(Updates with California failure.)

 
   DOW JONES NEWSWIRES 
 

U.S. regulators announced Friday the failure of two Georgia banks, adding more closures to the state that leads the country in failures this year, as well as a California bank.

The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. said Habersham Bank based in Clarkesville, Ga., and Citizens Bank of Effingham, based in Springfield, Ga., have closed. The former was acquired by SCBT Financial Corp. (SCBT) and the latter by Heritage Financial Group Inc. (HBOS).

Later Friday, the FDIC said Charter Oak Bank (CHOB) of Napa, Calif., also failed and was being acquired by Bank of Marin Bancorp's (BMRC) banking subsidiary.

The closings bring this year's number of Georgia's bank failures to six and California's to two. Colorado, Florida and Wisconsin also have seen two banks fail each. A total of 21 U.S. banks have failed in 2011.

The number of banks that failed last year--157--was the highest since the savings-and-loan crisis ended in 1992, although the total assets at those fallen banks was much smaller than the total the year before.

Habersham Bank had about $387.6 million in total assets and $339.9 million in total deposits with eight branches as of the end of last year.

SCBT, the holding company for SCBT NA and the operator of South Carolina Bank and Trust, agreed to assume all the deposits without paying a premium and entered a loss-share transaction with the FDIC on $270.7 million of the assets. Habersham's branches will reopen at their normal hours starting Saturday as new SCBT locations.

With the takeover, SCBT said it now operates a total of 83 financial centers in Georgia, North Carolina and South Carolina. The company said it expected the takeover to be immediately accretive to both earnings per share and tangible book value.

Meanwhile, Citizens Bank of Effingham had about $214.3 million in total assets and $206.5 million in total deposits and fourth branches at year's end.

Heritage Financial Group, through its HeritageBank of the South banking subsidiary, agreed to assume all the deposits, paying a premium of 1% to the FDIC. It also entered a loss-share transaction with the FDIC on $158.1 million of the assets. The four branches will reopen Saturday as HeritageBank locations. Heritage Financial already operates 16 full-service branch locations and two mortgage production offices mostly in South Georgia and North Central Florida.

As for the California bank, Charter Oak had approximately $120.8 million in total assets and $105.3 million in total deposits as of Dec. 31. Bank of Marin--Bank of Marin Bancorp.'s subsidiary based in nearby Novato, Calif.--would take over the two branches and all the deposits of Charter Oak.

The FDIC said it is retaining $28.5 million of the assets for later disposition.

The FDIC estimated that the cost of the failures to the Deposit Insurance Fund would be $171.5 million.

Depositors of the failed banks will automatically become depositors of the new banks and deposits will continue to be insured by the FDIC.

-By Joan E. Solsman, Dow Jones Newswires; 212-416-2291; joan.solsman@dowjones.com