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Charter Completes Acquisition of Troubled Merit Savings

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Times Staff Writer

Charter Savings Bank in Huntington Beach said Wednesday that it has completed its $3.5-million acquisition of financially troubled Merit Savings Bank, the only savings and loan catering to the Japanese-American community in Southern California.

The acquisition catapulted the one-office Charter into a five-branch operation with $440 million in assets, more than twice its previous size, said Jon Maddox, Charter’s president.

Mola Development, which owns 90% of Charter, paid $1 million in cash to Merit shareholders and put $2.5 million in cash into Charter’s capital base to merge the Los Angeles thrift into Charter.

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Maddox said all Merit employees are being retained, including its president, Keith Kishiama, who will act as a liaison between Merit’s retail operations and Charter.

With Merit, Charter also picked up a sizable retail base composed mainly of first- and second-generation Japanese-Americans who hold accounts in Merit’s branches in downtown Los Angeles, Fullerton, Torrance and Monterey Park.

Charter--strong on building out projects and managing and developing properties--has lacked a consumer-oriented retail base. It has acted mainly as a wholesale operation by buying packages of loans at discounts from other lenders.

More than 14% of Merit’s $220 million in assets at the end of last year were foreclosed real estate and poor or non-performing loans. Bankrupt construction companies, cost overruns and bad projections eventually sapped Merit of its net worth.

Since reaching a merger agreement in January, Mola and Charter have reduced the $30 million in foreclosed real estate that Merit was holding to about $13 million.

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