Depositors "run" on a failing New York City bank in an effort to recover their money, July 1914

A bank failure occurs when a bank is unable to meet its obligations to its depositors or other creditors because it has become insolvent or too illiquid to meet its liabilities. Failing banks share commonalities: rising asset losses, deteriorating solvency, and an increasing reliance on expensive noncore funding.

A bank typically fails economically when the market value of its assets falls below the market value of its liabilities. The insolvent bank either borrows from other solvent banks or sells its assets at a lower price than its market value to generate liquid money to pay its depositors on demand. The inability of the solvent banks to lend liquid money to the insolvent bank creates a bank panic among the depositors as more depositors try to take out cash deposits from the bank. As such, the bank is unable to fulfill the demands of all of its depositors on time. A bank may be taken over by the regulating government agency if its shareholders' equity are below the regulatory minimum.

The failure of a bank is generally considered to be of more importance than the failure of other types of business firms because of the interconnectedness and fragility of banking institutions. Research has shown that the market value of customers of the failed banks is adversely affected at the date of the failure announcements. It is often feared that the spill over effects of a failure of one bank can quickly spread throughout the economy and possibly result in the failure of other banks, whether or not those banks were solvent at the time as the marginal depositors try to take out cash deposits from these banks to avoid from suffering losses. Thereby, the spill over effect of bank panic or systemic risk has a multiplier effect on all banks and financial institutions leading to a greater effect of bank failure in the economy. As a result, banking institutions are typically subjected to rigorous regulation, and bank failures are of major public policy concern in countries across the world.

Notable acquisitions of failed banks

The following table lists significant acquisitions of failed banks, illustrating the scale and impact of major bank failures. It does not include partial purchases by governments to prevent bank or banking system failures, such as government intervention during the subprime mortgage crisis:

Announcement dateTargetAcquirerTransaction value (US$ billion)Notes
1999-11-29United Kingdom National Westminster Bank PlcScotland Royal Bank of Scotland42.5
2003-10-27United States FleetBoston FinancialUnited States Bank of America47
2004-01-15United States Bank One CorporationUnited States JPMorgan Chase58
2006-01-01United States MBNAUnited States Bank of America34.2
2007-05-20Italy CapitaliaItaly UniCredit29.47
2007-09-28United States NetBankNetherlands ING Group0.014
2008-02-22United Kingdom Northern RockUnited Kingdom Government of the United Kingdom41.213
2008-04-01United States Bear StearnsUnited States JPMorgan2.2
2008-07-01United States Countrywide FinancialUnited States Bank of America4
2008-07-10Denmark Roskilde BankDenmark Nationalbanken (Centralbank of Denmark)15
2008-07-14United Kingdom Alliance & LeicesterSpain Santander1.93
2008-08-31Germany Dresdner KleinwortGermany Commerzbank10.812
2008-09-07United States Fannie Mae and Freddie MacUnited States Federal Housing Finance Agency5,000[dubious – discuss]Federal conservatorship with expected return to independent management
2008-09-14United States Merrill LynchUnited States Bank of America44
2008-09-17United States Lehman BrothersUnited Kingdom Barclays1.3
2008-09-18United Kingdom HBOSUnited Kingdom Lloyds TSB33.475
2008-09-26United States Lehman BrothersJapan Nomura Holdings1.3
United States Washington MutualUnited States JPMorgan1.9
2008-09-28United Kingdom Bradford & BingleyUnited Kingdom Government of the United Kingdom Spain Santander1.838
Belgium Luxembourg Netherlands FortisFrance BNP Paribas12.356
2008-09-29United Kingdom Abbey NationalUnited Kingdom Government of the United Kingdom Spain Santander2.298
2008-09-30Belgium DexiaBelgium France Luxembourg The Governments of Belgium, France and Luxembourg7.06
2008-10-03United States WachoviaUnited States Wells Fargo15
Netherlands ABN AMRO Netherlands FortisNetherlands NL Financial Investments[nl] (Ministry of Finance )23.3Breakup, nationalization of some components with return to publicly traded company
2008-10-07Iceland LandsbankiIceland Icelandic Financial Supervisory Authority4.192UK assets seized by UK government; bad assets nationalized by Iceland and retail operations reorganized as Landsbankinn
2008-10-08Iceland Glitnir3.254
2008-10-09Iceland Kaupthing Bank1.257
2008-10-13United Kingdom Lloyds Banking GroupUnited Kingdom Government of the United Kingdom26.0452008 United Kingdom bank rescue package
Scotland Royal Bank of Scotland Group30.641
2008-10-14United States Bank of AmericaUnited States Federal government of the United States45Troubled Asset Relief Program
United States Bank of New York Mellon3
United States Goldman Sachs10
United States JPMorgan25
United States Morgan Stanley10
United States State Street2
United States Wells Fargo25
2009-02-11Republic of Ireland Allied Irish BankRepublic of Ireland Government of the Republic of Ireland3.861Post-2008 Irish banking crisis
Republic of Ireland Anglo Irish Bank13.57Anglo Irish Bank Corporation Act 2009
Republic of Ireland Bank of Ireland3.861Post-2008 Irish banking crisis
2009-03-19United States IndyMacUnited States OneWest Bankunknown
2012-03-13Greece Alpha BankGreece Government of Greece2.096Greek government-debt crisis
Greece Eurobank4.633
Greece National Bank of Greece7.612
Greece Piraeus Bank5.516
2012-03-25Cyprus Laiki BankCyprus Bank of Cyprus10.8122012–2013 Cypriot financial crisis
2012-05-25Spain BankiaSpain Government of Spain20.9622008–2014 Spanish financial crisis
2012-06-07Portugal Caixa Geral de DepositosPortugal Government of Portugal1.782010–2014 Portuguese financial crisis
Portugal Millennium BCP3.3

Bank failures in the U.S.

In the U.S., deposits in savings and checking accounts are backed by the FDIC. As of 1933, each account owner is insured up to $250,000 in the event of a bank failure. When a bank fails, in addition to insuring the deposits, the FDIC acts as the receiver of the failed bank, taking control of the bank's assets and deciding how to settle its debts. The number of bank failures has been tracked and published by the FDIC since 1934, and has decreased after a peak in 2010 due to the 2008 financial crisis.

Since the year 2000, over 500 banks have failed. The 2010s saw the most bank failures in recent memory, with 367 banks collapsing over that decade. However, while the 2010s saw the most banks fail, it wasn't the worst decade in terms of the value of the banks going under. The 2000s saw 192 banks go under with $533 billion in assets ($749 billion in 2023 dollars) compared to the $273 billion ($354 billion) lost in the 2010s.

No advance notice is given to the public when a bank fails. Under ideal circumstances, a bank failure can occur without customers losing access to their funds at any point. For example, in the 2008 failure of Washington Mutual the FDIC was able to broker a deal in which JP Morgan Chase bought the assets of Washington Mutual for $1.9 billion. Existing customers were immediately turned into JP Morgan Chase customers, without disruption in their ability to use their ATM cards or do banking at branches. Such policies are designed to discourage bank runs that might cause economic damage on a wider scale.[citation needed]

Global failure

The failure of a bank is relevant not only to the country in which it is headquartered, but for all other nations with which it conducts business. This dynamic was highlighted during the 2008 financial crisis, when the failures of major bulge bracket investment banks affected local economies globally. This interconnectedness was manifested not on a high level, with respect to deals negotiated between major companies from different parts of the world, but also to the global nature of any one company's makeup. Outsourcing is a key example of this makeup; as major banks such as Lehman Brothers and Bear Stearns failed, the employees from countries other than the United States suffered in turn. A 2015 analysis by the Bank of England found greater interconnectedness between banks has led to a greater transmission of stresses during a time of recession.

See also

Further reading

  • Calomiris, Charles W., and Joseph R. Mason. "Fundamentals, panics, and bank distress during the depression." American Economic Review (2003): 1615–1647.
  • Carlson, Mark. "Causes of bank suspensions in the panic of 1893." Explorations in Economic History 42.1 (2005): 56–80.
  • Wicker, Elmus. The banking panics of the Great Depression (2000). ISBN 978-0-521-66346-5.
  • Wicker, Elmus. Banking panics of the gilded age (2006).
  • Wicker, Elmus. "A Reconsideration of the Causes of the Banking Panic of 1930." Journal of Economic History 40.03 (1980): 571–583.

External links