With a hat tip to the Calculated Risk blog, who uses the term liberally, another bank has made a visit to the so-called confessional. Birmingham, Ala.-based Regions Financial Corp. said Thursday it will boost loan loss reserves to approximately $360 million in the fourth quarter of 2007, an increase of $270 million one quarter earlier. The company cited “weakening credit quality,” primarily in its residential construction loan portfolio. We are experiencing a sharp slowdown in real estate demand, especially in parts of Florida and Georgia, and are responding aggressively to counter its effects,â€? said Dowd Ritter, chairman and chief executive officer. “We are closely monitoring the impact of the declines in housing demand and values on our borrowers and are acting quickly to address current areas of weakness.â€? Residential builder loans represent approximately 8 percent, or $7.5 billion, of Regions’ total portfolio of $95 billion. In addition to increasing the loan loss provision, the company said it reassign key managers to focus on work-out strategies for distressed borrowers. The bank also said it will record approximately $131 million of additional pre-tax charges during the fourth quarter, including $42 million it said was related to its mortgage servicing business. For more information, visit http://www.regions.com. Disclosure: At time of post, the author held no positions in RF.
Regions Financial Visits the Confessional; Boosts Loan Loss Provision
Most Popular Articles
Latest Articles
Navigating movement in the mortgage industry series: Due diligence in mergers and acquisitions
The current environment of mergers and acquisitions (“M&A”) is evolving. There is constant movement in the mortgage industry with the desire for growth and expansion. It is easy to become blinded by the end goal of increasing loan volume and quality origination talent. Thus, it has never been more important to focus on due […]
-
Southern Nevada real estate outlook: 2025 predictions
-
Tough Calls: Lessons from Volcker, inflation, and the Fed’s crossroads
-
What to expect in 2025: Securing customer insurance in a volatile real estate market
-
Professional fix-and-flip market poised for growth in 2025
-
Expired listings: A Realtor’s goldmine