2026 data FDIC sourced Public-data reference.

Bank of New England — FDIC Bank Health Profile

Salem, New Hampshire · Est. 1983. Free, sourced from the FDIC BankFind Suite — refreshed each quarter and cross-checked against the FDIC Call Report.

State chartered State member bank FDIC Cert #24540 New York Region
D
Health grade
Weak
Score: 40/100

Basel III capital ratios — Bank of New England

0% 0.3% 0.6% 0.9% 1.2% 1.5% CET1 (≥6.5% req.) Tier 1 (≥8.0% req.) Total (≥10.0% req.) 0% 0% 1.4%
Basel III capital ratios — Bank of New England

Total Assets

$1.8B

Total balance-sheet footings

Total Deposits

$1.5B

Customer-funded liabilities

Net Loans

$1.6B

Outstanding loan book

Net Income

$39M

Bottom-line earnings

Safety Metrics

Tier 1 capital ratio
Well-capitalized 10%

0.00% of risk-weighted assets — below the federal "well-capitalized" threshold of 10%.

Tier 1 Capital Ratio
Core capital ÷ risk-weighted assets. Well-capitalized: ≥10%
0.00%
Texas Ratio
Non-performing loans ÷ equity. Danger zone: >100%
Equity Capital
Tangible book value as a capital buffer
$303M

Profitability Metrics

Return on Assets (ROA)
Net income ÷ assets. Healthy: ≥1%
2.28%
Return on Equity (ROE)
Net income ÷ equity. Industry avg: ~10%
13.72%
Efficiency Ratio
Operating costs ÷ revenue. Efficient: <60%
26.25%

Income & Expense Breakdown

$120M
Interest Income
$1M
Non-Interest Income
$19M
Non-Interest Expense

FDIC Deposit Insurance

Bank of New England is FDIC-insured (Certificate #24540). Your deposits are protected up to $250,000 per depositor, per account category regardless of this bank's health grade.

What the Numbers Say About Bank of New England

Bank of New England is an FDIC-insured institution (Certificate #24540) headquartered in Salem, New Hampshire, established in 1983. The bank currently holds $1.8B in total assets and $1.5B in customer deposits, with $1.6B deployed as loans. It operates as a State chartered (State member bank) within the FDIC New York region. These figures come directly from the bank's quarterly FDIC Call Report and reflect the balance sheet as of the latest regulatory filing.

On safety metrics, Bank of New England reports a Tier 1 Capital Ratio of 0.00% — below the 6% "adequately capitalized" minimum set by federal regulators and a Texas Ratio of —. Equity capital stands at $303M, serving as the tangible buffer against loan losses. On profitability, the bank posted a Return on Assets of 2.28% and a Return on Equity of 13.72%, with an Efficiency Ratio of 26.25% — below the 60% mark considered efficient for the industry. The combined picture yields a PlainBankData health grade of D (40/100), a composite score that blends all four dimensions.

Not financial advice. This page summarizes public FDIC Call Report data for informational purposes only. Health grades are our interpretation of regulatory filings and are not official FDIC ratings, endorsements, or predictions. Regardless of grade, every dollar on deposit at Bank of New England is protected by FDIC insurance up to $250,000 per depositor, per ownership category — even if the bank were to fail. For decisions about where to hold deposits, consult a qualified financial professional and verify the latest figures directly at the FDIC's BankFind Suite.

Top 5 banks in New Hampshire by total assets

Top 5 banks in New Hampshire by total assets Horizontal bar chart of the top 5 items by value (USD). Top 5 banks in New Hampshire by total assets Top 5 1. Mascoma Bank $3.0B 2. Bank of New Hampshire $2.7B 3. Bank of New England $1.8B 4. Meredith Village Savings Bank $1.6B 5. Merrimack County Savings Bank $1.4B Top 5 banks in New Hampshire ranked by total assets (FDIC Call Report). Source: FDIC BankFind Suite Q1 2025.

Source: FDIC BankFind Suite — Call Report (FFIEC 031/041) + CRA performance data Bank of New England (FDIC Cert #24540) — Tier 1 capital ratio, total assets, deposits, CRA rating · 2025 FDIC Call Reports filed quarterly; latest publicly-available vintage shown. Health grades are PlainBankData's interpretation of regulatory filings and are not official FDIC ratings.

Other Banks in New Hampshire

All New Hampshire banks →
Bank Assets Grade ROA
Mascoma Bank Lebanon $3.0B D 0.52%
Bank of New Hampshire Laconia $2.7B C 0.92%
Meredith Village Savings Bank Meredith $1.6B D 0.43%
Merrimack County Savings Bank Concord $1.4B D 0.27%
Franklin Savings Bank Franklin $917M C 0.77%
Savings Bank of Walpole Walpole $839M C 0.78%
Primary Bank Bedford $723M A 1.62%
Claremont Savings Bank Claremont $621M F 0.43%

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Bank of New England's health grade?
Bank of New England receives a health grade of D (40/100) based on four FDIC financial metrics: Tier 1 Capital Ratio (40%), Return on Assets (25%), Texas Ratio (20%), and Efficiency Ratio (15%). This bank shows notable financial weaknesses. Your deposits remain FDIC-insured up to $250,000.
How large is Bank of New England?
Bank of New England holds $1.8B in total assets and $1.5B in deposits. It is headquartered in Salem, New Hampshire.
Is my money safe at Bank of New England?
Yes. Bank of New England is FDIC-insured (Certificate #24540). Your deposits are protected up to $250,000 per depositor, per account category, regardless of the bank's health grade. If a bank fails, the FDIC typically makes insured deposits available within one business day.
What is Bank of New England's Tier 1 Capital Ratio?
Bank of New England has a Tier 1 Capital Ratio of 0.00%. The federal "well-capitalized" threshold is 10%. This bank is below the 6% minimum for "adequately capitalized" status.
How efficient is Bank of New England?
Bank of New England has an Efficiency Ratio of 26.25%. Below 60% is considered efficient — the bank converts a strong share of revenue into profit. This metric compares non-interest expenses to total revenue.

Bank Safety Guides

Data from the FDIC BankFind Suite API. Financial data as of Q4 2025.

Related

Data sourced from official U.S. government datasets. See our methodology for details. Retrieved and formatted by PlainBankData Editorial

Disclaimer: This information is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute professional advice. Data is sourced from the FDIC BankFind Suite. Consult a qualified professional before making decisions based on this data.