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FDIC Chief: Deposits In U.S. Banks Are Safe

Bank Suffered One Of Biggest Closures In U.S. History, Seized By Feds

 CBS News Interactive: Eye On The Economy

WASHINGTON (AP) ― The nation's banking system is "absolutely safe" and Americans' insured deposits in banks protected, the head of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation said Tuesday.

"Insured deposits are absolutely safe," Sheila Bair, FDIC chairwoman, said in an interview on CBS' "The Early Show." "The banking system as a whole is absolutely safe."

The FDIC insures bank deposits of up to $100,000 and up to $250,000 for funds in retirement accounts such as an IRA.

Bair said that while there will likely be more bank closings - like that of IndyMac Bank, which last week became the largest regulated thrift to fail - they won't occur on a large scale and should be put in "appropriate context."

"There are 8,500 banks," Bair said. "This is one."

"We've had five bank closings this year," Bair said. "I won't say that banks don't have challenges right now. They do." But, she noted, "No insured depositor has ever lost a penny of insured deposits throughout the FDIC's 75-year history."

(© 2008 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.)

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