I found it quite easily on the BECU website, searching for "balance sheet". The most recent data posted publicly is from Jan. 09 to Sept. 09. It can be seen here:
http://www.becu.org/livefiles/24/34/Q%2 ... osting.pdfAccording to the nine months ending Sept. 09, BECU had a net loss of $45 million, which would make it the second largest in its history. Combined with the $65 million it lost in the prior nine months, I'm thinking that BECU is in a world of hurt. The record foreclosures in the area haven't helped, either.
BECU has roughly $104 million in loan losses increase from the same period in 08. Reserves have fallen by about $70 million and net loans have fallen about $200 million.
I don't know what they term "investments" but they list those as "assets". If you take that as face value (which I don't, their "investments" increased by $200 million after the credit bubble burst in late 07, but I have no other choice), you then get a capitalization ratio (reserves over "assets") then it went from 8% in September of 08 to 7% in 09.
I hardly think that 7% reserves in a fiat money system is "well capitalized", considering their reserves are the only real money they have. However, in all the financial statements they've released, I can't see where they go above 8.4%, even during the credit bubble years.
Anyways, someone with a better understanding of credit unions should speak to these numbers before I say BECU is safe or not.