![]() Subscribe to Dollars & Sense magazine. Recent articles related to the financial crisis. In Other News: Three More Banks Go DownAnother one of those stories that would normally be front page news for a week but barely registers these days:Two California thrifts (Downey Savings & Loan and PFF Bank & Trust) and one Georgia thrift (Community Bank of Loganville) were closed by regulators on Friday, the highest number of bank closures in a single day since the S&L crisis of the late 1980s. All the banks were put into receivership by the FDIC which then sold all the deposits. Bo depositors lost money, however the FDIC deposit insurance fund is on the hook for an estimated $2.3 billion total for all three banks. So far this year, 22 U.S. banks have failed, the largest being the $307 billion Washington Mutual. All the banks failed due to massive lending in the sub-prime mortgage sector that have since gone sour. [As we mentioned in a post a few days ago, you can follow the bank closings yourself by visiting this page at the FDIC's website regularly.] Labels: bank consolidation, bank failures, FDIC, WAMU, Washington Mutual Tax Breaks for Banks Buying BanksWe've reported on the fact that many of the banks receiving bailout money are using it to buy other banks, instead of using it to increase lending. If you thought that the main point of the bailout was to reverse the credit freeze, there's plenty of evidence that the Treasury Department actually intended it to spur further consolidation in the banking sector.One more bit of evidence: an article in today's New York Times reports that the day before Congress passed the $700 billion bailout, Treasury changed tax rules and "said that a bank was entitled to use all the losses related to troubled loans in a bank that it was purchasing, thus reducing its tax bill." The article goes on: The break, which can be applied to deals made years ago, before the financial crisis began, will hand banks at least $110 billion, according to Robert Willens, an independent tax and accounting analyst.The department's inspector general is reviewing the rule change, in response to complaints from members of Congress who say that the rule change was improper. It may well have been improper, but it sure lends credence to the notion that bank consolidation was part of Paulson's agenda all along. Here's how much of a deal some banks are getting, according to the Times: Several banks that have recently announced acquisitions will benefit from the tax break, which helps offset their own steep losses in ailing mortgages. Wells Fargo will be able to use $19.4 billion in losses at Wachovia, which it is buying for $15.1 billion.Read the rest of the article (it's quite short, and was buried in the business section). Labels: bailout, bank consolidation, financial crisis, Henry Paulson, Treasury Department |