Despite Bank Failures, FDIC Keeps Bank Savings Safe

The number of U.S. bank failures is once again on the rise, with seven banks in the state of Illinois being closed by the FDIC on Friday. Already in 2010, 57 banks have gone out of business. That includes 41 bank failures in the first quarter, and 16 so far in the second quarter. By comparison, in 2009, there were a total of 140 bank failures -- a sharp rise from just 25 bank failures in 2008.

So does all this stepped-up negative activity mean that your money is less safe? Actually, no. Here's why.

A Primer on the FDIC

In 1933, under the Glass-Steagall Act, President Franklin D. Roosevelt created the FDIC to provide deposit insurance to banks. The goal of this deposit insurance was to assure the public that money put into any FDIC member bank was safe, secure and "backed by the full faith and credit of the United States government."


So since Jan. 1, 1934, the FDIC has insured bank deposits in America. Back then, FDIC insurance coverage guaranteed your deposits to the tune of $2,500 (a lot of money during the Great Depression). Before that time, if you had money in a bank, and that bank failed, your hard-earned savings were often completely wiped out.

FDIC-Insured Deposits Now Covered Up to $250,000

Fast forward 65-plus years later.

If you currently have money sitting in a deposit account at a bank, and that bank is FDIC insured, then your money is protected up to $250,000. In 2008, during the height of the biggest financial crisis most of us have ever experienced, the FDIC raised the limits on insured accounts to $250,000 from $100,000.

This $250,000 limit – per depositor, per account – will be in place until Jan. 1, 2014, at which time it is scheduled to go back to $100,000. The FDIC insures so-called deposit accounts, which include the following:

• Checking Accounts
• Savings Accounts
• Negotiable Order of Withdrawal Accounts (also called NOW accounts, which are savings accounts that allow you to write checks on them)
• Time Deposit Accounts, (including Certificates of Deposit or CDs)
• Negotiable Instruments (such as interest checks, outstanding cashier's checks, or other items drawn on the accounts of the bank)

The good news for most people is that even if your bank goes out of business, if you've put your money in an FDIC-insured institution, you can rest assured that your money – up to the limits described – is perfectly safe. In fact, since the FDIC's inception, not a single dime of insured deposits has ever been lost.



Lynnette Khalfani-Cox, an award-winning financial news journalist and former Wall Street Journal reporter for CNBC, has also been featured in top newspapers including the Washington Post, USA Today, and the New York Times, as well as magazines ranging from Essence and Redbook to Black Enterprise and Smart Money. Check out her New York Times best seller, 'Zero Debt: The Ultimate Guide to Financial Freedom.'

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