| New Richmond bank to focus on
small and mid-sized businesses
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Carving
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New Richmond bank
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by Jack
Milligan
for Virginia Business
February 2006
It seems to be a never-ending cycle
in a banking industry that has been merger crazy for
most of the past 15 years. A bank president with a
long
Rolodex of contacts decides that he doesn’t want
to work for a large organization any longer, so he raises
a pot full of money and starts a community bank. That’s
pretty much Merlin A. Henkel’s story — and
he’s having the time of his life.
Henkel, 50, has spent most of his
professional life as a Virginia banker. From 2000 to
February 2005, he was a regional president for Resource
Bancshares in Virginia Beach — which was acquired
by Lancaster, Pa.-based Fulton Financial Corp. in September
2003. From 1993 through 1997, Henkel was a senior executive
at Regency Bank in Richmond, serving as president during
his tenure. Regency was acquired by Martinsville-based
MainStreet Bank Group Inc., and Henkel spent 1998 as
president of MainStreet’s Cen-tral Virginia operation.
When it comes to bank acquisitions,
Henkel has been there and done that. So when he started
to feel the
itch to run his own show again, he teamed up with former
colleague Thomas L. Hotchkiss, who had been MainStreet’s
senior credit officer. The two men have since raised
$16.8 million in equity capital to start the Virginia
Business Bank, which will be based in Richmond and focus
on its business community. The bank will operate from
a single office in the Stony Point Office Park. It will
offer a full range of loan and deposit products for
consumers and businesses, although its primary focus
will be on small and mid-sized companies. Henkel will
be president and CEO, and Hotchkiss will serve as the
bank’s chief credit officer.
In an interview, Henkel says that large banks “just
don’t pay attention to the under $5 million [business]
market any more,” while most community banks
concentrate on companies with $1 million in annual
sales or less.
He allows that there have been a number of community
bank startups in Richmond over the past five years,
but he intends to target that $1 million to $5 million
niche.
Virginia Business Bank expected to open its doors next
month.
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