BB&T Acquires Colonial as Regulators Close Five US Lenders

August 16, 2009 Bookmark and Share

Inc., the facing a criminal probe, had its banking operations closed by regulators and taken over by BB&T Corp. in the biggest failure since Inc. collapsed last year. Regulators also shut two companies in , one in and one in Pittsburgh on Friday, pushing the tally of failed banks this year to 77. Branches and deposits of Colonial Bank, ranked second in its home state, were turned over to BB&T in a deal brokered by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., the regulator said in a statement. The failure of Montgomery-based Colonial followed a Florida expansion that left the company with more than US$1.7B in soured real-estate loans. Regulators are closing banks at the fastest pace in 17 years. Read more

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A US Bancorp unit and SolarCity team up for solar power plan

June 9, 2009 Bookmark and Share

A unit of and privately-held has teamed up to wire homes and businesses in , and , with no upfront costs, while taking advantage of government credits. The agreement, for which no value was disclosed, allows Community Development Corp., a unit of , to take advantage of breaks including a solar credit. In return, the bank pays for the purchase and installation of solar power by , which markets and maintains the systems. and businesses purchase the electricity generated from their roofs. “We are able to offer a home owner or a business owner a solar financing solution that costs them less than if they bought the same amount of electricity from the utility,” said Lyndon Rive, chief executive of , from company headquarters in Foster City, Calif. also may choose to pay the cost of the installation, which can run to US$20,000 and has a payback period for eight to 10 years, Rive said. Darren Van’t Hof, vice president of the unit said in a telephone interview from that the two companies have created a equity fund which finances the solar lease plan. The joint fund reaps the benefits of the breaks, sharing the stream between the bank and , he said. The company takes care of maintenance for 15 years, after which a homeowner can renew the plan, upgrade, buy the system or have it removed, Rive said. Rive said the company already has a six-month backlog and the agreement, signed a few days ago, will allow it to whittle away that backlog and sell more systems.

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