MAJOR BANK BRANCH CLOSINGS ARE ON THE HORIZON…

The debt crisis in the financial services sector, which has come to a head in recent weeks, has claimed retail banks as well as some of Wall Street’s biggest investment houses. Last month, JPMorgan Chase acquired Washington Mutual for the fire-sale price of $1.7 billion after the latter had the dubious distinction of suffering the largest bank failure in US history. Wachovia, which also incurred heavy exposure to the subprime mortgage market, was to be sold to Citigroup in a deal arranged through the FDIC. However, as this was written, a Wells Fargo/Wachovia merger announced on Friday seemed to obviate that deal—although not if Citigroup can help it. Regardless, the spate of high-profile M&A activity—not to mention some of the regional banks that have gone out altogether—does suggest that we may see fewer bank branches by 2010. A decisive 78% of respondents to last week’s online poll agree that a big wave of branch closings is in the not-too-distant future, and New York retail expert C. Bradley Mendelson, executive director at Cushman & Wakefield, feels the same way. Here, he explains how this is likely to play out:

“How many branches close depends on who ends up with these banks. You have these two mergers, for lack of a better term; one is WaMu and Chase and the other is Wachovia and Citibank, or maybe Wachovia and Wells Fargo. But Citibank is saying Wachovia didn’t have any right to make a deal with Wells Fargo and the FDIC is saying they’re going to back the deal they originally backed, which was with Citibank. We’ll see what happens. But certainly among all these banks, there is redundancy in the New York area. There are a number of locations where they’re across the street from each other or on the same block. Chase has 148 branches in New York City and WaMu has 35 to 40 branches in the city—they’re all in competitive locations. If Wells Fargo ends up with Wachovia, there are no Wells Fargo branches in New York City. So they’ll have an instant expansion. Citibank and Wachovia, on the other hand, are redundant in certain places.

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