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The financial assistance can take the form of loans, guarantee for loan taken by the bank or acceptance of accommodation bills. Similarly, the technical assistance may include takeover of management and control of the bank, changes in management or assisted merger with another viable institution.
The FDIC Insures: Checking Accounts. Negotiable Order of Withdrawal (NOW) Accounts. Savings Accounts. Money Market Deposit Accounts (MMDAs)
Types of resolution transactions Once it is determined that an institution has failed, or is in danger of failing, and private- sector solutions have not been successful, there are basically three options for its resolution. The institution can be liquidated, sold, or assisted to prevent its failure.
Ownership Categories Single Accounts. Certain Retirement Accounts. Joint Accounts. Trust Accounts. Employee Benefit Plan Accounts. Corporation/Partnership/Unincorporated Association Accounts. Government Accounts.
Three main resolution options are available: the troubled institution may be liquidated, sold, or assisted to prevent its failure. Numerous variations of these main options are used in different countries.
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Liquidation is the process of permanently closing a bank and its branches, selling off any assets and using the proceeds to settle as many of the banks remaining liabilities as possible. Typically, customer accounts are closed and checks are mailed to account holders for the amount of their insured deposits.
FDIC regulations require a covered insured depository institution to submit a resolution plan under which the FDIC, as receiver, might resolve the institution under the Federal Deposit Insurance Act in a way that provides depositors timely access to their insured deposits, maximizes returns on the sale or disposition
Resolution occurs at the point where the authorities determine that a bank is failing or likely to fail, that there is no other supervisory or private sector intervention that can restore the institution to viability (for example by applying measures set out in a so-called recovery plan, which all banks are required to