The Illinois Department of Financial Professional Regulation on Friday shut down Glenwood, Ill.-based Heritage Community Bank and named as receiver the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., which entered into a purchase and assumption agreement with MB Financial Bank of Chicago. The four Heritage offices reopened Saturday as branches of MB Financial Bank, which assumed all of the failed bank’s $218.6 million in deposits, including brokered deposits. MB Financial also agreed to purchase approximately $230.5 million of the failed bank’s $232.9 million in assets — at a $14.5 million discount. The FDIC said it had entered a loss-sharing agreement on some $181 million in assets covered by the agreement with MB Financial. The failed bank is estimated to cost the FDIC’s Deposit Insurance Fund some $41.6 million. The Nevada Financial Institutions Division on Friday shut down Henderson, Nev.-based Security Savings Bank and named as receiver the FDIC, which entered a purchase and assumption agreement with Las Vegas-based Bank of Nevada. The two Security Savings offices reopened Monday as branches of Bank of Nevada, which assumed all of the failed bank’s $175.2 million in deposits, including brokered deposits. Bank of Nevada also agreed to purchase approximately $111.3 million of the bank’s assets, which were estimated at $238.3 million at the end of December. The FDIC said the cost of the failed bank to the insurance fund will be $59.1 million. Together, the two closings cost the fund an estimated $100.7 million. With the eight other bank failures in February, the FDIC’s fund is out some $944.3 million in this month alone. The fund also lost between $789.1 million and $814.1 million from January closings, according to estimates made at the time. So far this year, the cost to the fund is at least $1.73 billion, according to the FDIC’s estimates. There were six bank closings in all of January alone in 2009; there had been one closing in January of 2008. Friday marked the ninth and 10th closings in February alone; in 2008, there were no closings in February at all. So far, 16 banks have closed this year in the same time it took for a single Kansas City, Mo.-based bank to close last year at a cost of approximately $5.6 million to the Deposit Insurance Fund. Write to Diana Golobay at [email protected].
Most Popular Articles
While many homebuilders, such as D.R. Horton and Tri Pointe Homes, significantly reduced the number of new home starts over the last quarter amid sluggish homebuyer demand, Smith Douglas Homes Corp. is taking a different approach, akin to that of Lennar. Pace over price. The builder’s strategy reflects a commitment to affordability and serving the […]
-
Mortgage rate declines are raising the likelihood of a refi surge
Mar 19, 2026 -
Homebuilders Urged To Invest In Frontline Jobsite Workers Now
Mar 19, 2026 -
How hybrid operations are elevating builder performance
Apr 30, 2026 9:50 am -
HousingWire Mortgage Rankings have arrived, bringing data-driven benchmark to originator performance
Apr 30, 2026 -
After An Involuntary Pause, Orders Matter Again For LGI
Mar 20, 2026
Latest Articles
HousingWire on Tuesday announced the launch of the HousingWire Mortgage Rankings, a new performance intelligence product designed to provide a clear, data-driven view of mortgage origination activity across the U.S. The rankings benchmark mortgage originators based on observed production, offering a standardized view of performance across geographies, loan types and channels. Historically, the mortgage industry has lacked […]