Charter Bank — Texas Ratio
Data as of · sourced from FFIEC call reports. How we update
Charter Bank reported a texas ratio of 27.00% as of Q1 2026 , ranking #141 of 3,908 U.S. banks (96th percentile) . The Texas Ratio is the most-cited bank failure-prediction metric. A ratio above 100% historically correlates with elevated failure risk.
12-Quarter Trend
National Context
What is the Texas Ratio?
The Texas Ratio compares a bank's potential credit losses (non-performing assets + real-estate-owned) to its loss-absorbing capacity (tangible common equity + loan loss reserves). Coined during the 1980s Texas banking crisis, it remains the single most widely cited bank failure-prediction metric.
Under 25%: healthy. 25-50%: normal for most community banks. 50-100%: watch — credit issues exceed half of capital. Over 100%: elevated failure risk; the bank's bad assets exceed its capacity to absorb them. The ratio should be read against trend — a stable 70% is different from a quickly rising 60%.
Full definition & formula →More Charter Bank metrics
Source: FFIEC call reports, standardized by BankRegReports. Values are point-in-time as filed. See the full Charter Bank profile or how this data updates.