Farm Credit Bank of Texas

Bank
  • Bank
  • Government-sponsored enterprise
Industry
  • Agribusiness
  • Financial services
Headquarters
Austin, Texas
Key people
Amie Pala, CEO

Issac Bennett, CCO; Brandon Blaut, COO; Brian O'Keane, CFO; Scott Erlichman, CIO; Thomas Ringler, EVP, Enterprise Risk;

Nisha Rocap, Chief Audit Executive; Nanci Tucker, Chief Administrative Officer & General Counsel
Net income
Increase US$ 199.9 million (2023)Total assetsIncrease US$ 37.3 billion (2023)Total equityIncrease US$ 1.7 billion (2023)Websitewww.farmcreditbank.com
Charter map

Farm Credit Bank of Texas, part of the US Farm Credit System, serves as a wholesale lender and business-service provider to 13 local borrower-owned Farm Credit associations in Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, New Mexico and Texas.[1][2]

Farm Credit Bank of Texas is a federated cooperative owned by the local Farm Credit association cooperatives, which directly finance rural real estate, agricultural production, country homes and agribusiness firms.[2] Together with the other three banks of the Farm Credit System (AgFirst Farm Credit Bank, Columbia, South Carolina; AgriBank FCB, St. Paul, Minnesota; and CoBank, ACB, Denver, Colorado), the bank generates funds from the issuance of debt securities in the national and international financial markets through the Federal Farm Credit Banks Funding Corporation, a joint subsidiary of the banks of the Farm Credit System.[2] These debt securities are the joint and several liabilities of the banks of the Farm Credit System and are neither guaranteed by the federal government nor backed by the full faith and credit of the federal government.[2] The Farm Credit Insurance Fund is available to protect investors in Farm Credit System debt securities.[2]

History

Farm Credit Bank of Texas is the product of the 1988 merger of the Federal Land Bank of Texas and Federal Intermediate Credit Bank of Texas. These banks were known as the Federal Land Bank of Houston and the Federal Intermediate Credit Bank of Houston prior to changing their names in 1979, and were located in Houston from their respective founding dates of 1916 and 1923 until they relocated to Austin in 1982.

See also

References

  1. ^ "View FCS Institution Directory: Farm Credit Bank of Texas". Farm Credit Administration. Retrieved 2016-09-25.
  2. ^ a b c d e Monke, Jim (May 17, 2016). Farm Credit System (PDF). Congressional Research Service.

External links

  • Official website
  • Farm Credit Administration site
  • About the Funding Corporation
  • Farm Credit (About us)
Authority control databases Edit this at Wikidata
International
  • VIAF
National
  • United States