by TJ_98370 » Sun May 24, 2009 9:35 am
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A response to S-Crow's post and a sad story that I fear may be repeated many times throughout the country -
......"The lessons learned are that any time an institution begins to emphasize growth and share price before loan administration and solid underwriting, you have a recipe for trouble," said Brad Williamson, Washington Department of Financial Institutions' director of banks. "And sadly, that appears to be what happened with Westsound Bank."......
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.....Golombek, the bank's first president and chief executive officer, left just 19 months (after he initiated the creation of Westsound Bank in 1998).
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The majority of the board wanted the bank to grow very fast, Golombek said recently. He preferred slow and steady.
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"I couldn't control them," he said. "I can sit there 'til I'm blue in the face and say, 'This isn't going to work.'".....
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.....Dave Johnson was hired to replace Golombek, and the coming years seemed great for Westsound and its customers......
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.....With home-appreciation rates rising 20 percent year after year, there seemed no end to the party. Westsound became a go-to bank for many local contractors like Becker. Many were overextended, but they were confident the economy would continue strong.
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"They would loan money to anybody," Becker said. Becker's son-in-law, Matt Templeton, said he was able to get $1.3 million in loans from Westsound when he was only making $35,000 a year.
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Westsound was confident, too. Its assets and deposits grew rapidly.
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In 2006, Johnson announced record growth for the first half of the year. Assets increased 63 percent to $301 million. Loans were up 76 percent to $275 million. Deposits increased 62 percent to $274 million, and net income rose 84 percent to $2 million.
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Westsound moved up Pacific to bigger quarters and had offices throughout western Puget Sound and in Federal Way.
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To fuel even more growth, Westsound leaders decided to take the company public. The bank's parent, WSB Financial Group, raised $41 million through an initial offering of common stock. Some 2.6 million shares were sold for between $16.50 and $19 apiece.
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The push was on.
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Westsound Hits the Wall
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But the next year, the inflated housing market that Westsound was so dependent on began to crumble.
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That provided a dangerous backdrop for what was about to happen.
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In an internal review, Westsound cut 33 of 40-plus employees from its mortgage marketing arm and terminated Brett Green, executive vice president of sales and lending, saying at the time it was going to outsource loan marketing.
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Soon after, the bank announced it was under investigation by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. and the state Department of Financial Institutions for possible fraud and violation of banking rules.
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Front and center in the probe were 146 risky high-end home construction loans worth $90 million.
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The result from the FDIC and DFI investigation remains out of reach of the public.
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But this is known - In a conference call to investors, Johnson said the bank had issued loans that didn't require full documentation of income, but merely stated income. But a secondary-market program by Countrywide Financial Corp., to which these loans were sold, required full documentation.
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Borrowers were making interest payments, but the bank could not demonstrate their ability to pay over the long haul.
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Countrywide pulled its program, leaving Westsound without an exit strategy.
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Most of the problem loans were made by one or two employees who were by then no longer with the bank. Many were made out of Westsound's branch in Federal Way for fancy houses in King and Pierce counties.......