Contributor : Naomi Snyder
Buying into trouble? Experts give their advice on FDIC acquisitions
Buying a failed bank can be a brutal experience. There may be opportunity to grow your bank, but there also is risk and hard work to do in a short amount of time.
With few growth opportunities, Ameris Bancorp went on a shopping spree
Two bankers share their experiences with FDIC-Assisted deals as a way to grow their financial institutions.
Opportunity knocks, but there are drawbacks
Hundreds of banks, most of them small, community organizations, likely will fail in the years to come but there's still the opportunity for bankers to buy troubled institutions and grow balance sheets during tough economic times.
Bank acquisitions rise in first quarter, but not by much
Top dealmakers include Sandler O'Neill & Partners, Raymond James & Associates and Keefe, Bruyette & Woods. While there weren't a lot of fish to be had, one firm did take the bigger fish.
Big banks still grapple with their own complexity, risk
The world's largest banks have made a lot of progress revamping how they handle risk in the wake of the financial crisis, but they keep bumping up against the limitations of their own technology.
Banks (don’t) like Small Business Lending Fund
Congress created the $30 billion fund to provide capital to banks and increase lending to small business, but not many banks applied for it. Here's why.
Where is all the bailout fraud?
Armed inspectors, with sirens wailing, find few cases of actual TARP money stolen. Is that because none exists, or is that because we haven't found it?
2011 Banker and Board Poll: More acquisitions ahead
A look at what more than 550 bank directors and CEOS have to say about what's ahead for the financial industry.
TARP Legacy: Hidden Costs
While taxpayers will make an estimated $20 billion profit from the Troubled Asset Relief Program for banks, what about the legacy of "too big to fail?"
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau chief faces Republican critics
Review of subcommittee hearing with Elizabeth Warren, the special advisor setting up the new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, who fought back challenges from Republicans.