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U.S. regulators take over First National Bank

Branches to reopen on Monday under Mutual of Omaha Bank banners

It looked like business as usual when a woman with a child walked up to the front door of the First National Bank branch at 4950 W. Flamingo Road about 5 p.m. Friday.

The door was already locked, and she walked away having come about a minute too late, probably unaware that First National had closed for good.

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  • The bank's five Las Vegas branches, however, will open Monday under a new banner: Mutual of Omaha Bank.

    The Omaha, Neb.-based insurance company is buying First National Bank of Nevada, which was placed under federal receivership late Friday, the first Nevada-based bank to be seized in 18 years.

    Mutual of Omaha will assume the $3 billion in deposits at First National and an affiliated institution, First Heritage Bank of Newport Beach, Calif., Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. officials announced Friday evening. Mutual of Omaha also will acquire some of the banks' assets in the deal.

    The sale means that all of First National's depositors -- even those with uninsured deposits exceeding the FDIC's $100,000 limit -- will avoid any losses.

    Customers will be able to access their checking accounts, debit cards and automated teller machines this weekend and will be able to withdraw money from tellers on Monday. Yet customers need not do so, said David Barr, a spokesman for the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.

    "Their deposits will continue to remain insured by the FDIC," Barr said. "There really is no need for customers to do anything. They should look at it as business as usual and as just a change of ownership."

    Jim Nolan, a spokesman for Mutual of Omaha Bank, agreed.

    "We think it's a good news story for the depositors of the bank. Not a penny will be lost," he said.

    Mutual of Omaha, a 99-year-old member-owned insurance company, entered the banking business in January 2007. It had $800 million in assets and branches in Nebraska and Colorado only, prior to acquiring First National.

    The company wants to expand its banking operations into areas with high growth, particularly those where it has strong name recognition and many insurance clients, Nolan said.

    Nevada, Arizona and Southern California fit that description, he said. The bank will serve both consumers and business customers.

    Some analysts had expressed fears that numerous homeowner associations with more than $100,000 on deposit at First National, would lose money with the shut down. The bank holding company provided services to homeowner associations around the country and counted on homeowner associations for $1.2 billion of its $3 billion in deposits.

    Local banking officials Friday evening welcomed the way FDIC officials handled the First National shutdown and sale.

    Because all deposits are being assumed by Mutual of Omaha, "there is no financial destruction to the local community, and we are very lucky the FDIC approached it that way," said Bill Martin, CEO of Service1st Bank and a former federal bank regulator.

    The Nevada Financial Institutions Division made the first announcement of First National's closing Friday night, but federal regulators bore full responsibility for oversight at the bank because of its national charter. The FDIC said the closing will cost the government's insurance fund $862 million.

    First National Bank is the fifth bank and the biggest bank to fail in Nevada since the Great Depression. Frontier Savings, which had $247 million in deposits, was seized in 1990. The other failures were Great West Bank and Mineral Bank, both of Las Vegas, and Sierra Savings & Loan of Gardnerville.

    Ray Lamb owned First National, which was known as Laughlin National Bank in 1998 when he acquired it. The bank is not related to another First National Bank in Nevada that operated here several years earlier.

    First National's closure is the seventh FDIC-insured bank to have been shut down this year. The most recent and largest closure occurred earlier this month when the FDIC seized IndyMac Bank of California.

    First National often took a nontraditional approach to banking. For a while, it operated branches in Wal-Mart stores. Now, it has 25 branches around Nevada and Arizona, and none is located in the discount stores.

    The bank was active in making home mortgage loans, ranging from subprime to prime, during the housing boom of the early 2000s. It also made construction and land loans. Bankers described those as high-risk niches, which produced big profits that turned to losses with the Southern Nevada real estate bust.

    At the end of March, First National Bank reported 11 percent of its loans were past due. The bank reported a $140 million first-quarter loss. The bank had been trying to raise $200 million in additional capital, but reported that was difficult to do.

    The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, which regulates national banks, said that First National was undercapitalized and had dissipated its assets "due to unsafe and unsound practices."

    "In reality, most financial institutions (in Nevada) are pretty sound," said Robert Sarver, chairman and CEO of Western Alliance Bancorporation, which operates Bank of Nevada.

    Western Alliance was an unsuccessful bidder for First National, but Sarver said he hopes to buy other struggling banks with FDIC assistance.

    Contact reporter John G. Edwards at jedwards@reviewjournal.com or 702-383-0420.



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    Jeff G wrote on July 27, 2008 10:56 AM: Can"t wait to see what happens to City Crossings - /henderson.... FIB had about $35 mil in that deal. Now its' Chap 11.


    Herb wrote on July 27, 2008 12:25 AM: I have always liked Mutual of Omaha because of their old "Wild Kingdom" television show. That was back when there was wholesome television, not like the filth they have today. I wish Mutual of Omaha the best of luck in Nevada.


    Jeffrey D. Allen wrote on July 26, 2008 05:27 PM: First National over extended?. . .nah. . . you gotta be kiddin'! It's a good thing a solid company like Mutual of Omaha is there to pull their a** out of the fire. Might be time to start looking at some Swiss bank accounts though guys; with all the stability we got in the Dollar right now and all.


    rb wrote on July 26, 2008 03:50 PM: Actually Herb it is Bush's Fault..there are numerous quotes from Greenspan(republican) and dum***s GW that the banks needed to find a better way to make homeownership affordable to America. You see, the only increase in economic activity that took place during his FAILED administration had to do with the mortgage industry. This is just like the S&L debacle from the 80's that his dad encouraged. Same sh*t different verse. Everytime the republicans take the presidency they have screwed over the country, then it takes another 4-6 years to fix it. I remember TRICKLE DOWN ECONOMICS and this is the same result as then. The rich get richer and the poor get poorer. Problem is, I am not sure if OBama is up to the task or if he is bought and paid for too. www.zeitgeistmovie.com


    DUH wrote on July 26, 2008 11:36 AM: "The sale means that all of First National's depositors -- even those with uninsured deposits exceeding the FDIC's $100,000 limit -- will avoid any losses."

    Anyone with over $100,000 in an account deserves to lose since bank failures are not new news.

    "The company wants to expand its banking operations into areas with high growth, particularly those where it has strong name recognition and many insurance clients, Nolan said."

    The only high growth is home foreclosures, cash strapped citizens and cost of living expenses. DUH


    Herb wrote on July 26, 2008 10:52 AM: This is not Bush's fault. The banks were giving out loans for overpriced homes to consumers who couldn't afford to pay them back. The banks who made these risky loans deserve to fail. Not that I feel sorry for most of the people getting foreclosed on, they were greedy and should have bought a more modest house they could afford or better yet rent an apartment.


    Ugly American Too wrote on July 26, 2008 10:08 AM: Don't Forget the Silverado Savings and Loan Collapse starring G.W,Bush's brother Neil


    Ugly American wrote on July 26, 2008 09:31 AM: There haven't been this many bank failures since Bush's dad was in office. Remember all the S&Ls that clapsed from fraud & money laundering?

    Look up the Keating Five staring John McCain.


    charles wrote on July 26, 2008 08:22 AM: Considering all of the shady mortgages this bank made in Nevada to people lving high on the hog, it is no wonder they were taken over. You have people in houses that belong in apartments, and they got them with crafty creative mortgages. A person with a $50,000 income has no business being in a $350,000 home, but as this is Vegas and showing off to the neighbors and co-workers is the norm what else can you expect. The market is now correcting itself, and shaking all of this crap out of it.......And the banks that made these borderline mortgages will fail and have to be taken over by the feds.


    dig it up wrote on July 26, 2008 07:21 AM: I smell the coming of another Great Depression.