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First NBC Bank looks like it will fail per WSJ

Posted on 10/17/16 at 8:10 am
Posted by ihometiger
Member since Dec 2013
12475 posts
Posted on 10/17/16 at 8:10 am
If you have money over 500k there today is the time to get it out of there ASAP

WSJ breaking article
Posted by DollaChoppa
I Simp for ACC
Member since May 2008
84774 posts
Posted on 10/17/16 at 8:13 am to
Can I get your login username and pass?
Posted by The Mick
Member since Oct 2010
43143 posts
Posted on 10/17/16 at 8:13 am to
Whats your log in and password so we can read the article?
Posted by jbgleason
Bailed out of BTR to God's Country
Member since Mar 2012
18911 posts
Posted on 10/17/16 at 8:16 am to
What we need is a board where people Talk about Money for this thread.

Plus, this is the OT and 500k isn't enough to bother with transferring.
Posted by stout
Smoking Crack with Hunter Biden
Member since Sep 2006
167294 posts
Posted on 10/17/16 at 8:16 am to
quote:

If you have money over 500k there today is the time to get it out of there ASAP


You can't do that. The Feds will stop a "run on the bank" from happening.
Posted by GREENHEAD22
Member since Nov 2009
19608 posts
Posted on 10/17/16 at 8:17 am to
Yea no shite. Anyway around having to be a subscriber?
Posted by The Mick
Member since Oct 2010
43143 posts
Posted on 10/17/16 at 8:19 am to
quote:

You can't do that. The Feds will stop a "run on the bank" from happening.
Protect the Ponzi at all costs.
Posted by TigerstuckinMS
Member since Nov 2005
33687 posts
Posted on 10/17/16 at 8:26 am to
Login required?

Posted by eScott
Member since Oct 2008
11376 posts
Posted on 10/17/16 at 8:36 am to
quote:

WJS breaking article

Posted by ihometiger
Member since Dec 2013
12475 posts
Posted on 10/17/16 at 8:52 am to
Posted by eScott
Member since Oct 2008
11376 posts
Posted on 10/17/16 at 9:00 am to

quote:

New Orleans' Premier Bank, First NBC, Runs Into Problems

7:31 pm ET October 16, 2016 (Dow Jones) Print


By Rachel Louise Ensign

With much of New Orleans still devastated by Hurricane Katrina in 2006, well-heeled local luminaries including football stars Peyton and Eli Manning invested in a new bank meant to help with the rebuilding.

That bank, First NBC Bank Holding Co., grew rapidly over the past decade under the leadership of Ashton Ryan, a prominent local banker. Now, it is facing its own storm.

First NBC invested heavily in New Orleans construction projects that included generous tax credits established by federal and state governments. These included the New Orleans African-American Museum, local theaters and an assisted-living facility in a historic building, according to the bank's annual report. As business boomed, First NBC became the largest bank based in the city by assets.

"I cannot go to an event in this community and not see First NBC down as the major sponsor or a key sponsor," Ben Johnson, president and chief executive of the New Orleans Chamber of Commerce. "Every city wants an Ashton Ryan."

The tax credits, though, have led to questions about First NBC's earnings, capital levels and accounting. The bank is also grappling with souring loans and securities.

The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. has said First NBC is no longer "well capitalized," restricting its ability to take on certain deposits and pay interest. The Securities and Exchange Commission is investigating its accounting.

After being late to file its 2015 accounts with regulators, First NBC has yet to file its second-quarter report with the SEC. As a result, it is fighting the possibility of being delisted by Nasdaq.

This makes First NBC something of an anomaly: a publicly traded U.S. bank running into financial problems at a time when bank failures remain low and regulatory scrutiny is tougher than ever.

Some analysts believe the bank, which has about $5 billion in assets, may need to raise as much as $150 million to shore up its balance sheet. That would be equal to almost three-quarters of First NBC's shrunken market value. Its stock has fallen more than 70% in 2016.

First NBC said that it has a turnaround plan.

"We believe we have a model that works," said Mr. Ryan, a native New Orleanian who rides on a Mardi Gras float each year. "Our capital problems came from unusual items that we don't think would be expected to recur."

The bank has said the crux of its turnaround plan will be an attempt to raise capital but that it hopes to avoid issuing more common stock. Indeed, First NBC says it might be able to use debt to bolster a capital ratio on which it has been found lacking.

Selling debt isn't necessarily straightforward, though. First NBC was recently downgraded to junk status by Kroll Bond Rating Agency Inc., which specializes in rating smaller lenders. It is now the only bank the ratings company covers with a junk rating.

The bank's problems this year led an investment firm that owns the bank's debt, HoldCo Asset Management, to bet against the stock. This, the firm said, was initially a way to hedge against the prospect of default by the bank. HoldCo also released public letters questioning the bank's accounting.

Another potential issue: Mr. Ryan.

The 68-year-old has long been a top banker in New Orleans's close-knit business community. He has a portrait of himself in his office. A customer painted it for Mr. Ryan after First NBC helped him "recover from a significant loan issue he had experienced at another bank," a spokesman said.

But his stature, which helped get First NBC up and running, may have turned into a liability. In its 2015 annual report, which wasn't filed until August, management said the company didn't have adequate internal controls over accounting because of the board's "lack of adequate oversight" and Mr. Ryan's "dominant influence." The bank recently announced governance changes, including separating the CEO and chairman roles.

What's more, nearly all of Mr. Ryan's stock in the bank, about 475,000 shares, equal to 2.5% of shares outstanding, is pledged against outside debts, including real-estate investments, according to Mr. Ryan and securities filings.

It isn't clear if football's Manning brothers still own shares in the bank. An agent for the brothers didn't respond to requests for comment.

The root of First NBC's trouble is its reliance on the esoteric tax credits.

The benefit from the credits, as well as from fees tied to projects that generated them, made up about half the bank's earnings in recent years, according to Catherine Mealor, an analyst with Keefe, Bruyette & Woods.

In 2014, for instance, First NBC made $43 million -- $33 million of which was from tax benefits.

Largely because of the credits, the bank's deferred tax assets -- effectively an offset to future taxes -- have grown unusually large. At the end of the first quarter, these stood at $247 million, up from $95.8 million a year earlier. The latest amount was equal to two-thirds of the bank's common equity.

That is potentially worrisome because forthcoming regulatory changes mean the bank won't get as much credit for these assets in capital ratios. In coming years, that could leave it with a too-thin capital buffer.

Another problem: When First NBC's 2015 annual report was released in August, it restated results for the prior four years and included a $59.5 million charge to write down its tax-credit investments for 2015. The report also showed a deteriorating loan book: 4.6% of loans were considered nonperforming in 2015 versus an average of 1.1% for banks around the same size.

That was largely due to one loan to an oil-and-gas company that now has a balance of $112 million. The bank also wrote off $70 million worth of purchased receivables from an ethanol-manufacturing subsidiary of a bankrupt company.



(END) Dow Jones Newswires

October 16, 2016 19:31 ET (23:31 GMT)

Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.

Posted by BraveTiger225
Atlanta, GA
Member since May 2008
17662 posts
Posted on 10/17/16 at 9:04 am to
quote:

"We believe we have a model that works," said Mr. Ryan, a native New Orleanian who rides on a Mardi Gras float each year.


What a random arse comment.
Posted by DeathValley85
Member since May 2011
17180 posts
Posted on 10/17/16 at 9:07 am to
quote:

You can't do that. The Feds will stop a "run on the bank" from happening.


Well they didn't stop it in It's a Wonderful Life...so...what do you have to say to THAT?
Posted by slackster
Houston
Member since Mar 2009
84991 posts
Posted on 10/17/16 at 9:12 am to
quote:

If you have money over 500k there today is the time to get it out of there ASAP



First of all, depending on how your accounts are set up you could only be insured up to $250k. You could also be insured for much more.

Second of all, the depositors over their insurance limits are rarely - if ever - exposed to any losses as the FDIC is much more effective at facilitating a sale than they are at reimbursing all depositors.
Posted by SuperSaint
Sorting Out OT BS Since '2007'
Member since Sep 2007
140462 posts
Posted on 10/17/16 at 9:18 am to
Fresh got a Bourbon, pearl white with TVs
My clique ain't hurtin, haul to the bank First N.B.C.
Posted by Dizz
Member since May 2008
14734 posts
Posted on 10/17/16 at 9:19 am to
Did I miss the part where the article said likely to fail?
Posted by LSURussian
Member since Feb 2005
126962 posts
Posted on 10/17/16 at 9:20 am to
quote:

Did I miss the part where the article said likely to fail?
It's not in the article. OP must have an axe to grind with that bank.
Posted by saint tiger225
San Diego
Member since Jan 2011
35541 posts
Posted on 10/17/16 at 9:21 am to
quote:

What a random arse comment.
Same thing I thought when reading it.
Posted by slackster
Houston
Member since Mar 2009
84991 posts
Posted on 10/17/16 at 9:40 am to
quote:

It's not in the article. OP must have an axe to grind with that bank.



While that is plausible, failing to produce timely SEC reports and a 15-day suspension of trading is never a good thing.

It is the publicly traded company version of you payroll check bouncing - there is hardly ever a good reason for it to happen - but you know this already.
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