Banks’ Bleeding Continue

by Bill Watkins on September 4th, 2009

Today’s news will be dominated by the BLS’s unemployment data release. I’m sure we’ll have more to say on that. Right now, I’d like to discuss a less-publicized data release, one that probably has more information than the unemployment data.

Yesterday, the FDIC released bank charge-off data, and it was disappointing and scary. I’ve posted the chart below.

It was well publicized last December when banks charged off record amounts of loans. At the time, I was hoping that it was a one-time cleanup. It wasn’t. Banks charged off approximately $50 billion in the second quarter, up from about $40 billion in the fourth quarter of last year and the first quarter of this year.

The reason this is so scary is that we can’t have a vigorous recovery until banks are recapitalized, and they can’t be recapitalized until charge-offs decline. This is another sign that, while the recession may be near its technical end, we are a long way from recovery.

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