The night the lights went out in Georgia
In theory, no bank should ever fail. Ostensibly, no business should fail. You make a product, sell it for more than it costs to produce it, and you make a profit. I know, I know, the reality is different. Most businesses
People talk often about the Federal Reserve printing money, but that gets it wrong. The Fed doesn't print money, either literally or figuratively. The Fed gives that job to the banks. A bank's business, ultimately, involves creating "money" in its broadest sense. Cash gets into circulation when a bank hands it out to a customer. Banks create credit when they make loans, and credit is the true lubricant of the economy. The banking license is almost literally a license to print money. It should, therefore, be an impossible thing to fail at. Banking is like the underwear-gnome business model from "South Park," but instead of a question mark between phases one and three, phase two is "print money." Any conservatively run bank should turn a steady profit season after season, year after year. Most in fact do.
But banks do fail. On Friday, Georgia banking regulators and the FDIC
Community Bank had about $288 million in assets and $268 million in deposits. That's tiny compared to the big banks, but it still should have been enough to profitably run a bank. Community Trust's problems, it seems, as they usually do, revolved around loans. On April 14, the Fed
That gambit in itself may not have been the problem. A January review by the Atlanta Fed found problems with "board oversight, capital, and compliance." The bank was given 30 days to come up with a written plan to fix its problems. They didn't even make it two weeks. I don't know exactly what was happening inside Community Trust, but it obviously wasn't being run conservatively.
If you want to be a doomer, you might note that in all of 2025 only two banks failed, whereas two have already failed in only the first four months of 2026. But that's still nothing. In the 2008 financial crisis,
I know businesspeople love to complain about regulators and rules, but there are reasons why they're there. And for banks the reason is because even bankers sometimes get out ahead of their skis. Even the Medici, the most famous banking family in history, screwed up eventually. And if too many banks fail, if the money-creating mechanism breaks, the entire economy seizes up.













