US regulators closed four banks on Friday, bringing the total number of foreclosures this year to seven. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation said Tennessee Commerce Bank, of Franklin, Tennessee, was closed on Friday. The bank's sole branch will reopen on Monday as a branch of Republic Bank & Trust Company.
Tennessee Commerce Bank had about $1.185 billion in total assets and $1.156 billion in total deposits. The pace of bank failures has slowed as the economy and the financial industry recovers from the 2007-2009 financial crisis. Unlike Tennessee Commerce Bank, most of these closures have been smaller banks, particularly those with less than $1 billion in assets.
First Guaranty Bank and Trust Company in Jacksonville, Florida, was also closed Friday, the FDIC said. The bank's eight branches will reopen Monday as part of CenterState Bank in Florida. First Guaranty Bank had about $377.9 million in assets and $349.5 million in total deposits. In addition, Patriot Bank Minnesota of Forest Lake, Minnesota, closed on Friday. The bank's three branches will reopen Saturday as a part of First Resource Bank.
The FDIC said Patriot Bank had approximately $111.3 million in assets and $108.3 million in total deposits. The final bank closed on Friday was BankEast in Knoxville, Tennessee. The bank's ten branches will reopen Monday as branches of US Bank National Association, a subsidiary of US Bancorp. BankEast had about $272.6 million in total assets and $268.8 million in total deposits. In 2010 157 banks with $92.1 billion in total assets failed while 92 institutions with $34.9 billion in total assets were closed in 2011.