Click here to for more on Cox services available in your area.

Columns

Taking stock of PCBC, one share at a time

Generally speaking, it’s not a great idea for a journalist to own stock in a company he or she covers. In fact, it’s entirely unethical.
 

 
Dirt is flying again as building picks up in the Tri-Counties

After a year or more of struggling to find work, contractors are ready to dig in their shovels and let the dirt fly as construction projects large and small break ground throughout the Tri-Counties.

 

Syndicate

Home
Los Padres Bank shores up capital levels Print E-mail
Written by Staff report   
Monday, 25 January 2010

After months of struggling with capital ratios, Harrington West Financial Group, parent company of Solvang-based Los Padres Bank, has escaped a regulatory action that can precede a seizure and returned to “adequately capitalized,” the bank said Jan. 25. The bank remains under a longer-term cease and desist order to raise capital ratios.

Harrington West had been under what is known as a “prompt corrective action,” a measure that lets federal regulators take a bank into receivership when its capital dwindles. Harrington West had slipped into the “undercapitalized” category, two levels above the most serious class of capital shortage.

Harrington West said it has returned to “adequately capitalized.” A deal to sell its Midwest operations and a favorable change in tax law boosted its capital.

Harrington West’s capital ratios came under scrutiny from federal regulators in October 2009, when regulators ordered Harrington Wet to raise its core tangible capital ratio to 4 percent and its risk-based capital ratio to 8 percent of assets by Nov. 6.

The company was further ordered to boost its core capital ratios to 8 percent and its risk-based capital to 12 percent by Dec. 31, 2009 — a requirement it has not yet met. Harrington West has not announced its fourth-quarter earnings or capital ratios.

On Nov. 6, Los Padres sold its Kansas City branches to Arvest, an Arkansas-based company for book value plus a $4.1 million cash premium, clearing $96.2 million in loans and assets from its books as well as $94.9 million in deposits.

Are you a subscriber? If not, sign up today for a four-week FREE trial or subscribe and receive the 2010 Book of Lists free with your purchase.

Comments
Add NewSearch
Have something to say? Submit a comment to this story.
Your Name: * (required)
Your Email:
 
Email: * (required but will not be published)
Your Title:
 
 
Security Image
Please input the anti-spam code that you can read in the image.

Copyright (C) 2007 Alain Georgette / Copyright (C) 2006 Frantisek Hliva. All rights reserved.

 
< Prev   Next >

Joomla Templates by Joomlashack