OneUnited Bank, which has skipped dividend payments on $12 million in government TARP funds, reported a 25 percent decline in deposits during 2009 as lending activity dropped off at one of the largest black-owned banks in the country.
OneUnited, which is based in downtown Boston but with major operations in Los Angeles, had $291.8 million in deposits at the end of 2009, according to a filing with the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. That was down from $388.1 million at the end of 2008.
The bank’s net loans were $324 million at the end of 2009, down about 12 percent from the previous year. OneUnited has total assets of $540.6 million and primarily lends in city neighborhoods in Boston, Los Angeles and Miami.
The bank was not immediately available to comment for this story.
On the plus side, OneUnited turned in a full-year net profit of $3.17 million in 2009, compared with a year-ago net loss of $29.8 million when it had investment losses of nearly $60 million.
The past year has been a rough one for the bank after federal and Massachusetts bank regulators hit OneUnited with a cease and desist order. In December 2008, the regulators accused the management of OneUnited Bank of running an unsound lending operation and ordered a top-to-bottom review of executive perks that included a 2008 Porsche and a housing allowance for a beach-front home in California.
As directed by the FDIC, the bank has since sold the Porsche used by OneUnited Chief Executive Kevin Cohee.
The bank received more criticism after it received $12 million in federal bailout money, and had U.S. Rep. Barney Frank of Massachusetts, chairman of the powerful House Financial Services Committee, championing its cause. OneUnited needed the capital after investments in a poorly diversified portfolio were wiped out, leaving the bank with no capital in the third quarter of 2008.
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