- Washington Mutual - Wikipedia
Old Stone Corp Thursday announced it has completed the sale of its Washington state retail division, Old Stone Bank of Washington, to Washington Mutual, a federal savings bank, a subsidiary of Seattle-based Washington Mutual Savings Bank, for a pre-tax gain of approximately $10 million
- Washington Mutual Bank (Including its subsidiary . . . - FDIC
Subsequent to the closure, JPMorgan Chase acquired the assets and most of the liabilities, including covered bonds and other secured debt, of Washington Mutual Bank from the FDIC as Receiver for Washington Mutual Bank
- What happened to Washington Mutual? Who bought it?
Who bought Washington Mutual? JPMorgan Chase acquired the deposits, assets, and certain liabilities of Washington Mutual from the FDIC on September 25, 2008, for just $1 9 billion
- Washington Mutual (WaMu): How It Went Bankrupt - The Balance
In 2008, it became the largest failed bank in U S history By the end of 2007, WaMu had more than 43,000 employees, 2,200 branch offices in 15 states, and $188 3 billion in deposits
- The Inside Story of WaMu - The Biggest Bank Failure in . . .
Washington Mutual, the country’s largest savings and loan bank, fell into the latter camp The author of "The Lost Bank" has the story of the biggest bank failure in American history
- WASHINGTON MUTUAL BANK
WASHINGTON MUTUAL BANK - Receivership Balance Sheet Summary (Unaudited) Fund Code:10015 Failure Date:9 25 2008
- Washington Mutual (WaMu) - HistoryLink. org
The bank that eventually became known as Washington Mutual -- or simply WaMu -- had its beginnings in a glue pot That glue pot boiled over in June 1889 in a downtown Seattle woodworking shop and started the Great Seattle Fire, which left 29 square blocks of downtown Seattle in ruins
|