It can never hurt to shop around. There's a bank out there that'll work with him I'm sure.
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Infinity Art Glass - Fantastic local artist and Shocker fan
RIP Guy Always A Shocker
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Since my wife is a banker I asked her about the problem. She indicates that most banks have money to loan and they know that they are being asked to make loans. However, another government agency (FDIC) is basically cracking down on higher risk loans and unsecured debt to the extent that they have to significantly increase their loan loss reserves and face the FDIC examiners to explain any questionable to the FDIC loans (not questionable to he bank loan officers). This focus of the FDIC is primarily on smaller banks that they examine and not on the big boys that caused the problems in the first place. As a friend of mine says they are in a Catch 20-20 situation. Damned if they do and damned if they don't except that if they do it could cost them more than if they don't.
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Originally posted by engrshockSince my wife is a banker I asked her about the problem. She indicates that most banks have money to loan and they know that they are being asked to make loans. However, another government agency (FDIC) is basically cracking down on higher risk loans and unsecured debt to the extent that they have to significantly increase their loan loss reserves and face the FDIC examiners to explain any questionable to the FDIC loans (not questionable to he bank loan officers). This focus of the FDIC is primarily on smaller banks that they examine and not on the big boys that caused the problems in the first place. As a friend of mine says they are in a Catch 20-20 situation. Damned if they do and damned if they don't except that if they do it could cost them more than if they don't.
Of all the federal regulators, the FDIC has probably performed most capably during the subprime fiasco. It has performed as well as it has because it has a fairly narrow, well-defined mandate — insuring Americans’ bank deposits — and because banks backed by the FDIC are obliged to play by its rules. It makes sense that the insurer of depository institutions is also their regulator: Because the FDIC is on the hook for bank deposits, it has a good financial incentive to manage banks’ risks intelligently. They should crack down on “risky” loans.
That said – it does put smaller banks in a difficult spot in certain quarters – e.g. they get characterized as the bad actor.
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Originally posted by MaggieOriginally posted by engrshockSince my wife is a banker I asked her about the problem. She indicates that most banks have money to loan and they know that they are being asked to make loans. However, another government agency (FDIC) is basically cracking down on higher risk loans and unsecured debt to the extent that they have to significantly increase their loan loss reserves and face the FDIC examiners to explain any questionable to the FDIC loans (not questionable to he bank loan officers). This focus of the FDIC is primarily on smaller banks that they examine and not on the big boys that caused the problems in the first place. As a friend of mine says they are in a Catch 20-20 situation. Damned if they do and damned if they don't except that if they do it could cost them more than if they don't.
Of all the federal regulators, the FDIC has probably performed most capably during the subprime fiasco. It has performed as well as it has because it has a fairly narrow, well-defined mandate — insuring Americans’ bank deposits — and because banks backed by the FDIC are obliged to play by its rules. It makes sense that the insurer of depository institutions is also their regulator: Because the FDIC is on the hook for bank deposits, it has a good financial incentive to manage banks’ risks intelligently. They should crack down on “risky” loans.
That said – it does put smaller banks in a difficult spot in certain quarters – e.g. they get characterized as the bad actor.Infinity Art Glass - Fantastic local artist and Shocker fan
RIP Guy Always A Shocker
Carpenter Place - A blessing to many young girls/women
ICT S.O.S - Great local cause fighting against human trafficking
Wartick Insurance Agency - Saved me money with more coverage.
Save Shocker Sports - A rallying cry
Comment
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Originally posted by MaggieOriginally posted by engrshockSince my wife is a banker I asked her about the problem. She indicates that most banks have money to loan and they know that they are being asked to make loans. However, another government agency (FDIC) is basically cracking down on higher risk loans and unsecured debt to the extent that they have to significantly increase their loan loss reserves and face the FDIC examiners to explain any questionable to the FDIC loans (not questionable to he bank loan officers). This focus of the FDIC is primarily on smaller banks that they examine and not on the big boys that caused the problems in the first place. As a friend of mine says they are in a Catch 20-20 situation. Damned if they do and damned if they don't except that if they do it could cost them more than if they don't.
Of all the federal regulators, the FDIC has probably performed most capably during the subprime fiasco. It has performed as well as it has because it has a fairly narrow, well-defined mandate — insuring Americans’ bank deposits — and because banks backed by the FDIC are obliged to play by its rules. It makes sense that the insurer of depository institutions is also their regulator: Because the FDIC is on the hook for bank deposits, it has a good financial incentive to manage banks’ risks intelligently. They should crack down on “risky” loans.
That said – it does put smaller banks in a difficult spot in certain quarters – e.g. they get characterized as the bad actor.
Further another form of income is being lost to banks with the new laws passed with respect to overdraft protection. Since the limits are placed on the overdrafts that can be charged many banks will just drop the coverage and let the checks and debit card bounce as they may rather than take the risk of deadbeats not paying their overdrawn accounts. There were abuses by some banks of the overdraft charges but it is going to affect all banks and people who do not keep proper monies in their account. the overdraft charges are basically a charge for using unsecured lines of credit until they did get money into their account. Now they will just get to pay more returned check fees or have more transactions declined. Perhaps that is at it should be.
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engrshock,
I am not sure we disagree on much. As an aside, I simply don’t have a big problem with the existence of the FDIC (not saying you do either). Without the FDIC, we’d be in a world of hurt far worse than the one we’re in now. Without the federal deposit guarantee that the FDIC provides, people would take their money out of banks and hoard it in real cash. Such hoarding would severely contract the money supply (because each dollar in the bank creates multiple dollars in deposits).
Some regulations are bad; good regulations are necessary; and the best of them have held up remarkably during this severe test, arguably the greatest test since their creation, since the FDIC became permanent law after the worst failures of the Great Depression.
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I am not disagreeing with you or attacking FDIC. The FDIC has stepped up their review of smaller banks. I guess I am just concerned that the problem that came to the front was due to the actions of the big banks which are not so well monitored. Also it was brought up in this thread that someone had lost their line of credit. That is not unusual at this time given what banks are faced with and it is not because of banks not wanting to loan money to good long term customers. I was on an airplane with a gentlemen that was trying to get funds for a stockyard that he owns with some others and he was very frustrated because they need the line of credit to do business but that type of thing is on a watch list by the FDIC. He managed to work something out gut he had to provide collateral. He also said that a construction supply business he had in Florida was not able to get funding with their normal bank of many years because "construction" was in the name and in Florida it is hard to get loans for anything relating to construction.
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