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Regulators lean on Denver bank
Loans at Premier spur demand to get house in order
Published August 30, 2007 at midnight
Mounting problem loans at Denver's Premier Bank have prompted state and federal regulators to step in and demand the bank clean up its balance sheet.
The Federal Reserve and the Colorado Division of Banking have entered into a "written agreement" with Premier Bank that requires it to revise its lending policies and stop extending credit to borrowers who have created the bad loans.
Premier Bank President Kenneth So said the issues stem from loans made several years ago, and the bank has been working for some time to improve its policies and procedures. He said the bank has brought in new managers and is completing a three-year strategic plan.
"With what we've been doing the last two years to correct the problem, we feel we're not at the beginning stage, we're at the middle stage," So said. "Our owners, board of directors and senior management team are committed to fixing the problem. We're not for sale, and we're trying to build back to profitability."
On Dec. 31, Premier Bank had nearly $8.7 million in what is called "noncurrent loans and leases," representing 8.5 percent of the bank's assets. By comparison, all Colorado chartered-banks, including Premier, had about 0.5 percent of their assets nonperforming at year's end.
Premier Bank cut its nonperforming loans to $5.3 million by June 30, but the number still represented more than half of the bank's capital.
The bank lost $848,000 in 2006 as it made provisions to cover its loan losses and lost another $184,000 in the first half of 2007, according to regulatory reports.
Premier Bank, founded in 1995, is owned by Korean investors and specializes in lending to the Asian community. Under former President Jeffery Lee, the bank won national attention for heavy Small Business Administration-backed lending. Each year, Premier Bank battled Wells Fargo and other huge banks for the top spot in Colorado SBA lending.
Lee left in January 2004 to examine his life and "do more for the kingdom of God," he said at the time. He was replaced by a senior vice president at the bank, George Taylor. So followed in May 2005.
Finance Editor David Milstead can be reached at milstead@RockyMountainNews.com or 303-954-2648.
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