Institution Statistics
| Bank of the Prairie | | FDIC Certificate # | 4626 | | BankRate Report | View | | Year Established | 1914 | | Employees | 23 | | Primary Regulator | FDIC |
Assets and Liabilities | | Assets | $83.01 million | | Loans | $54.99 million | | Deposits | $71.83 million | | Equity Capital | $8.00 million | | Loan Loss Allowance | $1.14 million | | Unbacked Noncurrent Loans | $2.00 million | | Real Estate Owned | $5.04 million |
Historic Data - December 2010 | | Assets | $96.99 million | | Equity Capital | $8.30 million | | Loan Loss Allowance | $1.30 million | | Unbacked Noncurrent Loans | $2.67 million | | Real Estate Owned | $975,000 |
Profit Margin - Quarterly | | Net Interest Margin | 4.28% | | Return on Assets | -0.41% | | Return on Equity | -4.51% | | Interest Income | $4.25 million |
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Institution Health
Overall Score:
2 out of 5
| Texas Ratio |  | | The Texas Ratio is an indicator of how much funds a bank has available compared to the total value of loans considered at risk. As of December 31, 2011 Bank of the Prairie had $7.04 million in non-current loans and owned real-estate with $9.13 million in equity and loan loss allowances on hand to cover it. This gives Bank of the Prairie a Texas Ratio of 77.04% which is below average. Any bank with a Texas Ratio near or greater than 100% is considered at risk. | | Texas Ratio Trend |  | | The Texas Ratio for Bank of the Prairie increased slightly from 37.88% as of December 31, 2010 to 77.04% as of December 31, 2011, resulting in a negative change of 103.36%. This indicates that the balance sheet and financial strength for Bank of the Prairie has declined slightly in recent periods. | | Deposit Growth |  | | In the past year, Bank of the Prairie has decreased its total deposits by -$13.65 million, resulting in -15.96% growth for the year. A strong track record of growth is an indicator of consumer confidence and the bank's ability to strengthen its balance sheet. The growth Bank of the Prairie has shown is poor. | | Capitalization |  | | Both FDIC and NCUA consider capitalization levels of banks and credit unions to be of high importance. Higher capitalization allows for a greater buffer when cover loans that may fail in the future. Bank of the Prairie has $83.01 million in assets with $9.13 million in equity, resulting in a capitalization level of 11.00%, which is above average. |
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