The pace of bank failures is accelerating. This past Friday night the FDIC took control of four more banks, representing the largest number of bank closures yet on a single date and bringing the year to date total to 13 — including ten just in the last three weeks alone.

On February 13, 2008

As detailed in a recent post (here), one of the more worrisome trends in an economic environment full of thing to worry about is the increasing number of bank failures involving community banks. This trend continued this past Friday night when the FDIC closed three more banks, brining the 2009 bank closure tally

In recent days, all eyes have been on two of the world’s largest banks. Commentators have questioned, for example, whether Citigroup should be nationalized (refer here) or if the Merrill Lynch-related losses might cost Bank of America CEO Kenneth Lewis his job (refer here). These institutions’ enormous size makes their problems predominant.

From this week’s news, it almost appears as if there had been some kind of an unannounced competition for most outrageously fraudulent or corrupt scheme. First, there was Marc Dreier’s incredibly brazen plot to peddle bogus notes to hedge funds using assumed identities. Then there was Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich’s apparent attempt to flog Barrack