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Saturday, April 26, 2014

Unofficial Problem Bank list declines to 513 Institutions

by Calculated Risk on 4/26/2014 07:53:00 AM

This is an unofficial list of Problem Banks compiled only from public sources.

Here is the unofficial problem bank list for April 25, 2014.

Changes and comments from surferdude808:

Today, the FDIC released an update on its enforcement action activities through March 2013 that contributed to many changes to the Unofficial Problem Bank List. For the week, there were nine removals and one addition that leave the list at 513 institutions with assets of $167.3 billion. A year ago, the list held 775 institutions with assets of $285.3 billion. During the month, the list declined from 538 to 513 institutions after 21 action terminations, five mergers, one failure, and two additions. Assets fell by $7.0 billion this month.

Actions were terminated against Finance Factors, Ltd., Honolulu, HI ($482 million); Oxford Bank & Trust, Oak Brook, IL ($446 million); Mohave State Bank Lake, Havasu City, AZ ($288 million Ticker: SBAZ); Mariners Bank, Edgewater, NJ ($249 million); Coast National Bank, San Luis Obispo, CA ($120 million Ticker: CTBP); State Central Bank, Bonaparte, IA ($71 million); The Home Building and Loan Company, Greenfield, OH ($38 million); and The First State Bank, Ryan, OK ($29 million).

Allendale County Bank, Fairfax, SC ($55 million) left the list by being the sixth failure of the year. With an initial loss estimate of 31.4 percent of assets, this is the most costly failure this year when measured as a share of assets. Since the on-set of the Great Recession, there have been 10 failures in South Carolina, which ranks 13th highest across all states. Moreover, failures in the FDIC Southeast's office based in Atlanta now total 187 across seven states with a loss estimate of $31.8 billion or nearly 29 percent of failed bank assets. Guess the high number of costly failures is what happens when warnings about the developing real estate bubble went unheeded. Many of us are waiting for the FDIC to publish a comprehensive post-mortem analysis on the regulatory failures of the last decade similar to what they published after the 1980s (see History of the 80s). Instead all they chose to publish is research on the state of community banking.

Added this week was New Jersey Community Bank, Freehold, NJ ($144 million). Also, the FDIC issued a Prompt Corrective Action order against Columbia Savings Bank, Cincinnati, OH ($38 million), which has been operating under a Cease & Desist order since February 2011.

Friday, April 25, 2014

Bank Failure #6 in 2014: Allendale County Bank, Fairfax, South Carolina

by Calculated Risk on 4/25/2014 05:35:00 PM

From the FDIC: Palmetto State Bank, Hampton, South Carolina, Assumes All of the Deposits of Allendale County Bank, Fairfax, South Carolina

As of December 31, 2013, Allendale County Bank had approximately $54.5 million in total assets and $51.0 million in total deposits. ... The FDIC estimates that the cost to the Deposit Insurance Fund (DIF) will be $17.1 million. ... Allendale County Bank is the sixth FDIC-insured institution to fail in the nation this year, and the first in South Carolina.
Does anyone remember bank failures? (this is the first failure since February!)

Vehicle Sales Forecasts: Solid in April

by Calculated Risk on 4/25/2014 01:52:00 PM

Auto sales were clearly impacted by the harsh winter weather in January and February, and then rebounded sharply in March. The rebound in March was predicted by Atif Mian and Amir Sufi Weakening Economy or Just Bad Winter?

Note: The automakers will report April vehicle sales on Thursday, May 1st.  Sales in March were at a 16.3 million seasonally adjusted annual rate (SAAR), and it appears sales in April will be above 16 million (SAAR) too.

Here are a few forecasts:

From J.D. Power: April New-Vehicle Retail Sales Showing Growth, With Consumer Spending at Record-Level Pace

New light-vehicle retail sales are expected to reach their highest levels for the month of April since 2005, according to a monthly sales forecast developed jointly by J.D. Power and LMC Automotive. ... Total light-vehicle sales in April 2014 are expected to reach 1.4 million units, a 4 percent increase from April 2013. [16.1 million SAAR]
Note: In April 2014, there was one more selling day than in April 2013 (26 days vs. 25 last year).

From Edmunds.com: Car Sales Settle into a Groove in April, Says Edmunds.com
Edmunds.com ... forecasts that 1,401,606 new cars and trucks will be sold in the U.S. in April for an estimated Seasonally Adjusted Annual Rate (SAAR) of 16.2 million. ... The forecast anticipates that the auto industry will enjoy its best April performance since dealers sold 1,444,587 vehicles in April 2006.
From TrueCar: April SAAR to Hit 16.2 Million Vehicles, According to TrueCar; 2014 New Vehicle Sales Expected to be up 8 Percent Year-Over-Year
New light vehicle sales in the U.S. (including fleet) are expected to reach 1,382,000 units, up 7.5 percent from April 2013 and down 10.0 percent from March 2014. ... Seasonally Adjusted Annualized Rate ("SAAR") of 16.2 million new vehicle sales is up 9.2 percent from April 2013 and down 0.5 percent over March 2014.

A Few Q1 GDP Forecasts

by Calculated Risk on 4/25/2014 11:01:00 AM

The BEA is scheduled to release the advance estimate for Q1 Gross Domestic Product (GDP) next week on Wednesday, April 30th. The consensus forecast is for real GDP to increase 1.1% in Q1 (from Q4, annualized). Here are a few forecasts:

From Kris Dawsey at Goldman Sachs:

Despite GDP likely growing at an anemic rate of around 1.0% in Q1, we remain optimistic about the rest of 2014. The core narrative for a pickup in growth this year has not changed. The fiscal drag is still lower, consumer spending should still strengthen, and business investment seems poised for a comeback. We see the weakness in Q1 as mainly driven by temporary factors, including a large drag from weather and inventories. The recent encouraging dataflow—with the exception of some of the housing numbers—appears consistent with our forecast for a near-term pickup. For the remainder of 2014, 3%+growth remains our baseline. ...

We forecast 1.8% growth in real final sales in Q1 (GDP growth excluding the effects of the volatile inventories category). ... Inventory investment was a significant positive contributor to growth in 2013, adding 3/4 percentage point to growth over the four quarters of the year. ... In Q1, the rate of real inventory accumulation appears to have moderated based on the incoming data on manufacturing, wholesale, and retail inventories, which will be a drag on Q1 GDP growth.
emphasis added
From Merrill Lynch:
We think the first estimate of 1Q GDP will show sluggish growth of only 1.2% qoq saar. A large part of the weakness owes to the cold weather which held back economic activity in the beginning of the year. Inventories are also being drawn down, albeit gradually, as businesses were caught with excess stockpiles. We estimate that inventories will slice 0.6pp from growth, matching the drag to the economy from a wider trade deficit. Residential investment is also likely to contract, reflecting the decline in home sales and sluggish housing starts. ... We think momentum will improve in the spring, setting the stage for a rebound in 2Q with growth above 3.0%.

For the first release of 1Q GDP, we are looking for relatively soft readings on key inflation metrics in this report. Specifically, we expect both the GDP deflator and the core PCE deflator to rise 1.3% qoq saar for 1Q.
From Nomura:
Disregard the backward-looking Q1 GDP, April data should show the recovery taking off. ... Weather weighed on economic activity early in the year. This should be reflected in a markedly slower pace of GDP growth in Q1. We expect GDP to grow at an annualized rate of 0.9% in Q1, compared with 2.6% in Q4.
And on the April employment report to be released next Friday, the consensus is for 210 thousand payroll jobs added with Merrill forecasting 215 thousand and Nomura forecasting 225 thousand.

Final April Consumer Sentiment at 84.1

by Calculated Risk on 4/25/2014 09:58:00 AM

Consumer Sentiment
Click on graph for larger image.

The final Reuters / University of Michigan consumer sentiment index for April increased to 84.1 from the March reading of 80.0, and was up from the preliminary April reading of 82.6.

This was above the consensus forecast of 82.5. Sentiment has generally been improving following the recession - with plenty of ups and downs - and a big spike down when Congress threatened to "not pay the bills" in 2011, and another smaller spike down last October and November due to the government shutdown.

I expect to see sentiment at post-recession highs very soon.