A fully wired NH expected by 2026
Despite a shift in policy, New Hampshire officials expect 100% of the households and businesses in the state will have access to broadband internet by 2026.
Chittenden Corp., parent company of Ocean National Bank, reported sharply reduced earnings on Thursday but blamed it on costs related to a previous merger.
Chittenden’s net income was about $9 million for the second quarter of the year, or 20 cents a diluted share, compared to $21 million, or 45 cents a share, for the same quarter in the previous year.
But that was primarily due to a repositioning of the company’s securities portfolio and merger costs, both related to acquisition of the Maine-based Merrill Merchants Bancshares, completed at the end of May. Without those costs, the company would have made about $21.6 million, which was roughly the same as same quarter last year.
There are other mergers in the works for Chittenden. The Burlington, Vt.-based company is in the midst of acquiring the Wolfeboro, N.H.-based Community Bank & Trust Company in a $124 million deal expected to be completed at the end of the year, and merging it into Ocean National.
And Chittenden itself is being acquired by Connecticut-based Peoples United Financial in a $1.9 billion deal expected to be finalized in the first quarter of next year.
The company reported losing some $14.1 million on the sale of securities connected to the Merrill merger and spent another $4.1 million in merger costs. On the other hand, because of the merger the company has $6.9 billion in assets, about a $500 million increase. Some $73 million of that increase because of “goodwill” and “intangibles,” it said.
While the company made a slightly smaller provision for credit losses than the same period the previous year, nonperforming assets rose to $29.4 million, about a $5 million increase, primarily due to small commercial loans, it said. – BOB SANDERS