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Regulators Close Three More US Banks

Reuters

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  Washington - Regulators closed banks on Friday in Georgia and California, bringing the total of U.S. bank failures to nine this year.

Door of County Bank in Merced, California.

A community bank in Merced, California, County Bank, is one of four bank failures in California and Georgia announced on Friday by the FDIC. Twenty-five banks failed in 2008, and nine have failed so far in 2009. (Photo: Alison Yin / The Modesto Bee)

    The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp said County Bank of Merced, California, was closed by the California Department of Financial Institutions, and the FDIC was appointed as a receiver.

    County Bank, which operated 39 offices, had $1.7 billion in assets and $1.3 billion in deposits, according to regulators. Westamerica Bank of San Rafael, California, will assume all of the deposits of the failed bank.

    The FDIC said in a release the cost to the Deposit Insurance Fund would be $135 million.

    The FDIC also said it became a receiver of Culver City, California-based Alliance Bank and entered into an agreement with California Bank & Trust, a subsidiary of Zions Bancorp, to assume all the deposits.

    Alliance Bank was closed by the California Department of Financial Institutions. The bank had $1.14 billion in assets and $951 million in deposits. The cost to the Deposit Insurance Fund will be $206 million, the FDIC estimated.

    Regulators said on Friday a third firm, FirstBank Financial Services, had failed.

    All deposits of the McDonough, Georgia, bank will be assumed by Regions Bank of Birmingham, Alabama, said the FDIC, which took receivership of FirstBank.

    Regulators said FirstBank Financial Services had assets of about $337 million and $279 million in deposits at the end of 2008. The estimated cost to the Deposit Insurance Fund will be $111 million.

    In 2008, 25 banks were seized by officials, up from only three in 2007.

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    (Reporting by John Poirier and Christopher Doering; editing by Peter Cooney.)

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