worst appears to be behind us. That said, numerous threats still exist that could derail the banking system, including interest rate risk, inflation, double-dip recession, commercial real estate defaults, and more declines within the real estate market. However, while these threats exist, each by itself would only have a marginal effect on the overall banking universe; it would take another perfect storm of conditions to repeat 2008-2009." Get Full Details About This Report >> |
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