Community Bank of the Bay 2nd Quarter Earnings Rise Substantially.OAKLAND Oakland, city (1990 pop. 372,242), seat of Alameda co., W Calif., on the eastern side of San Francisco Bay; inc. 1852. Together with San Francisco and San Jose, the city comprises the fourth largest metropolitan area in the United States. , Calif. -- Community Bank of the Bay (OTCBB OTCBB See OTC Bulletin Board (OTCBB). :CBYAA) has announced second-quarter earnings of $85,091, compared to just $3,900 in the same period in 2006. The bank's total loans grew by 33 percent over the year from July July: see month. 1, 2006 to July 1, 2007, with the total growing from $33 million to $44 million. Its net interest margin (NIM nim 1 tr. & intr.v. nimmed, nim·ming, nims Archaic To steal; pilfer. [Middle English nimen, to take, from Old English niman; see ) - the difference between what the bank pays out for money and the rate it earns on those funds - grew to 5.11 percent, up from 4.8 percent a year ago. Brian The name Brian (sometimes spelled Bryan) comes from an Irish backround. It is of Celtic origin and its meaning may be "hill" or "strong, noble, and high"[1]. Garrett See also: All pages beginning with Garrett Garrett is a masculine Irish, and Anglo-Saxon first name, or surname meaning "Lord of the spear", "spear brave" or "spear wielder". , president and chief executive officer of Community Bank of the Bay, said the bank is successfully shifting its growth strategy into developing more stable, ongoing deposits rather than somewhat higher-cost, timed certificates of deposit. "Our role as a contributor to our community and a sincere partner with our depositors who want to make sure their money is used for the good of their community is one important key to our customer relationships," Garrett said. "It's it's 1. Contraction of it is. 2. Contraction of it has. See Usage Note at its. it's it is or it has it's be ~have the very essence of a community bank. This is economic voting at its finest - the use of dollars to support worthwhile community issues by the very people that live and work here and benefit from these efforts." Community Bank has two special deposit programs. The Oakland 1st Fund allows depositors in any type of account to designate des·ig·nate tr.v. des·ig·nat·ed, des·ig·nat·ing, des·ig·nates 1. To indicate or specify; point out. 2. To give a name or title to; characterize. 3. their funds to be invested exclusively in Oakland. The service is free. The very successful program had $21.5 million in deposits on June June: see month. 30, and has funded more than $13 million in loans to Oakland-based businesses and individuals. The Bay Area Green Fund, a similar program launched earlier this year, allows depositors to designate their money for uses that support loans, programs and companies attempting to make socially responsible or environmentally sound investments in their lives, companies, and communities. "Our current local market for core deposits is very competitive," Garrett said. "It will make 2007 a tough year for banks, but we have faith in our clients and our community. Our Oakland 1st Fund and the Bay Area Green Fund should continue to attract depositors who want their money to make a difference." Garrett said that as the bank shifted its deposits over the last year from higher-cost TCDs to more non-maturity deposits, the bank's total deposits dropped very slightly (1.3 percent), to $52,238,427 on June 30, 2007, from $52,947,032 on June 30, 2006. At the same time non-maturity deposits grew (3.2 percent) from $27,387,594 to $28,263,880. The bank added one additional position to its staff, year to year, for a total of 17. Assets dropped slightly (1.5 percent) to $65,555,720 on June 30, 2007, from $66,524,422 on June 30, 2006. Community Bank of the Bay is located at 1750 Broadway in Oakland. The office is open from 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m., Monday through Friday. Information on the bank and its services is available online at www.communitybankbay.com. |
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