Bank Abruptly Shut Down by US Authorities in First Bank Failure of 2025
US regulators have abruptly shut down a bank in Illinois in the first bank failure of 2025.
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) says the Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation (IDFPR) has closed Pulaski Savings Bank.
The FDIC has been appointed as the receiver and has transferred all deposit accounts and most of the bank’s assets to Millennium Bank.
The FDIC says it will have to pay about $28.5 million from its Deposit Insurance Fund to cover the cost of the failure, pointing to “suspected fraud” as the primary factor driving the expense.
The agency has not provided additional information on why the bank collapsed.
As of September, Pulaski Savings Bank had $49.5 million in total assets and $42.7 million in total deposits.
In December, the FDIC said 68 American banks are on its “problem list,” meaning the firms are experiencing financial, operational or managerial weaknesses that could reasonably threaten their soundness if unresolved.
The US witnessed two bank failures last year, starting with the closure of Republic First Bank in April, which had $6 billion in assets and $4 billion in deposits.
That was followed by First National Bank of Lindsay in Oklahoma, which was closed in October with about $107.8 million in assets and $97.5 million in deposits.
Disclaimer: The content of this article solely reflects the author's opinion and does not represent the platform in any capacity. This article is not intended to serve as a reference for making investment decisions.
You may also like
Shibarium Devs Connect with Core Team via New Channel

Bitcoin Clings to $74K: Analyzing BTC’s Ability to Ward Off Further Decline
Stability at $74K: How 50,000 BTC Holders are Supporting Bitcoin's Resistance Against Further Dips

Donald Trump’s Memecoin to Face $320 Million Token Unlock as Price Dips

33% of French looking to buy crypto in 2025 but Italians are even more bullish
Share link:In this post: A third of French people intend to purchase cryptocurrencies this year. New study shows Italians as most bullish among surveyed nations in Europe. The crypto sector’s growing legitimacy helps attract more investors, researchers say.
Trending news
MoreCrypto prices
More








