Banking, finance, and taxes
A Bank Turnaround in Michigan (DEAR)
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Amazingly, something good can still happen in Michigan on the business front. Look no further than Dearborn Bancorp Inc. (NASDAQ: DEAR), which is managing to show profits despite this still being a story of contraction. This is the biggest winner of the trading day so far. This is the the holding company for Fidelity Bank and it is up because net income of $1,128,000 or $0.15 EPS was reported for the quarter. That compares to a loss of $6,249,000 or -$0.81 EPS a year ago in the same quarter.
The shareholders’ equity was listed as $43,180,000.00, which the company says comes to a book value of $5.62 per share. Not bad when you consider that the market closing price was $1.11 on March 31, 2010. and was merely $1.50 yesterday.
Its individual metrics are as follows:
This is not a growth story. This is a managing through hard times story. The bank’s press release noted, “Strong emphasis is being placed on collection and maintenance of the existing loan portfolio and new lending has been curtailed to conserve capital.”
This one is still in the works. The core operations are said to continue to produce enough income to offset “the high cost of FDIC insurance and the holding costs of other real estate owned.” The level of charge-offs will remain the determining factor over whether profitability in future quarters can be maintained. The primary concerns this year are still the local Michigan economy, credit quality, and the stability or improvement of the underlying collateral values of its loan portfolio.
At 9:40 AM EST this one is up 86% at $2.78 on over 1.2 million shares. The 52-week trading range is $0.35 to $3.00 and the average daily volume here is only about 500,000 shares per day. Here is how it traded pre-market:
JON C. OGG
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