UNITED STATES
                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                              Washington D.C. 20549

                                    FORM 10-K

                Annual Report Pursuant to Section 13 or 15(d) of
                       the Securities Exchange Act of 1934

For the fiscal year                               Commission File Number 0-10661
ended December 31, 2008
                                TriCo Bancshares
             ------------------------------------------------------
             (Exact name of Registrant as specified in its charter)

               California                                        94-2792841
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(State or other jurisdiction of                               (I.R.S. Employer
incorporation or organization)                               Identification No.)

63 Constitution Drive, Chico, California                             95973
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(Address of principal executive offices)                          (Zip Code)

Registrant's telephone number, including area code:(530) 898-0300
Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:

 Common Stock, without par value                Nasdaq Stock Market LLC
 -------------------------------     -------------------------------------------
       (Title of Class)              (Name of each exchange on which registered)

Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(g) of the Act:None.

Indicate by check mark whether the Registrant is a well-known  seasoned  issuer,
as defined in Rule 405 of the Act.

                                YES      NO   X
                                   ----    ----

Indicate by check mark  whether the  Registrant  is not required to file reports
pursuant to Section 13 or Section 15(d) of the Act.

                                YES      NO   X
                                   ----    ----

Indicate by check mark whether the Registrant (1) has filed all reports required
to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during
the  preceding 12 months (or for such shorter  periods that the  Registrant  was
required  to file  such  reports),  and  (2) has  been  subject  to such  filing
requirements for the past 90 days.

                                YES  X   NO
                                   ----    ----

Indicate by check mark if disclosure of delinquent  filers  pursuant to Item 405
of Regulation  S-K is not contained  herein,  and will not be contained,  to the
best  of  the  Registrant's   knowledge,  in  definitive  proxy  or  information
statements  incorporated  by  reference  in  Part  III of the  Form  10-K or any
amendment to this Form 10-K.


Indicate by check mark whether the Registrant is a large  accelerated  filer, an
accelerated filer, a non-accelerated  filer or a smaller reporting company.  See
the definitions of "large accelerated  filer,"  "accelerated filer" and "smaller
reporting company" in Rule 12b-2 of the Act (check one).

 Large accelerated filer       Accelerated filer    X
                         ----                      ----
 Non-accelerated filer         Smaller reporting company
                         ----                            ----

Indicate by check mark whether the  Registrant is a shell company (as defined in
Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act).

                                YES      NO   X
                                   ----    ----


The aggregate market value of the voting common stock held by  non-affiliates of
the Registrant,  as of March 6, 2009, was approximately  $127,949,000  (based on
the closing  sales price of the  Registrant's  common  stock on the date).  This
computation  excludes a total of 4,286,865 shares that are beneficially owned by
the officers and directors of Registrant  who may be deemed to be the affiliates
of Registrant under applicable rules of the Securities and Exchange Commission.

The number of shares  outstanding of  Registrant's  common stock, as of March 6,
2009, was 15,782,753 shares of common stock, without par value.

The  information  required to be  disclosed  pursuant to Part III of this report
either  shall be (i)  deemed  to be  incorporated  by  reference  from  selected
portions of TriCo  Bancshares'  definitive  proxy  statement for the 2009 annual
meeting of  stockholders,  if such proxy  statement is filed with the Securities
and Exchange Commission pursuant to Regulation 14A not later than 120 days after
the end of the Company's most recently  completed  fiscal year, or (ii) included
in an  amendment  to this report  filed with the  Commission  on Form 10-K/A not
later than the end of such 120 day period.




                                TABLE OF CONTENTS

                                                                     Page Number
PART I

Item 1        Business                                                       2
Item 1A       Risk Factors                                                  12
Item 1B       Unresolved Staff Comments                                     20
Item 2        Properties                                                    20
Item 3        Legal Proceedings                                             20
Item 4        Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders           20

PART II

Item 5        Market for Registrant's Common Equity, Related Stockholder
                 Matters and Issuer Purchases of Equity Securities          21
Item 6        Selected Financial Data                                       23
Item 7        Management's Discussion and Analysis of
                 Financial Condition and Results of Operations              24
Item 7A       Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk    44
Item 8        Financial Statements and Supplementary Data                   44
Item 9        Changes in and Disagreements with Accountants on
                 Accounting and Financial Disclosure                        79
Item 9A       Controls and Procedures                                       79
Item 9B       Other Information                                             79

PART III

Item 10       Directors, Executive Officers and Corporate Governance        80
Item 11       Executive Compensation                                        80
Item 12       Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners
                and Management and Related Stockholder Matters              80
Item 13       Certain Relationships and Related Transactions,
              and Director Independence                                     80
Item 14       Principal Accountant Fees and Services                        80

PART IV

Item 15       Exhibits and Financial Statement Schedules                    80

              Signatures                                                    81




FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS

In addition to historical information,  this Annual Report on Form 10-K contains
forward-looking  statements  about TriCo Bancshares (the "Company") for which it
claims the  protection  of the safe harbor  provisions  contained in the Private
Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These  forward-looking  statements are
based on  Management's  current  knowledge  and belief and  include  information
concerning  the Company's  possible or assumed  future  financial  condition and
results  of  operations.  When you see any of the words  "believes",  "expects",
"anticipates",  "estimates",  or similar  expressions,  these generally indicate
that we are making  forward-looking  statements.  A number of  factors,  some of
which are beyond the Company's ability to predict or control, could cause future
results to differ  materially  from those  contemplated.  These factors  include
those listed at Item 1A Risk Factors, in this report.




                                     PART I

ITEM 1. BUSINESS

Information About TriCo Bancshares' Business

TriCo  Bancshares (the "Company",  "TriCo",  "we" or "our") was  incorporated in
California  on October 13, 1981.  It was organized at the direction of the board
of directors of Tri Counties Bank (the "Bank") for the purpose of forming a bank
holding  company.  On September 7, 1982, the  shareholders  of Tri Counties Bank
became the  shareholders  of TriCo and Tri  Counties  Bank became a wholly owned
subsidiary of TriCo.  At that time,  TriCo became a bank holding company subject
to the  supervision  of the Board of  Governors  of the Federal  Reserve  System
("FRB")  under the Bank Holding  Company Act of 1956,  as amended.  Tri Counties
Bank  remains  subject  to the  supervision  of  the  California  Department  of
Financial  Institutions and the Federal Deposit Insurance  Corporation ("FDIC").
On July 31, 2003, the Company formed a subsidiary  business trust, TriCo Capital
Trust I, to issue trust  preferred  securities.  On June 22,  2004,  the Company
formed a  subsidiary  business  trust,  TriCo  Capital  Trust II, to issue trust
preferred  securities.  See Note 8 in the financial statements at Item 8 of this
report  for a  discussion  about  the  Company's  issuance  of  trust  preferred
securities.  Tri Counties Bank, TriCo Capital Trust I and TriCo Capital Trust II
currently are the only  subsidiaries  of TriCo and TriCo is not  conducting  any
business operations  independent of Tri Counties Bank, TriCo Capital Trust I and
TriCo Capital Trust II.

For  financial  reporting  purposes,  the  financial  statements of the Bank are
consolidated into the financial statements of the Company. Historically,  issuer
trusts,  such as TriCo  Capital  Trust I and TriCo Capital Trust II, that issued
trust preferred  securities have been consolidated by their parent companies and
trust  preferred  securities  have been  treated as eligible  for Tier 1 capital
treatment by bank holding companies under FRB rules and regulations  relating to
minority interests in equity accounts of consolidated subsidiaries. Applying the
provisions of the Financial  Accounting  Standards Board Revised  Interpretation
No. 46 (FIN 46R), the Company is no longer  permitted to consolidate such issuer
trusts  beginning  on  December  31,  2003.  The  FRB  permits  trust  preferred
securities to be treated as Tier 1 up to a limit of 25% of Tier 1 capital.

Additional  information  concerning  the  Company can be found on our website at
www.tcbk.com.  Copies of our annual reports on Form 10-K,  quarterly  reports on
Form 10-Q,  current  reports on Form 8-K and  amendments  to these  reports  are
available  free of charge  through  our  website  at  Investor  Relations---"SEC
Filings"  and  "Annual  Reports"  as soon as  reasonably  practicable  after the
Company  files these  reports to the  Securities  and Exchange  Commission.  The
information on our website is not incorporated into this annual report.

                                       2


Business of Tri Counties Bank

Tri Counties Bank was incorporated as a California  banking  corporation on June
26, 1974, and received its certificate of authority to begin banking  operations
on March 11, 1975. Tri Counties Bank engages in the general  commercial  banking
business in the California counties of Butte,  Contra Costa, Del Norte,  Fresno,
Glenn, Kern, Lake, Lassen,  Madera,  Mendocino,  Merced,  Napa, Nevada,  Placer,
Sacramento, Shasta, Siskiyou, Stanislaus, Sutter, Tehama, Tulare, Yolo and Yuba.
Tri  Counties  Bank  currently  operates  from 32  traditional  branches  and 25
in-store branches.

General Banking Services

The Bank conducts a commercial  banking  business  including  accepting  demand,
savings and time  deposits  and making  commercial,  real  estate,  and consumer
loans. It also offers  installment  note collection,  issues  cashier's  checks,
sells  travelers  checks and  provides  safe deposit  boxes and other  customary
banking services.  Brokerage  services are provided at the Bank's offices by the
Bank's association with Raymond James Financial  Services,  Inc., an independent
financial  services  provider and  broker-dealer.  The Bank does not offer trust
services or international banking services.

The Bank has  emphasized  retail  banking  since it  opened.  Most of the Bank's
customers are retail  customers and small to medium-sized  businesses.  The Bank
emphasizes serving the needs of local businesses,  farmers and ranchers, retired
individuals and wage earners.  The majority of the Bank's loans are direct loans
made to individuals and businesses in northern and central  California where its
branches are located.  At December  31, 2008,  the total of the Bank's  consumer
installment loans net of deferred fees outstanding was $514,448,000 (32.3%), the
total of commercial loans outstanding was $189,645,000 (11.9%), and the total of
real estate loans including  construction  loans of $84,229,000 was $886,756,000
(55.8%). The Bank takes real estate, listed and unlisted securities, savings and
time deposits, automobiles, machinery, equipment, inventory, accounts receivable
and notes receivable secured by property as collateral for loans.

Most of the Bank's deposits are attracted from individuals and  business-related
sources. No single person or group of persons provides a material portion of the
Bank's  deposits,  the loss of any one or more of which would have a  materially
adverse  effect on the  business of the Bank,  nor is a material  portion of the
Bank's  loans  concentrated  within  a  single  industry  or  group  of  related
industries.

In order to attract  loan and deposit  business  from  individuals  and small to
medium-sized  businesses,  branches of the Bank set lobby  hours to  accommodate
local demands.  In general,  lobby hours are from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.  Monday
through Thursday,  and from 9:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. on Friday.  Some Bank offices
also  utilize  drive-up  facilities  operating  from 9:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.  The
supermarket  branches  are open  from  9:00 a.m.  to 7:00  p.m.  Monday  through
Saturday and 11:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. on Sunday.

The Bank offers  24-hour  ATMs at almost all branch  locations.  The 64 ATMs are
linked to several  national and regional  networks  such as CIRRUS and STAR.  In
addition, banking by telephone on a 24-hour toll-free number is available to all
customers.  This service allows a customer to obtain  account  balances and most
recent transactions,  transfer moneys between accounts,  make loan payments, and
obtain interest rate information.

In  February  1998,  the Bank became the first bank in the  Northern  Sacramento
Valley to offer banking services on the Internet.  This banking service provides
customers one more tool for access to their accounts.

Other Activities

The  Bank may in the  future  engage  in other  businesses  either  directly  or
indirectly  through  subsidiaries  acquired  or  formed by the Bank  subject  to
regulatory constraints. See "Regulation and Supervision."

                                       3


Employees

At December 31, 2008,  the Company and the Bank employed 697 persons,  including
seven executive officers.  Full time equivalent employees were 625. No employees
of the Company or the Bank are presently represented by a union or covered under
a  collective  bargaining  agreement.  Management  believes  that  its  employee
relations are excellent.

Competition

The banking business in California generally,  and in the Bank's primary service
area of Northern and Central California specifically, is highly competitive with
respect to both loans and deposits. It is dominated by a relatively small number
of  national  and  regional  banks  with  many  offices  operating  over  a wide
geographic  area.  Among the  advantages  such major banks have over the Bank is
their  ability to finance wide  ranging  advertising  campaigns  and to allocate
their investment  assets to regions of high yield and demand. By virtue of their
greater total capitalization such institutions have substantially higher lending
limits than does the Bank.

In addition to competing  with savings  institutions,  commercial  banks compete
with other  financial  markets for funds as a result of the  deregulation of the
financial services industry.  Yields on corporate and government debt securities
and other commercial paper may be higher than on deposits,  and therefore affect
the ability of commercial  banks to attract and hold deposits.  Commercial banks
also compete for available funds with money market instruments and mutual funds.
During past periods of high  interest  rates,  money market funds have  provided
substantial  competition to banks for deposits and they may continue to do so in
the future.  Mutual  funds are also a major  source of  competition  for savings
dollars.

The Bank relies substantially on local promotional  activity,  personal contacts
by  its  officers,  directors,  employees  and  shareholders,   extended  hours,
personalized  service  and its  reputation  in the  communities  it  services to
compete effectively.

Regulation and Supervision

General

The Company and the Bank are subject to extensive  regulation under both federal
and state law.  This  regulation  is intended  primarily  for the  protection of
depositors,  the deposit  insurance fund, and the banking system as a whole, and
not for the  protection  of  shareholders  of the Company.  Set forth below is a
summary  description of the significant  laws and regulations  applicable to the
Company and the Bank. The  description is qualified in its entirety by reference
to the applicable laws and regulations.

Regulatory Agencies

The Company is a legal entity  separate and distinct from the Bank and its other
subsidiaries. As a bank holding company, the Company is regulated under the Bank
Holding  Company  Act of 1956 (the "BHC  Act"),  and is subject to  supervision,
regulation and inspection by the Federal Reserve.  The Company is also under the
jurisdiction of the Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC") and is subject to
the disclosure and regulatory requirements of the Securities Act of 1933 and the
Securities  Exchange Act of 1934,  each  administered by the SEC. The Company is
listed on the Nasdaq Global Select market  ("Nasdaq")  under the trading  symbol
"TCBK" and is subject to the rules of Nasdaq for listed companies.

The Bank, as a state chartered bank, is subject to broad federal  regulation and
oversight  extending  to all its  operations  by the Federal  Deposit  Insurance
Corporation  and to state  regulation by the California  Department of Financial
Institutions.

                                       4


The Company

The  Company  is a bank  holding  company.  In  general,  the BHC Act limits the
business of bank holding companies to banking, managing or controlling banks and
other  activities  that the  Federal  Reserve  has  determined  to be so closely
related  to  banking  as to be a proper  incident  thereto.  As a result  of the
Gramm-Leech-Bliley  Act, which amended the BHC Act, bank holding  companies that
are  financial  holding  companies  may engage in any  activity,  or acquire and
retain  the  shares of a company  engaged  in any  activity,  that is either (i)
financial in nature or incidental to such  financial  activity (as determined by
the Federal Reserve in  consultation  with the OCC) or (ii)  complementary  to a
financial activity,  and that does not pose a substantial risk to the safety and
soundness of  depository  institutions  or the  financial  system  generally (as
determined  solely by the Federal  Reserve).  Activities  that are  financial in
nature include securities  underwriting and dealing,  insurance underwriting and
agency, and making merchant banking investments.

If a bank holding  company  seeks to engage in the broader  range of  activities
that are permitted under the BHC Act for financial holding companies, (i) all of
its depository  institution  subsidiaries  must be "well  capitalized" and "well
managed" and (ii) it must file a  declaration  with the Federal  Reserve that it
elects to be a financial holding company. A depository institution subsidiary is
considered to be "well  capitalized" if it satisfies the  requirements  for this
status  discussed  in  the  section  captioned   "Capital  Adequacy  and  Prompt
Corrective  Action," included  elsewhere in this item. A depository  institution
subsidiary is considered  "well  managed" if it received a composite  rating and
management rating of at least "satisfactory" in its most recent examination.  In
addition,  the subsidiary depository  institution must have received a rating of
at least  "satisfactory"  in its most  recent  examination  under the  Community
Reinvestment  Act.  (See the  section  captioned  "Community  Reinvestment  Act"
included elsewhere in this item.)

Financial holding companies that do not continue to meet all of the requirements
for such status will, depending on which requirement they fail to meet, face not
being able to undertake  new  activities or  acquisitions  that are financial in
nature,  or losing  their  ability to  continue  those  activities  that are not
generally  permissible  for bank  holding  companies.  In  addition,  failure to
satisfy  conditions  prescribed  by the Federal  Reserve to comply with any such
requirements  could result in orders to divest banking  subsidiaries or to cease
engaging in activities other than those closely related to banking under the BHC
Act.

The BHC Act, the Federal Bank Merger Act, and other  federal and state  statutes
regulate  acquisitions  of  commercial  banks.  The BHC Act  requires  the prior
approval of the Federal  Reserve for the direct or indirect  acquisition of more
than 5 percent of the voting shares of a commercial  bank or its parent  holding
company.  Under the Federal  Bank Merger Act,  the prior  approval of the OCC is
required  for a national  bank to merge with another bank or purchase the assets
or assume the  deposits  of another  bank.  In  reviewing  applications  seeking
approval of merger and acquisition transactions, the bank regulatory authorities
will consider, among other things, the competitive effect and public benefits of
the  transactions,  the  capital  position  of the  combined  organization,  the
applicant's  performance  record under the Community  Reinvestment  Act (see the
section captioned "Community Reinvestment Act" included elsewhere in this item),
fair  housing  laws  and  the  effectiveness  of the  subject  organizations  in
combating money laundering activities.

Safety and Soundness Standards

The Federal  Deposit  Insurance  Corporation  Improvement Act of 1991 ("FDICIA")
implemented  certain  specific  restrictions  on  transactions  and required the
regulators  to adopt  overall  safety and  soundness  standards  for  depository
institutions  related to internal control,  loan underwriting and documentation,
and asset growth.  Among other things,  FDICIA limits the interest rates paid on
deposits by undercapitalized  institutions, the use of brokered deposits and the
aggregate  extension  of  credit by a  depository  institution  to an  executive
officer,  director,  principal  stockholder  or related  interest,  and  reduces
deposit insurance coverage for deposits offered by undercapitalized institutions
for deposits by certain employee benefits accounts.

                                       5



Section 39 to the  Federal  Deposit  Insurance  Act  requires  the  agencies  to
establish  safety and  soundness  standards for insured  financial  institutions
covering:

        o internal controls, information systems and internal audit systems;
        o loan documentation;
        o credit underwriting;
        o interest rate exposure;
        o asset growth;
        o compensation, fees and benefits;
        o asset quality, earnings and stock valuation; and
        o excessive   compensation  for  executive  officers,   directors  or
          principal shareholders which could lead to material financial loss.

If an  agency  determines  that  an  institution  fails  to  meet  any  standard
established by the guidelines,  the agency may require the financial institution
to submit to the  agency  an  acceptable  plan to  achieve  compliance  with the
standard.  If the  agency  requires  submission  of a  compliance  plan  and the
institution  fails to  timely  submit  an  acceptable  plan or to  implement  an
accepted  plan,  the  agency  must  require  the   institution  to  correct  the
deficiency.  An  institution  must file a  compliance  plan  within 30 days of a
request to do so from the institution's  primary federal  regulatory agency. The
agencies may elect to initiate  enforcement  action in certain cases rather than
rely on an existing plan  particularly  where failure to meet one or more of the
standards could threaten the safe and sound operation of the institution.

Restrictions on Dividends and Distributions

A  California  corporation  such  as  TriCo  may  make  a  distribution  to  its
shareholders if the corporation's retained earnings equal at least the amount of
the proposed  distribution.  In the event sufficient  retained  earnings are not
available  for  the  proposed   distribution,   a  California   corporation  may
nevertheless  make a distribution to its shareholders if, after giving effect to
the  distribution,  the  corporation's  assets equal at least 125 percent of its
liabilities and certain other conditions are met. Since the 125 percent ratio is
equivalent to a minimum capital ratio of 20 percent, most bank holding companies
are unable to meet this last test and so must have sufficient  retained earnings
to fund a proposed distribution.

The  primary  source  of  funds  for  payment  of  dividends  by  TriCo  to  its
shareholders will be the receipt of dividends and management fees from the Bank.
TriCo's ability to receive dividends from the Bank will be limited by applicable
state and federal law. Under Section 642 of the California Financial Code, funds
available for cash dividend  payments by a bank are restricted to the lesser of:
(i) retained  earnings;  or (ii) the Bank's net income for its last three fiscal
years (less any distributions to shareholders made during such period). However,
under Section 643 of the California  Financial  Code, with the prior approval of
the  Commissioner,  a bank may pay cash dividends in an amount not to exceed the
greater of the:  (1) retained  earnings of the bank;  (2) net income of the bank
for its last fiscal year;  or (3) net income of the bank for its current  fiscal
year. However,  if the state finds that the shareholders'  equity of the bank is
not adequate or that the payment of a dividend  would be unsafe or unsound,  the
Commissioner may order such bank not to pay a dividend to shareholders.

Additionally, under the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Improvement Act of
1991  ("FDICIA"),  a bank may not make any capital  distribution,  including the
payment of dividends, if after making such distribution the bank would be in any
of the  "undercapitalized"  categories under the FDIC's Prompt Corrective Action
regulations. A bank is undercapitalized for this purpose if its leverage ratios,
Tier 1 risk-based  capital level and total  risk-based  capital ratio are not at
least four percent, four percent and eight percent, respectively.

The FRB, FDIC and the DFI have authority to prohibit a bank holding company or a
bank from engaging in practices  which are  considered to be unsafe and unsound.
Depending on the  financial  condition of the Bank and upon other  factors,  the
FRB, FDIC or the DFI could determine that payment of dividends or other payments
by TriCo or the Bank might  constitute an unsafe or unsound  practice.  Finally,
any dividend that would cause a bank to fall below required capital levels could
also be prohibited.

                                       6


Source of Strength Doctrine

FRB policy requires a bank holding company to serve as a source of financial and
managerial  strength to its subsidiary  banks and does not permit a bank holding
company to conduct its  operations  in an unsafe or unsound  manner.  Under this
"source of strength doctrine," a bank holding company is expected to stand ready
to use  its  available  resources  to  provide  adequate  capital  funds  to its
subsidiary  banks  during  periods  of  financial  stress or  adversity,  and to
maintain  resources  and the capacity to raise capital that it can commit to its
subsidiary  banks.  Any capital  loans by a bank  holding  company to any of its
subsidiary  banks are subordinate in right of payment of deposits and to certain
other  indebtedness of such subsidiary  banks. The BHC Act provides that, in the
event of a bank holding company's bankruptcy, any commitment by the bank holding
company  to a federal  bank  regulatory  agency to  maintain  the  capital  of a
subsidiary  bank will be assumed  by the  bankruptcy  trustee  and  entitled  to
priority of payment.  Furthermore, the FRB has the right to order a bank holding
company to terminate any activity that the FRB believes is a serious risk to the
financial safety, soundness or stability of any subsidiary bank.

Consumer Protection Laws and Regulations

The  Company  is  subject  to  many  federal  consumer  protection  statues  and
regulations, some of which are discussed below.

The  Community  Reinvestment  Act of  1977  is  intended  to  encourage  insured
depository  institutions,  while operating safely and soundly,  to help meet the
credit needs of their  communities.  This act  specifically  directs the federal
regulatory  agencies to assess a bank's  record of helping meet the credit needs
of its  entire  community,  including  low- and  moderate-income  neighborhoods,
consistent with safe and sound practices. This act further requires the agencies
to take a financial  institution's  record of meeting its community credit needs
into account when  evaluating  applications  for,  among other things,  domestic
branches,  mergers or acquisitions,  or holding company formations. The agencies
use the  Community  Reinvestment  Act  assessment  factors in order to provide a
rating  to  the  financial  institution.  The  ratings  range  from  a  high  of
"outstanding" to a low of "substantial noncompliance."

The Equal Credit  Opportunity  Act  generally  prohibits  discrimination  in any
credit transaction,  whether for consumer or business purposes,  on the basis of
race,  color,  religion,  national origin,  sex, marital status,  age (except in
limited  circumstances),  receipt of income from public assistance programs,  or
good faith exercise of any rights under the Consumer Credit  Protection Act. The
Truth-in-Lending  Act is designed to ensure that credit terms are disclosed in a
meaningful  way so that  consumers  may compare  credit  terms more  readily and
knowledgeably.

The Fair Housing Act regulates many practices,  including making it unlawful for
any lender to discriminate in its housing-related lending activities against any
person because of race,  color,  religion,  national  origin,  sex,  handicap or
familial  status.  The Home Mortgage  Disclosure  Act grew out of public concern
over  credit  shortages  in certain  urban  neighborhoods  and  provides  public
information that will help show whether  financial  institutions are serving the
housing  credit needs of the  neighborhoods  and  communities  in which they are
located.  This act also  includes a "fair  lending"  aspect  that  requires  the
collection and disclosure of data about  applicant and borrower  characteristics
as a way of identifying possible  discriminatory  lending patterns and enforcing
anti-discrimination statutes.

The Real Estate Settlement  Procedures Act requires lenders to provide borrowers
with disclosures regarding the nature and cost of real estate settlements. Also,
this act prohibits  certain  abusive  practices,  such as kickbacks,  and places
limitations on the amount of escrow accounts.

Penalties  under the above laws may include  fines,  reimbursements,  injunctive
relief and other penalties.

                                       7



USA Patriot Act of 2001

The USA Patriot Act was enacted in 2001 to combat money laundering and terrorist
financing.   The  impact  of  the  Patriot  Act  on  financial  institutions  is
significant  and wide  ranging.  The Patriot Act  contains  sweeping  anti-money
laundering and financial  transparency  laws and requires  various  regulations,
including:

        o due diligence requirements for financial institutions that administer,
          maintain,  or manage private bank accounts or  correspondent  accounts
          for non-U.S. persons,
        o standards for verifying customer identification at account opening,
        o rules to promote cooperation among financial institutions, regulators,
          and law  enforcement  entities  to  assist  in the  identification  of
          parties that may be involved in terrorism or money laundering,
        o reports  to be filed by  non-financial  trades and  business  with the
          Treasury   Department's   Financial  Crimes  Enforcement  Network  for
          transactions exceeding $10,000, and
        o the filing of suspicious  activities reports by securities brokers and
          dealers if they  believe a customer  may be  violating  U.S.  laws and
          regulations.

Capital Requirements

Federal regulation imposes upon all financial  institutions a variable system of
risk-based capital guidelines designed to make capital requirements sensitive to
differences in risk profiles among banking  organizations,  to take into account
off-balance sheet exposures and to promote  uniformity in the definition of bank
capital uniform nationally.

The Bank and the Company are subject to the minimum capital  requirements of the
FDIC and the FRB, respectively. As a result of these requirements, the growth in
assets is  limited by the  amount of its  capital  as defined by the  respective
regulatory agency.  Capital requirements may have an effect on profitability and
the payment of dividends on the common stock of the Bank and the Company.  If an
entity is unable to increase its assets  without  violating the minimum  capital
requirements  or is forced to reduce  assets,  its ability to generate  earnings
would be reduced.

The FRB and the FDIC have  adopted  guidelines  utilizing a  risk-based  capital
structure. Qualifying capital is divided into two tiers. Tier 1 capital consists
generally of common stockholders'  equity,  qualifying  noncumulative  perpetual
preferred stock,  qualifying  cumulative perpetual preferred stock (up to 25% of
total  Tier 1  capital)  and  minority  interests  in  the  equity  accounts  of
consolidated  subsidiaries,  less goodwill and certain other intangible  assets.
Tier 2 capital  consists of, among other  things,  allowance  for loan and lease
losses up to 1.25% of weighted risk assets,  other  perpetual  preferred  stock,
hybrid  capital  instruments,   perpetual  debt,   mandatory   convertible  debt
securities,  subordinated  debt and  intermediate-term  preferred stock.  Tier 2
capital  qualifies  as part of total  capital  up to a maximum of 100% of Tier 1
capital. Amounts in excess of these limits may be issued but are not included in
the calculation of risk-based  capital ratios.  Under these  risk-based  capital
guidelines,  the Bank and the Company are required to maintain  capital equal to
at  least 8% of its  assets,  of which at least 4% must be in the form of Tier 1
capital.

The  guidelines  also  require  the  Company  and the Bank to maintain a minimum
leverage ratio of 4% of Tier 1 capital to total assets (the  "leverage  ratio").
The leverage ratio is determined by dividing an institution's  Tier 1 capital by
its quarterly  average total assets,  less goodwill and certain other intangible
assets.  The  leverage  ratio  constitutes  a minimum  requirement  for the most
well-run banking organizations.  See Note 19 in the financial statements at Item
8 of this report for a discussion  about the  Company's  risk-based  capital and
leverage ratios.

Prompt Corrective Action

Prompt  Corrective  Action  Regulations of the federal bank regulatory  agencies
establish  five  capital  categories  in  descending  order  (well  capitalized,
adequately  capitalized,  undercapitalized,  significantly  undercapitalized and
critically undercapitalized), assignment to which depends upon the institution's
total risk-based  capital ratio,  Tier 1 risk-based  capital ratio, and leverage
ratio.  Institutions classified in one of the three undercapitalized  categories
are subject to certain mandatory and discretionary  supervisory  actions,  which
include increased  monitoring and review,  implementation of capital restoration
plans,  asset growth  restrictions,  limitations upon expansion and new business
activities, requirements to augment capital, restrictions upon deposit gathering
and interest rates,  replacement of senior executive officers and directors, and
requiring  divestiture or sale of the institution.  The Bank has been classified
as well-capitalized since adoption of these regulations.

                                       8



Impact of Monetary Policies

Banking is a business that depends on interest rate  differentials.  In general,
the  difference  between the  interest  paid by a bank on its deposits and other
borrowings, and the interest rate earned by banks on loans, securities and other
interest-earning assets comprises the major source of banks' earnings. Thus, the
earnings and growth of banks are subject to the influence of economic conditions
generally,  both  domestic  and  foreign,  and also to the  monetary  and fiscal
policies of the United  States and its agencies,  particularly  the FRB. The FRB
implements  national  monetary  policy,  such as seeking to curb  inflation  and
combat  recession,  by its  open-market  dealings  in United  States  government
securities,   by  adjusting  the  required   level  of  reserves  for  financial
institutions  subject to reserve  requirements  and through  adjustments  to the
discount  rate  applicable  to borrowings by banks which are members of the FRB.
The  actions  of the FRB in these  areas  influence  the  growth of bank  loans,
investments and deposits and also affect  interest rates.  The nature and timing
of any future changes in such policies and their impact on the Company cannot be
predicted.  In  addition,  adverse  economic  conditions  could  make  a  higher
provision  for loan  losses a prudent  course and could  cause  higher loan loss
charge-offs, thus adversely affecting the Company's net earnings.

Premiums for Deposit Insurance

The FDIC has authority to impose a special  assessment on members of the Deposit
Insurance  Fund (the "DIF") to insure that there will be  sufficient  assessment
income for repayment of DIF obligations and for any other purpose which it deems
necessary.  The FDIC is  authorized  to set  semi-annual  assessment  rates  for
members at levels sufficient to maintain the DIF's reserve ratio to a designated
level of 1.15% of insured deposits.

Under  FDICIA,  the FDIC has  developed a risk-based  assessment  system,  which
provides that the assessment  rate for an insured  depository  institution  will
vary according to the level of risk incurred in its activities. An institution's
risk  category  is based  upon  whether  the  institution  is well  capitalized,
adequately  capitalized  or  less  than  adequately  capitalized.  Each  insured
depository  institution  is also to be  assigned  to one of  three  "supervisory
subgroups":  Subgroup A institutions are financially  sound  institutions with a
few minor weaknesses;  Subgroup B institutions are institutions that demonstrate
weaknesses which, if not corrected,  could result in significant  deterioration;
and Subgroup C institutions  are  institutions  for which there is a substantial
probability  that the FDIC will suffer a loss in connection with the institution
unless  effective  action is taken to correct  the areas of  weakness.  The FDIC
assigns  each  member  institution  an annual  FDIC  assessment  rate on insured
deposits.

Effective  January 1, 2009, banks pay from 12 basis points to 50 basis points on
deposits  annually for deposit  insurance.  The FDIC has proposed changes to the
deposit insurance assessment system beginning with the second quarter of 2009 to
make the increase in assessments fairer by requiring riskier institutions to pay
a  larger  share.  Together,  the  changes  would  improve  the way  the  system
differentiates risk among insured  institutions and help ensure that the reserve
ratio returns to at least 1.15 percent by the end of 2013.  Proposed  changes to
the assessment  system include  assessing  higher rates to  institutions  with a
significant reliance on secured  liabilities,  which generally raises the FDIC's
loss in the event of failure without providing  additional  assessment  revenue.
The proposal also would assess higher rates for institutions  with a significant
reliance  on  brokered  deposits  but,  for  well-managed  and  well-capitalized
institutions,  only when  accompanied  by rapid asset growth.  The proposal also
would  provide  incentives  in the form of a reduction in  assessment  rates for
institutions  to hold long-term  unsecured  debt and, for smaller  institutions,
high levels of Tier 1 capital.

                                       9



Securities Laws

The Company is subject to the periodic reporting  requirements of the Securities
and Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, which include filing annual, quarterly and
other  current  reports  with  the  Securities  and  Exchange  Commission.   The
Sarbanes-Oxley  Act was enacted in 2002 to protect  investors by  improving  the
accuracy and  reliability of corporate  disclosures  made pursuant to securities
laws. Among other things, this act:

        o prohibits  a  registered   public   accounting  firm  from  performing
          specified nonaudit services contemporaneously with a mandatory audit,
        o requires the chief executive officer and chief financial officer of an
          issuer to  certify  each  annual or  quarterly  report  filed with the
          Securities and Exchange Commission,
        o requires  an  issuer  to  disclose  all  material   off-balance  sheet
          transactions that may have a material effect on an issuer's  financial
          status, and
        o prohibits  insider  transactions  in an issuer's stock during lock-out
          periods of an issuer's pension plans.

The Company is also  required to comply  with the rules and  regulations  of The
NASDAQ Stock Market, Inc., on which its common stock is listed.

                                       10



Emergency Economic Stabilization Act

On October 3, 2008,  Congress adopted the Emergency  Economic  Stabilization Act
("EESA"),  including a Troubled  Asset Relief  Program  ("TARP").  TARP gave the
United States Treasury  Department  ("Treasury")  authority to deploy up to $700
billion  into the  financial  system for the purpose of  improving  liquidity in
capital markets.  On October 14, 2008,  Treasury  announced plans to direct $250
billion of this  authority into  preferred  stock  investments in banks and bank
holding companies through a Capital Purchase Program.  The general terms of this
Capital Purchase Program for publicly held companies are as follows:

        o Treasury's  investment  must  be  between  1% and  3% of the  issuer's
          risk-weighted assets;
        o Treasury's preferred stock earns 5% dividends for the first five years
          and 9% dividends  thereafter;  dividends on preferred  stock issued by
          holding companies are cumulative;  dividends on preferred stock issued
          by banks without holding companies are noncumulative;
        o No increase in common stock  dividends for three years while  Treasury
          is an investor;
        o No redemption of Treasury  preferred stock for three years except from
          new high-quality private capital;
        o Treasury's consent is required for stock repurchases;
        o Treasury receives warrants for common stock equal to 15% of Treasury's
          investment,  with an exercise price based on the common stock's market
          price;
        o Participating  bank  executives  must  agree to  certain  compensation
          restrictions  and  executive  compensation  above  $500,000 may not be
          claimed as a tax deduction;
        o If an issuer fails to pay  dividends on Treasury  preferred  stock for
          six  quarters,  whether or not  consecutive,  Treasury  is entitled to
          appoint two persons to the issuer's board of directors.

The  terms  of  Capital   Purchase   Program  have   potential   advantages  and
disadvantages.  The Board of  Directors  of the Company  determined  that it had
adequate  capital  and that the  Capital  Purchase  Program  would not be in the
Company's  best  interests  and  therefore  elected  not  to  seek  any  capital
investment from the Treasury.

On November 21, 2008,  the Board of Directors of the Federal  Deposit  Insurance
Corporation  ("FDIC")  adopted a final rule relating to the Temporary  Liquidity
Guarantee Program ("TLG Program").  The TLG Program was announced by the FDIC on
October  14,  2008,  preceded  by the  determination  of  systemic  risk  by the
Secretary of the Department of Treasury (after consultation with the President),
as an initiative  to counter the  system-wide  crisis in the nation's  financial
sector.  Under the TLG Program the FDIC will (i) guarantee,  through the earlier
of maturity or June 30, 2012,  certain newly issued senior unsecured debt issued
by participating  institutions on or after October 14, 2008, and before June 30,
2009 and (ii)  provide  full FDIC deposit  insurance  coverage for  non-interest
bearing  transaction  deposit accounts,  Negotiable Order of Withdrawal  ("NOW")
accounts  paying less than 0.5% interest per annum and Interest on Lawyers Trust
Accounts  ("IOLTA")  accounts held at participating  FDIC- insured  institutions
through December 31, 2009.  Coverage under the TLG Program was available for the
first  30 days  without  charge.  The fee  assessment  for  coverage  of  senior
unsecured  debt  ranges  from 50 basis  points to 100 basis  points  per  annum,
depending on the initial  maturity of the debt.  The fee  assessment for deposit
insurance coverage is 10 basis points per quarter on amounts in covered accounts
exceeding  $250,000.  On December 5, 2008, the Company elected to participate in
both  guarantee  programs.  As of December 31, 2008,  the Company issued no debt
under the TLG Program.

                                       11



ITEM 1A. RISK FACTORS

In analyzing whether to make or continue an investment in the Company, investors
should consider, among other factors, the following:

Risks Related to the Nature and Geographic Area of Our Business

The economic downturn in the United States and in California in particular could
hurt our profits.

The economies of the United States and California  are in a recession.  Business
activity  across a wide range of industries  and regions is greatly  reduced and
local governments and many businesses are in serious  difficulty due to the lack
of  consumer  spending,  declines  in the value of real  estate  and the lack of
liquidity in the credit markets. Unemployment has increased significantly.

Since mid-2007,  and particularly  during the second half of 2008, the financial
services  industry and the  securities  markets  generally  were  materially and
adversely  affected  by  significant  declines in the values of nearly all asset
classes and by a serious  lack of  liquidity.  This was  initially  triggered by
declines in home prices and the values of subprime mortgages,  but spread to all
mortgage and real estate asset  classes,  to leveraged  bank loans and to nearly
all  asset   classes,   including   equities.   The  global  markets  have  been
characterized by substantially  increased  volatility and  short-selling  and an
overall loss of investor confidence,  initially in financial  institutions,  but
more  recently in companies in a number of other  industries  and in the broader
markets.

Overall, during 2008 and the first quarter of 2009, the business environment has
been adverse for many  households  and  businesses in California  and the United
States. There can be no assurance that these conditions will improve in the near
term.  Such  conditions  could  adversely  affect  the  credit  quality  of  the
Corporation's loans, results of operations and financial condition.

Our business may be adversely  affected by business  conditions  in Northern and
Central California.

We conduct most of our business in Northern and Central California.  As a result
of this  geographic  concentration,  our results are  impacted by the  difficult
economic conditions in California. The current and on-going deterioration in the
economic  conditions in California  could result in the following  consequences,
any of which could have a material  adverse  effect on our  business,  financial
condition, results of operations and cash flows:

        o problem assets and foreclosures may increase,
        o demand for our products and services may decline,
        o low cost or non-interest bearing deposits may decrease, and
        o collateral for loans made by us,  especially real estate,  may decline
          in value, in turn reducing  customers'  borrowing  power, and reducing
          the value of assets and collateral associated with our existing loans.

In view of the  concentration of our operations and the collateral  securing our
loan portfolio in both northern and central  California,  we may be particularly
susceptible to the adverse  effects of any of these  consequences,  any of which
could have a  material  adverse  effect on our  business,  financial  condition,
results of operations and cash flows.

We are exposed to risks in connection with the loans we make.

A significant source of risk for us arises from the possibility that losses will
be  sustained  because  borrowers,  guarantors  and related  parties may fail to
perform  in  accordance  with  the  terms  of  their  loans.  Our  earnings  are
significantly  affected  by our ability to properly  originate,  underwrite  and
service loans. We have underwriting and credit monitoring  procedures and credit
policies,  including  the  establishment  and review of the  allowance  for loan
losses, that we believe to be appropriate to minimize this risk by assessing the
likelihood of  nonperformance,  tracking loan  performance and  diversifying our
respective  loan  portfolios.  Such policies and  procedures,  however,  may not
prevent unexpected losses that could adversely affect our results of operations.
We could sustain losses if we  incorrectly  assess the  creditworthiness  of our
borrowers or fail to detect or respond to  deterioration  in asset  quality in a
timely manner.

                                       12



Our allowance for loan losses may not be adequate to cover actual losses.

Like all  financial  institutions,  we maintain an allowance  for loan losses to
provide for loan defaults and non-performance. Our allowance for loan losses may
not be adequate to cover  actual loan  losses,  and future  provisions  for loan
losses could materially and adversely affect our business,  financial condition,
results of operations and cash flows. The allowance for loan losses reflects our
estimate of the probable  losses in our loan  portfolio at the relevant  balance
sheet date. Our allowance for loan losses is based on prior experience,  as well
as an evaluation of the known risks in the current  portfolio,  composition  and
growth of the loan  portfolio  and economic  factors.  The  determination  of an
appropriate level of loan loss allowance is an inherently  difficult process and
is based on numerous assumptions.  The amount of future losses is susceptible to
changes  in  economic,  operating  and other  conditions,  including  changes in
interest  rates,  that may be beyond  our  control  and these  losses may exceed
current estimates. Federal and state regulatory agencies, as an integral part of
their examination process, review our loans and allowance for loan losses. While
we believe  that our  allowance  for loan losses is  adequate  to cover  current
losses,  we cannot  assure you that we will not increase the  allowance for loan
losses  further or that the allowance  will be adequate to absorb loan losses we
actually incur. Either of these occurrences could have a material adverse affect
on our business, financial condition and results of operations.

The types of loans in our portfolio have a higher degree of credit risk, and the
downturn in our real estate markets could hurt our business.

We  generally  invest a greater  proportion  of our  assets in loans  secured by
commercial  real  estate,  commercial  loans and  consumer  loans  than  savings
institutions  that invest a greater  proportion of their assets in loans secured
by single-family  residences.  Commercial real estate loans and commercial loans
generally  involve  a higher  degree of credit  risk than  residential  mortgage
lending due  primarily  to the large  amounts  loaned to  individual  borrowers.
Losses  incurred on loans to a small number of  borrowers  could have a material
adverse  impact on our income  and  financial  condition.  In  addition,  unlike
residential  mortgage loans,  commercial and commercial real estate loans depend
on the cash flow from the  property or the  business  to service the debt.  Cash
flow may be  significantly  affected by general  economic  conditions.  Consumer
lending is riskier than residential  mortgage lending because consumer loans are
either  unsecured or secured by assets that  depreciate  in value.  See Item 7 -
Loans of this report for  information  as to the percentage of loans invested in
commercial real estate, commercial and consumer loans.

In  addition,  the downturn in our real estate  markets  could hurt our business
because  many of our loans are secured by real  estate.  Real estate  values and
real estate markets are generally  affected by changes in national,  regional or
local economic  conditions,  fluctuations in interest rates and the availability
of loans to  potential  purchasers,  changes in tax laws and other  governmental
statutes,  regulations  and policies and acts of nature.  As real estate  prices
decline, the value of real estate collateral securing our loans is reduced. As a
result, our ability to recover on defaulted loans by foreclosing and selling the
real estate  collateral  could then be diminished and we would be more likely to
suffer losses on defaulted loans. As of December 31, 2008,  approximately  82.2%
of the book value of our loan  portfolio  consisted of loans  collateralized  by
various types of real estate. Substantially all of our real estate collateral is
located in  California.  So if there is a  significant  further  decline in real
estate  values in  California,  the  collateral  for our loans will provide less
security.  Real estate  values could also be affected  by,  among other  things,
earthquakes and national disasters  particular to California in particular.  Any
such downturn could have a material  adverse  effect on our business,  financial
condition, results of operations and cash flows.

We depend on key  personnel  and the loss of one or more of those key  personnel
may materially and adversely affect our prospects.

Competition  for qualified  employees  and personnel in the banking  industry is
intense and there are a limited  number of qualified  persons with knowledge of,
and experience in, the California  community  banking  industry.  The process of
recruiting  personnel with the combination of skills and attributes  required to
carry out our strategies is often lengthy.  Our success depends to a significant
degree  upon our  ability  to  attract  and retain  qualified  management,  loan
origination, finance, administrative, marketing and technical personnel and upon
the continued contributions of our management and personnel. In particular,  our
success has been and continues to be highly  dependent upon the abilities of our
senior management team of Messrs. Smith,  O'Sullivan,  Bailey, Reddish,  Carney,
Miller and Rios,  who have expertise in banking and experience in the California
markets we serve and have targeted for future  expansion.  We also depend upon a
number of other key  executives  who are  California  natives  or are  long-time
residents and who are integral to  implementing  our business  plan. The loss of
the  services of any one of our senior  executive  management  team or other key
executives  could  have a material  adverse  effect on our  business,  financial
condition, results of operations and cash flows.

                                       13



We are exposed to risk of  environmental  liabilities with respect to properties
to which we take title.

In the course of our  business,  we may  foreclose and take title to real estate
and  could  be  subject  to  environmental  liabilities  with  respect  to these
properties.  We may be held liable to a governmental  entity or to third parties
for property damage, personal injury,  investigation and clean-up costs incurred
by these  parties in  connection  with  environmental  contamination,  or may be
required to investigate or clean-up  hazardous or toxic substances,  or chemical
releases at a property.  The costs associated with  investigation or remediation
activities  could be  substantial.  In  addition,  if we are the owner or former
owner of a  contaminated  site,  we may be subject to common law claims by third
parties based on damages and costs  resulting from  environmental  contamination
emanating from the property.  If we become subject to significant  environmental
liabilities,  our business,  financial condition, results of operations and cash
flows could be materially adversely affected.

Strong competition in California could hurt our profits.

Competition  in the  banking and  financial  services  industry is intense.  Our
profitability  depends upon our continued  ability to successfully  compete.  We
compete  exclusively in northern and central California for loans,  deposits and
customers with commercial banks,  savings and loan associations,  credit unions,
finance  companies,   mutual  funds,  insurance  companies,  and  brokerage  and
investment banking firms. In particular,  our competitors  include several major
financial  companies  whose  greater  resources  may afford  them a  marketplace
advantage by enabling them to maintain  numerous  locations and mount  extensive
promotional and advertising campaigns.  Additionally,  banks and other financial
institutions with larger capitalization and financial intermediaries not subject
to bank regulatory restrictions may have larger lending limits which would allow
them to serve the credit needs of larger customers. Areas of competition include
interest  rates for loans  and  deposits,  efforts  to obtain  loan and  deposit
customers  and a range in quality of products and services  provided,  including
new technology-driven products and services.  Technological innovation continues
to contribute to greater  competition  in domestic and  international  financial
services  markets as  technological  advances  enable more  companies to provide
financial  services.  We  also  face  competition  from  out-of-state  financial
intermediaries that have opened loan production offices or that solicit deposits
in our market areas.  If we are unable to attract and retain banking  customers,
we may be unable to  continue  our loan  growth  and level of  deposits  and our
business,  financial  condition,  results  of  operations  and cash flows may be
adversely affected.

Our recent results may not be indicative of our future results.

We may not be able to  sustain  our  historical  rate of  growth  and  level  of
profitability  or may not even be able to grow our  business  or  continue to be
profitable at all. Various factors, such as economic conditions,  regulatory and
legislative  considerations  and  competition,  may also impede or prohibit  our
ability  to  expand  our  market  presence  and  financial  performance.  If  we
experience a significant  decrease in our historical rate of growth, our results
of operations  and financial  condition may be adversely  affected due to a high
percentage of our operating costs being fixed expenses.

We may be adversely affected by the soundness of other financial institutions.

Financial  services  institutions  are  interrelated  as a result  of  clearing,
counterparty,  or  other  relationships.  We have  exposure  to  many  different
industries  and  counterparties,   and  routinely  executes   transactions  with
counterparties in the financial services industry,  including  commercial banks,
brokers and dealers, and other institutional clients. Many of these transactions
expose us to credit risk in the event of a default by a counterparty  or client.
In addition, our credit risk may be exacerbated when the collateral that we hold
cannot be realized upon or is liquidated at prices not sufficient to recover the
full  amount of the credit or  derivative  exposure  due to us. Any such  losses
could have a material  adverse affect on our financial  condition and results of
operations.

                                       14



Market and Interest Rate Risk

Current levels of market volatility are unprecedented.

The capital and credit  markets have been  experiencing  extreme  volatility and
disruption  for more than 12 months.  In some cases,  the markets  have  exerted
downward  pressure on stock  prices,  security  prices and credit  capacity  for
certain issuers without regard to those issuers' underlying  financial strength.
If the current levels of market  disruption  and volatility  continue or worsen,
there can be no assurance that we will not experience adverse effects, which may
be material,  on our ability to access  capital and on our results of operations
and which may affect the trading price of our common stock.

Decreasing interest rates could hurt our profits.

Our ability to earn a profit, like that of most financial institutions,  depends
on our net interest income,  which is the difference between the interest income
we earn on our interest-earning  assets, such as mortgage loans and investments,
and the interest  expense we pay on our  interest-bearing  liabilities,  such as
deposits.  Our  profitability  depends  on our  ability to manage our assets and
liabilities  during periods of changing  market interest  rates.  Recently,  the
Federal  Reserve  Board has lowered the  targeted  federal  funds rate to record
levels. A sustained decrease in market interest rates could adversely affect our
earnings. When interest rates decline,  borrowers tend to refinance higher-rate,
fixed-rate loans at lower rates. Under those circumstances, we would not be able
to reinvest those  prepayments  in assets earning  interest rates as high as the
rates on the prepaid loans on investment securities. In addition, our commercial
real estate and  commercial  loans,  which carry  interest  rates that adjust in
accordance with changes in the prime rate, will adjust to lower rates.

Our business is subject to interest rate risk and  variations in interest  rates
may negatively affect our financial performance.

Because of the  differences in the maturities and repricing  characteristics  of
our  interest-earning  assets  and  interest-bearing  liabilities,   changes  in
interest rates do not produce  equivalent  changes in interest  income earned on
interest-earning  assets  and  interest  paid on  interest-bearing  liabilities.
Accordingly,  fluctuations in interest rates could adversely affect our interest
rate spread and, in turn,  our  profitability.  In  addition,  loan  origination
volumes are affected by market interest rates. Rising interest rates, generally,
are  associated  with a lower volume of loan  originations  while lower interest
rates are  usually  associated  with higher loan  originations.  Conversely,  in
rising  interest  rate  environments,  loan  repayment  rates may decline and in
falling interest rate environments,  loan repayment rates may increase. Although
we have been successful in generating new loans during 2008, the continuation of
historically low long-term interest rate levels may cause additional refinancing
of commercial real estate and 1-4 family residence loans,  which may depress our
loan volumes or cause rates on loans to decline. In addition, an increase in the
general level of short-term  interest rates on variable rate loans may adversely
affect the ability of certain  borrowers to pay the interest on and principal of
their  obligations  or reduce the amount they wish to borrow.  Additionally,  if
short-term  market rates rise, in order to retain existing deposit customers and
attract new deposit  customers  we may need to increase  rates we pay on deposit
accounts.  Accordingly,  changes  in  levels  of  market  interest  rates  could
materially and adversely  affect our net interest  spread,  asset quality,  loan
origination volume,  business,  financial  condition,  results of operations and
cash flows.

Regulatory Risks

We operate in a highly regulated environment and we may be adversely affected by
changes in laws and  regulations.  Regulations may prevent or impair our ability
to pay dividends, engage in acquisitions or operate in other ways.

We are subject to  extensive  regulation,  supervision  and  examination  by the
California Department of Financial Institutions, or the DFI, the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation, and the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System.
See Item 1 - Regulation and  Supervision  of this report for  information on the
regulation and supervision which governs our activities.  Regulatory authorities
have  extensive  discretion in their  supervisory  and  enforcement  activities,
including the imposition of restrictions on our operations,  the  classification
of our assets and  determination  of the level of our allowance for loan losses.
Banking  regulations,  designed primarily for the protection of depositors,  may
limit our growth and the return to you, our investors, by restricting certain of
our activities, such as:

                                       15


        o the payment of dividends to its shareholders,
        o possible mergers with or acquisitions of or by other institutions,
        o desired investments,
        o loans and interest rates on loans,
        o interest rates paid on deposits,
        o the possible expansion of branch offices, and
        o the ability to provide securities or trust services.

We  also  are  subject  to  capitalization   guidelines  set  forth  in  federal
legislation  and could be subject to  enforcement  actions to the extent that we
are found by regulatory examiners to be undercapitalized. We cannot predict what
changes,  if any,  will be made to existing  federal and state  legislation  and
regulations or the effect that such changes may have on our future  business and
earnings prospects. Any change in such regulation and oversight,  whether in the
form of regulatory policy,  regulations,  legislation or supervisory action, may
have a material impact on our operations.

Compliance  with  changing   regulation  of  corporate   governance  and  public
disclosure may result in additional risks and expenses.

Changing laws,  regulations and standards  relating to corporate  governance and
public  disclosure,  including the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 and new Securities
and  Exchange  Commission  regulations,  are  creating  additional  expense  for
publicly-traded  companies  such  as  TriCo.  The  application  of  these  laws,
regulations  and  standard  may evolve over time as new  guidance is provided by
regulatory and governing  bodies,  which could result in continuing  uncertainty
regarding  compliance matters and higher costs necessitated by ongoing revisions
to disclosure and  governance  practices.  We are committed to maintaining  high
standards  of  corporate  governance  and public  disclosure.  As a result,  our
efforts to comply with evolving  laws,  regulations  and standards have resulted
in, and are likely to continue to result in, increased  expenses and a diversion
of management  time and  attention.  In  particular,  our efforts to comply with
Section  404 of the  Sarbanes-Oxley  Act of  2002  and the  related  regulations
regarding   management's  required  assessment  of  its  internal  control  over
financial  reporting and its external  auditors'  audit of that  assessment  has
required the commitment of significant  financial and managerial  resources.  We
expect  these  efforts  to  require  the  continued  commitment  of  significant
resources.  Further, the members of our board of directors, members of our audit
or  compensation  and  management  succession  committees,  our chief  executive
officer,  our chief financial officer and certain other executive officers could
face an increased risk of personal  liability in connection with the performance
of their duties.  It may also become more difficult and more expensive to obtain
director and officer liability  insurance.  As a result,  our ability to attract
and retain executive officers and qualified board and committee members could be
more difficult.

TriCo and the Bank could be aversely affected by new regulations.

Federal and state  governments and regulators  could pass  legislation and adopt
policies  responsive  to current  credit  conditions  that would have an adverse
affect on the Company and its financial  performance.  For example,  the Company
could experience higher credit losses because of federal or state legislation or
regulatory  action that limits the Bank's  ability to  foreclose  on property or
other collateral or makes foreclosure less economically feasible.

The FDIC insures deposits at FDIC insured  financial  institutions up to certain
limits. The FDIC charges insured financial institutions premiums to maintain the
Deposit  Insurance  Fund. Due to recent bank  failures,  the FDIC insurance fund
reserve  ratio has fallen below  statutory  minimums.  The FDIC has  developed a
proposed restoration plan that will uniformly increase insurance  assessments by
7 basis points  (annualized) and also proposes changes to the deposit  insurance
assessment system requiring  riskier  institutions to pay a larger share. If the
FDIC  adopts  this or a similar  plan,  the Bank could be required to pay higher
premiums for deposit insurance.

                                       16


Risks Related to Growth and Expansion

If we cannot attract deposits, our growth may be inhibited.

We plan to increase the level of our assets,  including our loan portfolio.  Our
ability to increase  our assets  depends in large part on our ability to attract
additional deposits at favorable rates. We intend to seek additional deposits by
offering  deposit  products  that are  competitive  with those  offered by other
financial institutions in our markets and by establishing personal relationships
with our customers.  We cannot assure you that these efforts will be successful.
Our inability to attract  additional  deposits at competitive rates could have a
material  adverse  effect  on our  business,  financial  condition,  results  of
operations and cash flows.

There are potential risks associated with future acquisitions and expansions.

We intend to continue to explore expanding our branch system through opening new
bank  branches and in-store  branches in existing or new markets in northern and
central  California.  In the ordinary course of business,  we evaluate potential
branch  locations that would bolster our ability to cater to the small business,
individual and residential lending markets in California.  Any given new branch,
if and when opened, will have expenses in excess of revenues for varying periods
after  opening that may  adversely  affect our results of  operations or overall
financial condition.

In  addition,  to the extent  that we acquire  other  banks in the  future,  our
business  may be  negatively  impacted  by  certain  risks  inherent  with  such
acquisitions.  These risks include:

        o incurring  substantial  expenses  in pursuing  potential  acquisitions
          without completing such acquisitions,
        o losing key clients as a result of the change of ownership,
        o the  acquired   business  not   performing  in  accordance   with  our
          expectations,
        o difficulties  arising  in  connection  with  the  integration  of  the
          operations of the acquired business with our operations,
        o needing to make significant investments and infrastructure,  controls,
          staff,   emergency  backup   facilities  or  other  critical  business
          functions that become strained by our growth,
        o management  needing  to divert  attention  from  other  aspects of our
          business,
        o potentially losing key employees of the acquired business,
        o incurring  unanticipated  costs which could  reduce our  earnings  per
          share,
        o assuming potential  liabilities of the acquired company as a result of
          the acquisition, and
        o an  acquisition  may dilute our earnings per share,  in both the short
          and long term, or it may reduce our tangible capital ratios.

As result of these risks, any given  acquisition,  if and when consummated,  may
adversely affect our results of operations or financial condition.  In addition,
because the  consideration  for an  acquisition  may involve  cash,  debt or the
issuance of shares of our stock and may  involve  the payment of a premium  over
book and  market  values,  existing  shareholders  may  experience  dilution  in
connection with any acquisition.

Our growth and expansion may strain our ability to manage our operations and our
financial resources.

Our financial performance and profitability depend on our ability to execute our
corporate  growth  strategy.  In addition to seeking  deposit and loan and lease
growth in our existing  markets,  we may pursue  expansion  opportunities in new
markets.  Continued  growth,  however,  may present operating and other problems
that  could  adversely  affect our  business,  financial  condition,  results of
operations and cash flows.  Accordingly,  there can be no assurance that we will
be able to execute our growth  strategy or maintain  the level of  profitability
that we have recently experienced.

Our growth may place a strain on our  administrative,  operational and financial
resources and increase demands on our systems and controls. This business growth
may  require  continued  enhancements  to and  expansion  of our  operating  and
financial  systems and controls and may strain or significantly  challenge them.
In  addition,   our  existing   operating  and  financial  control  systems  and
infrastructure  may not be adequate to maintain and  effectively  monitor future
growth. Our continued growth may also increase our need for qualified personnel.
We cannot assure you that we will be successful in attracting,  integrating  and
retaining such personnel.

                                       17



Risks Relating to Dividends and Our Common Stock

Our future ability to pay dividends is subject to restrictions.

Since we are a holding  company with no significant  assets other than the Bank,
we currently  depend upon dividends  from the Bank for a substantial  portion of
our  revenues.  Our  ability to  continue  to pay  dividends  in the future will
continue to depend in large part upon our receipt of dividends or other  capital
distributions  from the Bank.  The ability of the Bank to pay  dividends or make
other  capital  distributions  to us is  subject  to  the  restrictions  in  the
California  Financial  Code  and the  regulatory  authority  of the  DFI.  As of
December  31,  2008,  the Bank could have paid  approximately  $40.3  million in
dividends  without the prior  approval of the DFI.  The amount that the Bank may
pay in  dividends  is  further  restricted  due to the fact  that the Bank  must
maintain  a  certain  minimum  amount  of  capital  to  be  considered  a  "well
capitalized"   institution  as  further   described   under  Item  1  -  Capital
Requirements in this report.

From  time to  time,  we may  become a party to  financing  agreements  or other
contractual  arrangements  that have the effect of limiting or prohibiting us or
the Bank from declaring or paying  dividends.  Our holding company  expenses and
obligations  with respect to our trust  preferred  securities and  corresponding
junior  subordinated  deferrable  interest  debentures issued by us may limit or
impair our  ability to declare or pay  dividends.  Finally,  our  ability to pay
dividends is also subject to the  restrictions  of the  California  Corporations
Code.

Only a limited  trading market exists for our common stock,  which could lead to
price volatility.

Our  common  stock is quoted on the NASDAQ  Global  Select  Market  and  trading
volumes have been modest.  The limited  trading  market for our common stock may
cause  fluctuations  in the market value of our common stock to be  exaggerated,
leading to price volatility in excess of that which would occur in a more active
trading market of our common stock. In addition, even if a more active market in
our common stock develops, we cannot assure you that such a market will continue
or that shareholders will be able to sell their shares.

Anti-takeover  provisions and federal law may limit the ability of another party
to acquire us, which could cause our stock price to decline.

Various  provisions of our articles of  incorporation  and bylaws could delay or
prevent a third party from acquiring us, even if doing so might be beneficial to
our shareholders. These provisions provide for, among other things:

        o specified  actions that the Board of Directors  shall or may take when
          an offer to merge, an offer to acquire all assets or a tender offer is
          received,
        o a  shareholder  rights  plan  which  could  deter a  tender  offer  by
          requiring a potential  acquiror to pay a substantial  premium over the
          market price of our common stock,
        o advance  notice  requirements  for proposals that can be acted upon at
          shareholder meetings, and
        o the  authorization  to issue preferred stock by action of the board of
          directors acting alone, thus without obtaining shareholder approval.

The Bank Holding Company Act of 1956, as amended, and the Change in Bank Control
Act of 1978,  as amended,  together  with  federal  regulations,  require  that,
depending on the particular circumstances,  either Federal Reserve approval must
be  obtained  or  notice  must  be  furnished  to the  Federal  Reserve  and not
disapproved prior to any person or entity acquiring  "control" of a bank holding
company such as TriCo. These provisions may prevent a merger or acquisition that
would be attractive to shareholders and could limit the price investors would be
willing to pay in the future for our common stock.

The amount of common stock owned by, and other  compensation  arrangements with,
our  officers and  directors  may make it more  difficult to obtain  shareholder
approval of potential takeovers that they oppose.

As of March  6,  2009,  directors  and  executive  officers  beneficially  owned
approximately 19.11% of our common stock and our ESOP owned approximately 8.05%.
Agreements  with our senior  management  also provide for  significant  payments
under certain  circumstances  following a change in control.  These compensation
arrangements,  together with the common stock and option  ownership of our board
of  directors  and  management,  could make it  difficult or expensive to obtain
majority support for shareholder proposals or potential acquisition proposals of
us that our directors and officers oppose.

We may issue  additional  common stock or other equity  securities in the future
which could dilute the ownership interest of existing shareholders.

                                       18



In order to maintain our capital at desired or regulatorily-required  levels, or
to fund future  growth,  our board of directors  may decide from time to time to
issue  additional  shares of  common  stock,  or  securities  convertible  into,
exchangeable  for or representing  rights to acquire shares of our common stock.
The sale of these shares may significantly  dilute your ownership  interest as a
shareholder.  New investors in the future may also have rights,  preferences and
privileges  senior to our current  shareholders  which may adversely  impact our
current shareholders.

Holders of our junior  subordinated  debentures  have  rights that are senior to
those of our common stockholders.

We have supported our continued  growth through the issuance of trust  preferred
securities  from special  purpose trusts and  accompanying  junior  subordinated
debentures.  At December 31, 2008, we had outstanding trust preferred securities
and accompanying junior subordinated  debentures totaling $41,238,000.  Payments
of  the  principal  and  interest  on  the  trust   preferred   securities   are
conditionally  guaranteed by us. Further,  the accompanying  junior subordinated
debentures we issued to the trusts are senior to our shares of common stock.  As
a result, we must make payments on the junior subordinated debentures before any
dividends  can be paid on our common stock and, in the event of our  bankruptcy,
dissolution or liquidation,  the holders of the junior  subordinated  debentures
must be satisfied before any distributions can be made on our common stock.

Risks Relating to Systems, Accounting and Internal Controls

If we fail to maintain an effective system of internal and disclosure  controls,
we may not be able to accurately  report our financial results or prevent fraud.
As a result,  current and potential  shareholders  could lose  confidence in our
financial reporting,  which would harm our business and the trading price of our
securities.

Effective internal control over financial  reporting and disclosure controls and
procedures  are  necessary  for us to provide  reliable  financial  reports  and
effectively prevent fraud and to operate successfully as a public company. If we
cannot provide reliable  financial  reports or prevent fraud, our reputation and
operating  results  would be  harmed.  We  continually  review and  analyze  our
internal  control  over  financial  reporting  for  Sarbanes-Oxley  Section  404
compliance.  As part of that  process we may  discover  material  weaknesses  or
significant  deficiencies  in our internal  control as defined  under  standards
adopted  by  the  Public  Company   Accounting   Oversight  Board  that  require
remediation.  Material weakness is a deficiency, or combination of deficiencies,
in internal  control over financial  reporting,  such that there is a reasonable
possibility  that a material  misstatement  of the  company's  annual or interim
financial  statements  will not be  prevented  or  detected  in a timely  basis.
Significant  deficiency  is a deficiency  or  combination  of  deficiencies,  in
internal  control over  financial  reporting  that is less severe than  material
weakness,  yet important enough to merit attention by those  responsible for the
oversight of the Company's financial reporting.

As a result of weaknesses that may be identified in our internal control, we may
also  identify  certain  deficiencies  in some of our  disclosure  controls  and
procedures that we believe require remediation.  If we discover  weaknesses,  we
will make efforts to improve our internal and disclosure control. However, there
is no assurance  that we will be successful.  Any failure to maintain  effective
controls  or  timely  effect  any  necessary  improvement  of our  internal  and
disclosure controls could harm operating results or cause us to fail to meet our
reporting obligations,  which could affect our ability to remain listed with The
NASDAQ Global Select Market.  Ineffective internal and disclosure controls could
also cause investors to lose confidence in our reported  financial  information,
which  would  likely  have  a  negative  effect  on  the  trading  price  of our
securities.

We rely on communications,  information, operating and financial control systems
technology from third-party service providers, and we may suffer an interruption
in those systems that may result in lost business.  We may not be able to obtain
substitute  providers on terms that are as favorable if our  relationships  with
our existing service providers are interrupted.

                                       19



We rely heavily on third-party service providers for much of our communications,
information,  operating and financial control systems technology. Any failure or
interruption  or breach in security of these systems could result in failures or
interruptions in our customer relationship management,  general ledger, deposit,
servicing and loan origination  systems. We cannot assure you that such failures
or  interruptions  will not  occur  or,  if they do  occur,  that  they  will be
adequately addressed by us or the third parties on which we rely. The occurrence
of any failures or  interruptions  could have a material  adverse  effect on our
business,  financial condition,  results of operations and cash flows. If any of
our  third-party  service  providers   experience   financial,   operational  or
technological  difficulties,  or  if  there  is  any  other  disruption  in  our
relationships  with them,  we may be required to locate  alternative  sources of
such services,  and we cannot assure you that we could  negotiate terms that are
as favorable to us, or could obtain services with similar functionality as found
in our existing systems without the need to expend substantial resources,  if at
all.  Any of these  circumstances  could have a material  adverse  effect on our
business, financial condition, results of operations and cash flows.

A failure  to  implement  technological  advances  could  negatively  impact our
business.

The  banking  industry  is  undergoing   technological   changes  with  frequent
introductions  of new  technology-driven  products and services.  In addition to
improving  customer  services,   the  effective  use  of  technology   increases
efficiency  and  enables  financial  institutions  to reduce  costs.  Our future
success  will  depend,  in part,  on our  ability  to  address  the needs of our
customers by using technology to provide products and services that will satisfy
customer demands for convenience as well as to create additional efficiencies in
our operations.  Many of our competitors have  substantially  greater  resources
than  we do to  invest  in  technological  improvements.  We may  not be able to
effectively   implement   new   technology-driven   products   and  services  or
successfully market such products and services to our customers.

ITEM 1B. UNRESOLVED STAFF COMMENTS

None.

ITEM 2. PROPERTIES

The Company is engaged in the banking business through 57 offices in 23 counties
in  Northern  and  Central  California  including  nine  offices  each in Butte,
Sacramento,  and  Shasta  Counties,  four in  Stanislaus  County,  three each in
Placer,  Siskiyou,  and Sutter  Counties,  two in Glenn County,  and one each in
Contra Costa, Del Norte, Fresno, Kern, Lake, Lassen, Madera, Mendocino,  Merced,
Napa,  Nevada,   Tehama,  Tulare,  Yolo  and  Yuba  Counties.  All  offices  are
constructed and equipped to meet prescribed security requirements.

The Company owns 18 branch office locations and one administrative  building and
leases 39 branch office locations and 3 administrative  facilities.  Most of the
leases contain  multiple  renewal  options and provisions for rental  increases,
principally  for  changes  in the  cost of  living  index,  property  taxes  and
maintenance.

ITEM 3. LEGAL PROCEEDINGS

Neither the  Company nor its  subsidiaries,  are party to any  material  pending
legal  proceeding,  nor is their  property the subject of any  material  pending
legal  proceeding,  except  routine  legal  proceedings  arising in the ordinary
course  of their  business.  None of these  proceedings  is  expected  to have a
material  adverse  impact upon the Company's  business,  consolidated  financial
position or results of operations.

ITEM 4. SUBMISSION OF MATTERS TO A VOTE OF SECURITY HOLDERS

There were no matters submitted to a vote of the shareholders  during the fourth
quarter of 2008.

                                       20


                                     PART II

ITEM 5. MARKET FOR REGISTRANT'S  COMMON EQUITY,  RELATED STOCKHOLDER MATTERS AND
ISSUER PURCHASES OF EQUITY SECURITIES

Common Stock Market Prices and Dividends

The  Company's  common stock is traded on the NASDAQ Global Select Market System
("NASDAQ")  under the symbol "TCBK." The following  table shows the high and the
low closing  sale prices for the common  stock for each  quarter in the past two
years, as reported by NASDAQ:
         ==============================================================
            2008:                              High               Low
         --------------------------------------------------------------
         Fourth quarter                       $25.88            $15.50
         Third quarter                        $32.77             $9.99
         Second quarter                       $18.54            $10.95
         First quarter                        $19.30            $15.76

            2007:
         Fourth quarter                       $23.80            $19.30
         Third quarter                        $24.73            $19.77
         Second quarter                       $26.29            $21.43
         First quarter                        $27.85            $23.10
         ==============================================================

As of March 6, 2009 there were approximately 1,652 shareholders of record of the
Company's common stock. On March 6, 2009, the closing sales price was $11.13.

The Company has paid cash  dividends on its common stock in every  quarter since
March 1990,  and it is currently  the intention of the Board of Directors of the
Company to continue payment of cash dividends on a quarterly basis.  There is no
assurance,  however,  that any  dividends  will be paid since they are dependent
upon earnings,  financial condition and capital  requirements of the Company and
the Bank.  As of December 31, 2008,  $40,325,000  was  available  for payment of
dividends  by the  Company  to  its  shareholders,  under  applicable  laws  and
regulations.  The Company paid cash  dividends of $0.13 per common share in each
of the quarters ended December 31, 2008,  September 30, 2008, June 30, 2008, and
March 31,  2008,  and  $0.13  per  common  share in each of the  quarters  ended
December 31, 2007, September 30, 2007, June 30, 2007, and March 31, 2007.

Stock Repurchase Plan

The  Company  adopted  a  stock  repurchase  plan on  August  21,  2007  for the
repurchase of up to 500,000  shares of the  Company's  common stock from time to
time as market  conditions  allow. The 500,000 shares  authorized for repurchase
under this plan represented  approximately  3.2% of the Company's  approximately
15,815,000  common shares  outstanding  as of August 21, 2007.  This plan has no
stated expiration date for the repurchases. As of December 31, 2008, the Company
had purchased  166,600  shares under this plan.  The  following  table shows the
repurchases made by the Company or any affiliated  purchaser (as defined in Rule
10b-18(a)(3) under the Exchange Act) during the fourth quarter of 2008:




Period          (a) Total number of   (b) Average price  (c) Total number of    (d) Maximum number of
                    shares purchased      paid per share     shares purchased       shares that may yet
                                                             as part of publicly    be purchased under the
                                                             announced plans or     plans or programs
                                                             programs
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                
Oct. 1-31, 2008                 -                -                     -                  333,400
Nov. 1-30, 2008                 -                -                     -                  333,400
Dec. 1-31, 2008                 -                -                     -                  333,400
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total                           -                -                     -                  333,400


During the quarter ended  December 31, 2008  employees  tendered 6,400 shares of
the Company's  common stock with an average  market value of $22.25 per share in
lieu   of   cash  to   exercise   options   as   permitted   by  the   Company's
shareholder-approved  stock option plans. The tendered shares were retired.  The
market value of tendered shares is the last market trade price at closing on the
day the option is exercised.

                                       21


The following graph presents the cumulative total yearly shareholder return from
investing $100 on December 31, 2003, in each of TriCo common stock,  the Russell
3000 Index,  and the SNL Western Bank Index. The SNL Western Bank Index compiled
by SNL Financial  includes  banks  located in  California,  Oregon,  Washington,
Montana,  Hawaii  and  Alaska  with  market  capitalization  similar  to that of
TriCo's. The amounts shown assume that any dividends were reinvested.

Equity Compensation Plans

The following table shows shares reserved for issuance for outstanding  options,
stock  appreciation  rights and warrants  granted under our equity  compensation
plans as of December 31, 2008.  All of our equity  compensation  plans have been
approved by shareholders.



                                     (a)                                   (c) Number of securities
                              Number of securities           (b)               remaining available for
                              to be issued upon       Weighted average         issuance under equity
                              exercise of             exercise price of        compensation plans
                              outstanding options,    outstanding options,     (excluding securities
Plan category                 warrants and rights     warrants and rights      reflected in column (a)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                            
Equity compensation plans
  not approved by shareholders        -                       -                      -
Equity compensation plans
  approved by shareholders        1,404,801                $14.77                 148,140
                                -----------------------------------------------------------
Total                             1,404,801                $14.77                 148.140


                                       22



ITEM 6. SELECTED FINANCIAL DATA

The  following  selected  consolidated  financial  data  are  derived  from  our
consolidated  financial statements.  This data should be read in connection with
our consolidated financial statements and the related notes located at Item 8 of
this report.
 


                                TRICO BANCSHARES
                                Financial Summary
                    (in thousands, except per share amounts)

 ==========================================================================================================
    Year ended December 31,                      2008         2007         2006         2005         2004
 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                       
 Interest income                             $121,112     $127,268     $120,323      $98,756       $84,932
 Interest expense                              31,552       40,582       34,445       20,529        13,363
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Net interest income                           89,560       86,686       85,878       78,227        71,569
 Provision for loan losses                     20,950        3,032        1,289        2,169         2,901
 Noninterest income                            27,087       27,590       26,255       24,890        24,794
 Noninterest expense                           68,738       68,906       66,726       62,110        60,828
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Income before income taxes                    26,959       42,338       44,118       38,838        32,634
 Provision for income taxes                    10,161       16,645       17,288       15,167        12,452
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
      Net income                              $16,798      $25,693      $26,830      $23,671       $20,182
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

 Earnings per share:
      Basic                                     $1.07        $1.62        $1.70        $1.51        $1.29
      Diluted                                   $1.05         1.57         1.64         1.45         1.24
 Per share:
      Dividends paid                            $0.52        $0.52        $0.48        $0.45        $0.43
      Book value at December 31                 12.56        11.87        10.69         9.52         8.79
      Tangible book value at December 31        11.54        10.82         9.60         8.25         7.45

 Average common shares outstanding             15,771       15,898       15,812       15,708        15,660
 Average diluted common shares outstanding     16,050       16,364       16,383       16,331        16,270
 Shares outstanding at December 31             15,756       15,912       15,857       15,708        15,723

 At December 31:
 Loans, net                                $1,563,259   $1,534,635   $1,492,965   $1,368,809    $1,158,442
 Total assets                               2,043,190    1,980,621    1,919,966    1,841,275     1,627,506
 Total deposits                             1,669,270    1,545,223    1,599,149    1,496,797     1,348,833
 Debt financing and notes payable             102,005      116,126       39,911       31,390        28,152
 Junior subordinated debt                      41,238       41,238       41,238       41,238        41,238
 Shareholders' equity                         197,932      188,878      169,436      149,493       138,132

 Financial Ratios:

 For the year:
      Return on assets                         0.85%         1.36%        1.44%        1.38%        1.33%
      Return on equity                         8.70%        14.20%       16.61%       16.30%       15.20%
      Net interest margin(1)                   4.96%         5.07%        5.14%        5.14%        5.32%
      Net loan losses to average loans         0.69%         0.17%        0.04%        0.04%        0.12%
      Efficiency ratio(1)                     58.59%        59.86%       58.99%       59.64%       62.46%
      Average equity to average assets         9.72%         9.55%        8.68%        8.49%        8.72%
 At December 31:
      Equity to assets                         9.69%         9.54%        8.82%        8.12%        8.50%
      Total capital to risk-adjusted assets   12.42%        11.90%       11.44%       10.79%       11.86%
      Allowance for loan losses to loans       1.73%         1.12%        1.12%        1.17%        1.24%

(1) Fully taxable equivalent


                                       23


ITEM 7. MANAGEMENT'S  DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION AND RESULTS
OF OPERATIONS

The Company's  discussion and analysis of its financial condition and results of
operations  is intended  to provide a better  understanding  of the  significant
changes and trends  relating to the Company's  financial  condition,  results of
operations, liquidity, interest rate sensitivity, off balance sheet arrangements
and certain contractual  obligations.  The following  discussion is based on the
Company's   consolidated  financial  statements  which  have  been  prepared  in
accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of
America. Please read the Company's audited consolidated financial statements and
the related notes included as Item 8 of this report.

Critical Accounting Policies and Estimates

The Company's  discussion and analysis of its financial condition and results of
operations are based upon the Company's consolidated financial statements, which
have been prepared in accordance with accounting  principles  generally accepted
in the United States of America.  The preparation of these financial  statements
requires the Company to make  estimates and  judgments  that affect the reported
amounts of assets, liabilities, revenues and expenses, and related disclosure of
contingent  assets and liabilities.  On an on-going basis, the Company evaluates
its estimates,  including those that materially affect the financial  statements
and are related to the adequacy of the allowance  for loan losses,  investments,
mortgage  servicing  rights,  fair  value  measurements,  retirement  plans  and
intangible assets. The Company bases its estimates on historical  experience and
on various  other  assumptions  that are  believed  to be  reasonable  under the
circumstances,  the results of which form the basis for making  judgments  about
the carrying values of assets and liabilities that are not readily apparent from
other sources.  Actual results may differ from these  estimates  under different
assumptions or conditions.  The Company's  policies  related to estimates on the
allowance for loan losses,  other than temporary  impairment of investments  and
impairment of intangible assets, can be found in Note 1 to the Company's audited
consolidated  financial  statements  and the related notes included as Item 8 of
this report.

As the Company has not  commenced  any business  operations  independent  of the
Bank, the following discussion pertains primarily to the Bank. Average balances,
including  balances used in calculating  certain financial ratios, are generally
comprised  of  average  daily  balances  for the  Company.  Within  Management's
Discussion  and  Analysis of  Financial  Condition  and  Results of  Operations,
certain performance measures including interest income, net interest income, net
interest  yield,  and  efficiency  ratio  are  generally  presented  on a  fully
tax-equivalent  (FTE)  basis.  The Company  believes  the use of these  non-GAAP
measures provides additional clarity in assessing its results.

The  following   discussion  and  analysis  is  designed  to  provide  a  better
understanding  of the significant  changes and trends related to the Company and
the  Bank's  financial  condition,   operating  results,   asset  and  liability
management,  liquidity and capital  resources and should be read in  conjunction
with the consolidated  financial statements of the Company and the related notes
at Item 8 of this report.

Results of Operations

Net Income

Following  is a summary of the  Company's  net  income for the past three  years
(dollars in thousands, except per share amounts):

                                                      Year ended December 31,
   -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
     Components of Net Income                     2008        2007       2006
                                                --------------------------------
     Net interest income *                      $90,237     $87,529    $86,857
     Provision for loan losses                  (20,950)     (3,032)    (1,289)
     Noninterest income                          27,087      27,590     26,255
     Noninterest expense                        (68,738)    (68,906)   (66,726)
     Taxes *                                    (10,838)    (17,488)   (18,267)
                                                --------------------------------
     Net income                                 $16,798     $25,693    $26,830
                                                ================================
     Net income per average fully-diluted share   $1.05       $1.57      $1.64
     Net income as a percentage of average
          shareholders' equity                    8.70%       14.20%     16.61%
     Net income as a percentage of average
          total assets                            0.85%        1.36%      1.44%
   =============================================================================
     * Fully tax-equivalent (FTE)

                                       24



Earnings in 2008 decreased  $8,895,000  (34.6%) from 2007.  Net interest  income
(FTE) grew  $2,708,000  (3.1%) due to a $94,575,000  (5.5%)  increase in average
earning  assets  while net interest  margin  (FTE)  decreased 11 basis points to
4.96%.  The  provision  for  loan  losses  increased   $17,918,000  in  2008  to
$20,950,000  for the year ended  December 31, 2008 from  $3,032,000 for the year
ended December 31, 2007.  Noninterest  income and noninterest  expense decreased
$503,000 (1.8%) and $168,000 (0.2%), respectively.

Earnings in 2007  decreased  $1,137,000  (4.2%) from 2006.  Net interest  income
(FTE) grew  $672,000  (0.8%) due to a  $35,511,000  (2.1%)  increase  in average
earning assets while net interest margin decreased 0.07% to 5.07%. The loan loss
provision  increased  $1,743,000  in 2007  from  2006,  and  noninterest  income
increased  $1,335,000 (5.1%) while noninterest expense also increased $2,180,000
(3.3%).

The Company's return on average total assets was 0.85% in 2008 compared to 1.36%
and 1.44% in 2007 and 2006,  respectively.  Return on average equity in 2008 was
8.70% compared to 14.20% and 16.61% in 2007 and 2006, respectively.

Net Interest Income

The Company's  primary  source of revenue is net interest  income,  which is the
difference  between  interest  income on earning assets and interest  expense on
interest-bearing  liabilities.  Net interest income (FTE)  increased  $2,708,000
(3.1%) to  $90,237,000  from 2007 to 2008. Net interest  income (FTE)  increased
$672,000 (0.8%) to $87,529,000 from 2006 to 2007.

Following is a summary of the Company's  net interest  income for the past three
years (dollars in thousands):
                                                    Year ended December 31,
  ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Components of Net Interest Income         2008         2007         2006
                                        ----------------------------------------
    Interest income                        $121,112     $127,268     $120,323
    Interest expense                        (31,552)     (40,582)     (34,445)
    FTE adjustment                              677          843          979
                                        ----------------------------------------
    Net interest income (FTE)               $90,237      $87,529      $86,857
  ==============================================================================
    Net interest margin (FTE)                4.96%         5.07%        5.14%
  ==============================================================================

Interest income (FTE) decreased  $6,322,000  (4.9%) from 2007 to 2008, due to 73
basis point decrease in average yield on earning-asset that was partially offset
by $94,575,000  increase in the average balance of  earning-assets.  The average
yield on  earning  assets  decreased  from  7.43% in 2007 to 6.69% in 2008.  The
average  yield on loans  decreased 82 basis  points to 6.97%  during  2008.  The
decrease in average yield on  interest-earning  assets decreased interest income
(FTE) by $11,938,000, while the increase in average balances of interest-earning
assets added $5,916,000 to interest income (FTE) during 2008.

Interest expense  decreased  $9,030,000  (22.3%) in 2008 from 2007, due to an 80
basis point decrease in the average rate paid on interest-bearing liabilities to
2.26% that was partially offset by a $70,317,000  (5.3%) increase in the average
balance of interest-bearing  liabilities.  The decrease in the average rate paid
on interest-bearing  liabilities  decreased interest expense by $12,399,000 from
2007 to 2008,  while  the  increase  in  average  balances  of  interest-bearing
liabilities increased interest expense by $3,369,000 in 2008.

Interest  income (FTE)  increased  $6,809,000  (5.6%) from 2006 to 2007, the net
effect of higher  average  balances  of those  assets and  higher  earning-asset
yields.  The total yield on earning assets increased from 7.18% in 2006 to 7.43%
in 2007.  The average  yield on loans  increased 19 basis points to 7.78% during
2007.  The  increase  in  average  yield on  interest-earning  assets  increased
interest income (FTE) by $3,305,000,  while the increase in average  balances of
interest-earning assets added $3,504,000 to interest income (FTE) during 2007.

Interest expense increased  $6,137,000 (17.8%) in 2007 from 2006, due to a 0.44%
increase in the average rate paid on  interest-bearing  liabilities to 3.05% and
an  $11,385,000  (0.9%)  increase  in the  average  balance of  interest-bearing
liabilities.   The  increase  in  the  average  rate  paid  on  interest-bearing
liabilities  increased  interest  expense by $4,932,000 from 2006 to 2007, while
the  increase in average  balances  of  interest-bearing  liabilities  increased
interest expense by $1,205,000 in 2007.

                                       25



Net Interest Margin

Following is a summary of the Company's  net interest  margin for the past three
years:

                                                      Year ended December 31,
   -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
     Components of Net Interest Margin              2008      2007       2006
                                                --------------------------------
     Yield on earning assets                       6.69%      7.43%      7.18%
     Rate paid on interest-bearing liabilities     2.26%      3.05%      2.61%
                                                --------------------------------
     Net interest spread                           4.43%      4.38%      4.56%
     Impact of all other net
        noninterest-bearing funds                  0.53%      0.69%      0.58%
                                                --------------------------------
     Net interest margin (FTE)                     4.96%      5.07%      5.14%
  ==============================================================================

During the first three  quarters of 2007,  the Company was able to maintain  net
interest  margin  when  compared  to  2006 as  market  interest  rates  remained
relatively stable. However, during the fourth quarter of 2007, the Federal funds
rate and the prime rate of  lending  began to  decrease  while  competition  for
deposits prevented deposit rates from decreasing similarly.  As a result, during
the fourth  quarter of 2007,  the average  yield the Company was able to earn on
interest-earning  assets  decreased  faster  than  the  average  rate it paid on
interest-bearing  liabilities  causing the net interest  margin (FTE) for all of
2007 to be reduced from 2006 levels.  The rate  environment  throughout 2008 was
much like it was in the fourth quarter of 2007,  with the prime rate  decreasing
400 basis points during 2008 to 3.25% and the Federal Funds target rate reaching
an  unprecedented  0%-.25%  by the end of  2008.  While  market  conditions  for
deposits in 2008 prevented the Company from lowering deposit rates in proportion
to the decrease in the Federal Funds rate,  rate floors in many of the Company's
loans helped maintain the net interest  margin in 2008  relatively  close to the
2007 level.

                                       26


Summary of Average Balances, Yields/Rates and Interest Differential

The following tables present,  for the past three years,  information  regarding
the Company's consolidated average assets, liabilities and shareholders' equity,
the amounts of interest income from average earning assets and resulting yields,
and the amount of interest expense paid on interest-bearing liabilities. Average
loan balances include  nonperforming  loans.  Interest income includes  proceeds
from  loans on  nonaccrual  loans  only to the extent  cash  payments  have been
received and applied to interest income.  Yields on securities and certain loans
have been adjusted  upward to reflect the effect of income  thereon  exempt from
federal  income  taxation  at  the  current   statutory  tax  rate  (dollars  in
thousands):


                                                        Year ended December 31, 2008
                                                  -------------------------------------------
                                                   Average         Interest        Rates
                                                   balance        income/expense  earned/paid
                                                  -------------------------------------------
                                                                               
    Assets
    Loans                                         $1,549,014         $107,896          6.97%
    Investment securities - taxable                  242,901           11,996          4.94%
    Investment securities - nontaxable                24,983            1,863          7.46%
    Cash at Federal Reserve and other banks            2,751               31          1.11%
    Federal funds sold                                   144                3          2.08%
                                                  -----------        --------
    Total earning assets                           1,819,793          121,789          6.69%
                                                                     --------
    Other assets                                     166,413
                                                  ----------
         Total assets                             $1,986,206
                                                  ==========
    Liabilities and shareholders' equity
    Interest-bearing demand deposits                $225,872              721          0.34%
    Savings deposits                                 384,261            4,759          1.24%
    Time deposits                                    574,910           18,931          3.29%
    Federal funds purchased                           83,792            1,999          2.39%
    Other borrowings                                  88,879            2,512          2.83%
    Junior subordinated debt                          41,238            2,580          6.26%
                                                  ----------         --------
           Total interest-bearing                  1,398,952           31,552          2.26%
             liabilities                                             --------
    Noninterest-bearing demand                       362,522
    Other liabilities                                 31,613
    Shareholders' equity                             193,119
                                                  -----------
           Total liabilities and shareholders'    $1,986,206
             equity                               ===========
    Net interest spread (1)                                                            4.43%
    Net interest income and interest margin (2)                         $90,237        4.96%
                                                                     ==========        ======


                                                       Year ended December 31, 2007
                                                  ----------------------------------------------
                                                     Average          Interest       Rates
                                                     balance       income/expense    earned/paid
                                                  ----------------------------------------------
    Assets
    Loans                                         $1,511,331         $117,639          7.78%
    Investment securities - taxable                  183,493            8,158          4.45%
    Investment securities - nontaxable                30,032            2,297          7.65%
    Federal funds sold                                   362               17          4.70%
                                                  ----------         --------
    Total earning assets                           1,725,218          128,111          7.43%
                                                                     --------
    Other assets                                     169,296
                                                  ----------
         Total assets                             $1,894,514
                                                  ==========
    Liabilities and shareholders' equity
    Interest-bearing demand deposits                $224,279              452          0.20%
    Savings deposits                                 385,702            6,238          1.62%
    Time deposits                                    558,247           24,733          4.43%
    Federal funds purchased                           55,334            2,880          5.20%
    Other borrowings                                  63,835            2,983          4.67%
    Junior subordinated debt                          41,238            3,296          7.99%
                                                  ----------         --------
           Total interest-bearing liabilities      1,328,635           40,582          3.05%
                                                                     --------
    Noninterest-bearing demand                       351,815
    Other liabilities                                 33,066
    Shareholders' equity                             180,998
                                                  ----------
           Total liabilities and shareholders'    $1,894,514
             equity                               ==========
    Net interest spread (1)                                                            4.38%
    Net interest income and interest margin (2)                       $87,529          5.07%
                                                                      =======         ======
    (1)  Net  interest   spread   represents   the  average   yield  earned  on
         interest-earning assets less the average rate paid on interest-bearing
         liabilities.
    (2)  Net interest  margin is computed by dividing  net  interest  income by
          total average earning assets.

                                       27


                                                       Year ended December 31, 2006
                                                  ----------------------------------------------
                                                     Average          Interest       Rates
                                                     balance       income/expense    earned/paid
                                                  ----------------------------------------------
    Assets
    Loans                                         $1,447,163         $109,769      7.59%
    Investment securities - taxable                  206,989            8,749      4.23%
    Investment securities - nontaxable                34,400            2,728      7.93%
    Federal funds sold                                 1,155               56      4.85%
                                                  ----------       ---------
    Total earning assets                           1,689,707          121,302      7.18%
                                                                   ---------
    Other assets                                     171,343
                                                  ----------
         Total assets                             $1,861,050
                                                  ===========
    Liabilities and shareholders' equity
    Interest-bearing demand deposits                $236,881              477      0.20%
    Savings deposits                                 395,744            3,556      0.90%
    Time deposits                                    527,019           21,427      4.07%
    Federal funds purchased                           81,237            4,116      5.07%
    Other borrowings                                  35,131            1,667      4.75%
    Junior subordinated debt                          41,238            3,202      7.76%
                                                  ----------        ---------          -
           Total interest-bearing liabilities      1,317,250           34,445      2.61%
                                                                    ---------
    Noninterest-bearing demand                       352,617
    Other liabilities                                 29,641
    Shareholders' equity                             161,542
                                                  ----------
           Total liabilities and shareholders'    $1,861,050
             equity                              ===========
    Net interest spread (1)                                                        4.56%
    Net interest income and interest margin (2)                       $86,857      5.14%
                                                                    =========     ======
    (1)  Net  interest   spread   represents   the  average   yield  earned  on
         interest-earning assets less the average rate paid on interest-bearing
         liabilities.
    (2)  Net interest  margin is computed by dividing  net  interest  income by
          total average earning assets.


Summary of  Changes in  Interest  Income and  Expense  due to Changes in Average
Asset and Liability Balances and Yields Earned and Rates Paid

The  following  table  sets  forth a summary  of the  changes  in the  Company's
interest income and interest expense from changes in average asset and liability
balances  (volume)  and  changes  in average  interest  rates for the past three
years. The rate/volume variance has been included in the rate variance.  Amounts
are calculated on a fully taxable equivalent basis:



                                                            2008 over 2007                     2007 over 2006
                                             -------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                             Yield/                               Yield/
                                              Volume          Rate       Total      Volume        Rate        Total
                                             -------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                      (dollars in thousands)
                                                                                              
Increase (decrease) in
  interest income:
    Loans                                     $2,933       ($12,676)    ($9,743)      $4,867        $3,003      $7,870
    Investment securities                      2,662            742       3,404       (1,325)          303      (1,022)
    Cash at Federal Reserve and other banks       31              -          31            -             -           -
    Federal funds sold                           (10)            (4)        (14)         (38)           (1)        (39)
                                             --------------------------------------------------------------------------
      Total                                    5,616        (11,938)     (6,322)       3,504         3,305       6,809
                                             --------------------------------------------------------------------------
Increase (decrease) in
  interest expense:
    Demand deposits (interest-bearing)             3            316         319          (25)            -         (25)
    Savings deposits                             (23)        (1,456)     (1,479)         (90)        2,772       2,682
    Time deposits                                738         (6,540)     (5,802)       1,270         2,036       3,306
    Federal funds purchased                    1,481         (2,362)       (881)      (1,312)           76      (1,236)
    Junior subordinated debt                       -           (716)       (716)           -            94          94
    Other borrowings                           1,170         (1,641)       (471)       1,362           (46)      1,316
                                             --------------------------------------------------------------------------
      Total                                    3,369        (12,399)     (9,030)       1,205         4,932       6,137
                                             --------------------------------------------------------------------------
Increase (decrease) in
  net interest income                         $2,247           $461      $2,708       $2,299       ($1,627)       $672
                                             ==========================================================================

                                       28


Provision for Loan Losses

In 2008, the Bank provided $20,950,000 for loan losses compared to $3,032,000 in
2007. Net loan charge-offs  increased  $8,076,000  (309%) to $10,691,000  during
2008. The 2008 charge-offs represented 0.69% of average loans outstanding versus
0.17% in 2007.  Nonperforming  loans net of  government  agency  guarantees as a
percentage  of total loans were 1.73% and 0.48% at  December  31, 2008 and 2007,
respectively.  The ratio of allowance for loan losses to nonperforming loans was
100% at the end of 2008 versus 231% at the end of 2007.

In 2007, the Bank provided  $3,032,000 for loan losses compared to $1,289,000 in
2006. Net loan  charge-offs  increased  $2,014,000  (335%) to $2,615,000  during
2007. The 2007 charge-offs represented 0.17% of average loans outstanding versus
0.04% in 2006.  Nonperforming  loans net of  government  agency  guarantees as a
percentage  of total loans were 0.48% and 0.30% at  December  31, 2007 and 2006,
respectively.  The ratio of allowance for loan losses to nonperforming loans was
231% at the end of 2007 versus 375% at the end of 2006.

Noninterest Income

The following  table  summarizes the Company's  noninterest  income for the past
three years (dollars in thousands):

                                                     Year ended December 31,
   -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
     Components of  Noninterest Income              2008       2007      2006
                                               ---------------------------------
     Service charges on deposit accounts         $15,744    $15,449   $14,461
     ATM fees and interchange                      4,515      4,068     3,581
     Other service fees                            2,156      2,173     2,167
     Change in value of mortgage servicing rights (1,860)      (490)     (400)
     Gain on sale of loans                         1,127        994     1,224
     Commissions on sale of
         nondeposit investment products            2,069      2,331     1,946
     Increase in cash value of life insurance      1,834      1,445     1,767
     Other noninterest income                      1,502      1,620     1,509
                                               ---------------------------------
     Total noninterest income                    $27,087    $27,590   $26,255
  ==============================================================================

Noninterest  income  decreased  $503,000 (1.8%) to $27,087,000 in 2008.  Service
charges on deposit  accounts were up $295,000  (1.9%) due to growth in number of
customers.  ATM fees and  interchange  was up $447,000  (11.0%) due to growth in
number  of  customers  and the  introduction  of the  Company's  Perfect  Choice
Checking product in 2008. Overall,  mortgage banking activities,  which includes
amortization of mortgage  servicing rights,  mortgage  servicing fees, change in
value of mortgage  servicing  rights,  and gain on sale of loans,  accounted for
$303,000 of  noninterest  income in the 2008 compared to $1,502,000 in 2007. The
decreased  contribution  from mortgage banking  activities is primarily due to a
significant  decrease  in the  value  of  mortgage  rights  at the end of  2008.
Commissions on sale of nondeposit investment products decreased $262,000 (11.2%)
in 2008 due to lower demand for investment  products.  Increase in cash value of
life insurance  increased $389,000 (26.9%) due to increased earning rates on the
related life insurance policies.

Noninterest  income increased  $1,335,000 (5.1%) to $27,590,000 in 2007. Service
charges on deposit  accounts were up $988,000  (6.8%) due to growth in number of
customers.  ATM fees and  interchange,  and other  service fees were up $487,000
(13.6%) and $6,000  (0.3%) due to  expansion  of the  Company's  ATM network and
customer  base through  de-novo  branch  expansion.  Overall,  mortgage  banking
activities,  which includes amortization of mortgage servicing rights,  mortgage
servicing fees, change in value of mortgage  servicing rights,  and gain on sale
of loans, accounted for $1,502,000 of noninterest income in the 2007 compared to
$1,782,000 in 2006. The decreased  contribution from mortgage banking activities
is due to the continued slow pace of mortgage refinance activity. Commissions on
sale of nondeposit investment products increased $385,000 (19.8%) in 2007 due to
increased  resources  focused in that area and better demand for these products.
Increase  in cash value of life  insurance  decreased  $322,000  (18.2%)  due to
decreased earning rates on the related life insurance policies.

                                       29



Securities Transactions

During 2008 the Company did not sell any investment securities.  During 2008 the
Company received  proceeds from maturities of securities  totaling  $50,413,000,
and used $80,012,000 to purchase securities.

During 2007 the Company did not sell any investment securities.  During 2007 the
Company received  proceeds from maturities of securities  totaling  $49,256,000,
and used $78,822,000 to purchase securities.

Noninterest Expense

The following table summarizes the Company's other  noninterest  expense for the
past three years (dollars in thousands):

                                                     Year ended December 31,
  ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
     Components of  Noninterest Expense             2008       2007      2006
                                               ---------------------------------
     Salaries and related benefits:
       Base salaries, net of
          deferred loan origination costs        $25,374    $24,582   $22,788
       Incentive compensation                      2,860      3,808     4,633
       Benefits and other compensation costs       9,878      9,676     9,034
                                               ---------------------------------
     Total salaries and related benefits          38,112     38,066    36,455
                                               ---------------------------------
     Other noninterest expense:
       Equipment and data processing               6,405      6,300     5,926
       Occupancy                                   4,929      4,786     4,450
       ATM network charges                         2,081      1,857     1,839
       Telecommunications                          1,914      1,706     1,573
       Professional fees                           1,853      1,516     1,652
       Advertising                                 1,751      2,186     2,090
       Courier service                             1,069      1,223     1,308
       Postage                                       930        916     1,006
       Operational losses                            577        454       374
       Assessments                                   570        331       326
       Intangible amortization                       523        490     1,395
       Change in reserve for unfunded commitments    475        241        36
       Other                                       7,549      8,834     8,296
                                                --------------------------------
     Total other noninterest expenses             30,626     30,840    30,271
                                                --------------------------------
     Total noninterest expense                   $68,738    $68,906   $66,726
  ==============================================================================
     Average full time equivalent staff              636        638       623
     Noninterest expense to revenue (FTE)         58.59%      59.86%    58.99%

Salary and benefit  expenses  increased  $46,000  (0.1%) to  $38,112,000 in 2008
compared to 2007.  Base salaries  increased  $792,000  (3.2%) to  $25,374,000 in
2008.  The increase in base salaries was mainly due to annual salary  increases.
Incentive and commission  related salary expenses  decreased $948,000 (24.9%) to
$2,860,000 in 2008.  The decrease in incentive and  commission  expenses was due
primarily to decreases in management  bonuses and other  incentives  tied to net
income.   Benefits   expense,   including   retirement,   medical  and  workers'
compensation  insurance,  and taxes,  increased  $202,000  (2.1%) to  $9,878,000
during 2008. Also, included in salaries and benefit expense in 2008 was $450,000
for expensing of employee stock options compared to $477,000 in 2007.

Salary and benefit expenses  increased  $1,611,000 (4.4%) to $38,066,000 in 2007
compared to 2006. Base salaries net of deferred loan origination costs increased
$1,794,000  (7.9%) to  $24,582,000  in 2007.  The increase in base  salaries was
mainly due to an increase in average  full time  equivalent  employees  from 623
during 2006 to 638 during  2007,  and annual  salary  increases.  Incentive  and
commission  related salary expenses  decreased $825,000 (17.8%) to $3,808,000 in
2007.  The decrease in incentive  and  commission  expenses was due primarily to
decreases in related  income  generation  from gain on sale of loans,  and other
performance based incentive programs.  Benefits expense,  including  retirement,
medical and  workers'  compensation  insurance,  and taxes,  increased  $642,000
(7.1%) to $9,676,000 during 2007. Also, included in salaries and benefit expense
in 2007 was  $477,000  for  expensing  of  employee  stock  options  compared to
$382,000 in 2006.

                                       30



Other  noninterest  expenses  decreased  $214,000 (0.7%) to $30,626,000 in 2008.
Changes in the various categories of other noninterest  expense are reflected in
the table above.  The changes are  indicative  of the  Company's  efforts to use
technology to become more efficient, and the economic environment which has lead
to reduced volume of loan activity and associated expenses.  In particular,  the
$1,285,000  decrease in the "other"  category  of other  noninterest  expense is
primarily due to reduced  expenses  associated  with reduced home equity lending
activity in 2008.

Other noninterest expenses increased $569,000 (1.9%) to $30,840,000 in 2007. The
increase was mainly due to new branches  opened in 2006 and inflation  that were
partially offset by a $905,000 decrease in intangible amortization.

Provision for Taxes

The effective tax rate on income was 37.7%,  39.3%, and 39.2% in 2008, 2007, and
2006,  respectively.  The  effective  tax rate  was  greater  than  the  federal
statutory  tax rate due to state tax  expense  of  $2,594,000,  $4,277,000,  and
$4,462,000,  respectively,  in these  years.  Tax-exempt  income of  $1,187,000,
$1,454,000,  and  $1,749,000,  respectively,  from  investment  securities,  and
$1,834,000,  $1,445,000,  and  $1,767,000,  respectively,  from increase in cash
value of life insurance in these years helped to reduce the effective tax rate.

Financial Ratios

The following table shows the Company's key financial ratios for the past three
years:

   Year ended December 31,                        2008      2007      2006
                                               -------------------------------
   Return on average total assets                0.85%      1.36%     1.44%
   Return on average shareholders' equity        8.70%     14.20%    16.61%
   Shareholders' equity to total assets          9.69%      9.54%     8.82%
   Common shareholders' dividend payout ratio   48.77%     32.19%    28.31%
   ===========================================================================

Loans

The Bank concentrates its lending activities in four principal areas: commercial
loans (including agricultural loans), consumer loans, real estate mortgage loans
(residential  and commercial  loans and mortgage loans originated for sale), and
real estate  construction  loans.  At December 31, 2008,  these four  categories
accounted for approximately  12%, 32%, 51%, and 5% of the Bank's loan portfolio,
respectively,  as compared to 10%, 35%,  46%, and 9%, at December 31, 2007.  The
interest  rates  charged  for the loans made by the Bank vary with the degree of
risk, the size and maturity of the loans, the borrower's  relationship  with the
Bank and prevailing money market rates indicative of the Bank's cost of funds.

The majority of the Bank's loans are direct loans made to  individuals,  farmers
and  local  businesses.  The Bank  relies  substantially  on  local  promotional
activity and personal  contacts by bank  officers,  directors  and  employees to
compete  with other  financial  institutions.  The Bank makes loans to borrowers
whose applications include a sound purpose, a viable repayment source and a plan
of repayment established at inception and generally backed by a secondary source
of repayment.

At  December  31,  2008  loans,  including  net  deferred  loan  costs,  totaled
$1,590,849,000 which was a 2.5% ($38,883,000)  increase over the balances at the
end of 2007.  Demand for commercial real estate (real estate mortgage) loans and
non-real  estate secured  agriculture  loans was relatively  strong during 2008.
Demand for home equity loans and lines of credit was modest  during  2008.  Real
estate  construction  loans declined  during 2008 as did auto dealer loans.  The
average loan-to-deposit ratio in 2008 was 100.1% compared to 99.4% in 2007.

At  December  31,  2007  loans,  including  net  deferred  loan  costs,  totaled
$1,551,966,000 which was a 2.8% ($42,087,000)  increase over the balances at the
end of 2006.  Demand for commercial real estate (real estate mortgage) loans was
relatively  strong during 2007.  Other loan categories that showed modest growth
were home equity loans and  non-real  estate  secured  agriculture  loans.  Real
estate  construction  loans declined  during 2007 as did auto dealer loans.  The
average loan-to-deposit ratio in 2007 was 99.4 % compared to 95.7% in 2006.

                                       31



Loan Portfolio Composite

The following  table shows the Company's loan  balances,  including net deferred
loan costs, for the past five years:



                                                                         December 31,
                                             2008           2007           2006           2005           2004
                                        -------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                           
(dollars in thousands)
Commercial, financial and agricultural    $189,645        $164,815       $153,105       $143,175        $140,332
Consumer installment                       514,448         535,819        525,513        508,233         410,198
Real estate mortgage                       802,527         716,013        679,661        623,511         544,373
Real estate construction                    84,229         135,319        151,600        110,116          78,064
                                        -------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Total loans                         $1,590,849      $1,551,966     $1,509,879     $1,385,035      $1,172,967
                                        =========================================================================


Classified Assets

The  Company  closely  monitors  the  markets in which it  conducts  its lending
operations  and  continues  its strategy to control  exposure to loans with high
credit risk.  Asset reviews are performed  using grading  standards and criteria
similar to those employed by bank regulatory  agencies.  Assets receiving lesser
grades  fall  under  the  "classified  assets"  category,   which  includes  all
nonperforming  assets and potential problem loans, and receive an elevated level
of attention to ensure collection.

The following is a summary of classified assets on the dates indicated (dollars
in thousands):

                              At December 31, 2008       At December 31, 2007
                            -----------------------     ------------------------
                             Gross  Guaranteed  Net     Gross  Guaranteed   Net
                            ----------------------------------------------------
Classified loans            $63,850   $5,379  $58,471   $18,570  $5,948  $12,622
Other classified assets       1,185        -    1,185       187       -      187
                            ----------------------------------------------------
Total classified assets     $65,035   $5,379  $59,656   $18,757  $5,948  $12,809
                            ====================================================
Allowance for loan losses/Classified loans      47.2%                     137.3%

Classified  assets,  net of  guarantees  of the U.S.  Government,  including its
agencies and its  government-sponsored  agencies at December 31, 2008, increased
$46,847,000 (365.7%) to $59,656,000 from $12,809,000 at December 31, 2007.

Nonperforming Assets

Loans on which the accrual of interest has been  discontinued  are designated as
nonaccrual loans. Accrual of interest on loans is generally  discontinued either
when reasonable  doubt exists as to the full,  timely  collection of interest or
principal or when a loan becomes  contractually past due by 90 days or more with
respect  to  interest  or  principal.  When  loans are 90 days past due,  but in
Management's  judgment are well secured and in the process of  collection,  they
may not be classified as nonaccrual. When a loan is placed on nonaccrual status,
all interest  previously  accrued but not collected is reversed.  Income on such
loans is then  recognized only to the extent that cash is received and where the
future  collection  of  principal  is  probable - such loans are  classified  as
performing  nonaccrual  loans.  Interest accruals are resumed on such loans only
when they are brought  fully  current with respect to interest and principal and
when,  in the  judgment  of  Management,  the  loans are  estimated  to be fully
collectible as to both principal and interest.  The reclassification of loans as
nonaccrual does not necessarily reflect management's judgment as to whether they
are fully collectible.

Interest income on nonaccrual loans which would have been recognized  during the
year ended  December 31, 2008,  if all such loans had been current in accordance
with  their  original  terms,  totaled  $2,901,000.   Interest  income  actually
recognized on these loans in 2008 was $1,753,000.

The  Bank's  policy  is to place  loans 90 days or more  past due on  nonaccrual
status.  In some instances  when a loan is 90 days past due management  does not
place  it on  nonaccrual  status  because  the loan is well  secured  and in the
process of  collection.  A loan is considered to be in the process of collection
if, based on a probable  specific  event,  it is expected  that the loan will be
repaid or brought current. Generally, this collection period would not exceed 30
days.  Loans where the collateral has been  repossessed  are classified as other
real estate owned ("OREO") or, if the collateral is personal property,  the loan
is classified as other assets on the Company's financial statements.

                                       32



Management considers both the adequacy of the collateral and the other resources
of the  borrower  in  determining  the steps to be taken to  collect  nonaccrual
loans.   Alternatives  that  are  considered  are  foreclosure,   collecting  on
guarantees, restructuring the loan or collection lawsuits.

The following tables set forth the amount of the Bank's nonperforming assets net
of  guarantees  of  the  U.S.   government,   including  its  agencies  and  its
government-sponsored agencies, as of the dates indicated:

 


                                                  December 31, 2008             December 31, 2007
                                             -------------------------     -----------------------
                                                Gross Guaranteed  Net       Gross Guaranteed   Net
                                             ------------------------------------------------------
                                                                           
(dollars in thousands):
Performing nonaccrual loans                   $22,600   $5,102  $17,498     $9,098  $5,814   $3,284
Nonperforming, nonaccrual loans                 9,994      154    9,840      4,227       -    4,227
                                             ------------------------------------------------------
     Total nonaccrual loans                    32,594    5,256   27,338     13,325   5,814    7,511
Loans 90 days past due and still accruing         187        -      187          -       -        -
                                             ------------------------------------------------------
     Total nonperforming loans                 32,781    5,256   27,525     13,325   5,814    7,511
Other real estate owned                         1,185        -    1,185        187       -      187
                                             ------------------------------------------------------
     Total nonperforming loans and OREO       $33,966   $5,256  $28,710    $13,512  $5,814   $7,698
                                             ======================================================
Nonperforming loans to total loans                               1.73%                        0.48%
Allowance for loan losses/nonperforming loans                     100%                        231%
Nonperforming assets to total assets                             1.41%                        0.39%

                                                  December 31, 2006             December 31, 2005
                                              -------------------------     -----------------------
(dollars in thousands):                         Gross Guaranteed  Net       Gross Guaranteed   Net
Performing nonaccrual loans                   $10,255   $6,372   $3,883     $9,315  $6,933   $2,382
Nonperforming, nonaccrual loans                   561        -      561        579       -      579
                                              -----------------------------------------------------
     Total nonaccrual loans                    10,816    6,372    4,444      9,894   6,933    2,961
Loans 90 days past due and still accruing          68        -       68          -       -        -
                                              -----------------------------------------------------
     Total nonperforming loans                 10,884    6,372    4,512      9,894   6,933    2,961
Other real estate owned                             -        -        -          -       -        -
                                             ------------------------------------------------------
     Total nonperforming loans and OREO       $10,884   $6,372   $4,512     $9,894  $6,933   $2,961

Nonperforming loans to total loans                               0.30%                        0.21%
Allowance for loan losses/nonperforming loans                     375%                         548%
Nonperforming assets to total assets                             0.24%                        0.16%


                                                  December 31, 2004
                                              -------------------------
(dollars in thousands):                         Gross Guaranteed  Net
                                              -------------------------
Performing nonaccrual loans                   $11,043   $7,442   $3,601
Nonperforming, nonaccrual loans                 1,418      174    1,244
                                              -------------------------
     Total nonaccrual loans                    12,461    7,616    4,845
Loans 90 days past due and still accruing          61        -       61
                                              -------------------------
     Total nonperforming loans                 12,522    7,616    4,906
Other real estate owned                             -        -        -
     Total nonperforming loans and OREO       $12,522   $7,616   $4,906
                                              =========================

Nonperforming loans to total loans                               0.42%
Allowance for loan losses/nonperforming loans                     296%
Nonperforming assets to total assets                             0.30%

During  2008,  nonperforming  assets  net  of  government  guarantees  increased
$21,012,000  (273%) to $28,710,000.  Nonperforming  loans increased  $20,014,000
(266%)  to  $27,525,000.  The  ratio of  nonperforming  loans to total  loans at
December 31, 2008 was 1.73% versus 0.48% at the end of 2007.  Classifications of
nonperforming  loans  as a  percent  of total  loans at the end of 2008  were as
follows:  secured by real estate,  81%; loans to farmers,  8%; commercial loans,
2%; and consumer loans, 9%.

During  2007,  nonperforming  assets  net  of  government  guarantees  increased
$3,186,000  (70.6%) to  $7,698,000.  Nonperforming  loans  increased  $2,999,000
(66.5%)  to  $7,511,000.  The  ratio of  nonperforming  loans to total  loans at
December 31, 2007 was 0.48% versus 0.30% at the end of 2006.  Classifications of
nonperforming  loans  as a  percent  of total  loans at the end of 2007  were as
follows:  secured by real estate,  65%; loans to farmers,  1%; commercial loans,
1%; and consumer loans, 33%.

                                       33



Allowance for Loan Losses

Credit  risk is inherent in the  business of lending.  As a result,  the Company
maintains  an  allowance  for loan  losses  to  absorb  losses  inherent  in the
Company's loan and lease portfolio.  This is maintained through periodic charges
to earnings.  These charges are shown in the consolidated  income  statements as
provision for loan losses. All specifically identifiable and quantifiable losses
are  immediately  charged off against the allowance.  However,  for a variety of
reasons,  not all losses are immediately known to the Company and, of those that
are known,  the full extent of the loss may not be quantifiable at that point in
time.  The balance of the Company's  allowance for loan losses is meant to be an
estimate of these unknown but probable losses inherent in the portfolio.

For the remainder of this discussion,  "loans" shall include all loans and lease
contracts, which are a part of the Bank's portfolio.

Assessment of the Adequacy of the Allowance for Loan Losses

The Company  formally  assesses  the  adequacy of the  allowance  on a quarterly
basis.  Determination  of the  adequacy is based on ongoing  assessments  of the
probable  risk in the  outstanding  loan and  lease  portfolio,  and to a lesser
extent the Company's loan and lease commitments.  These assessments  include the
periodic  re-grading  of credits  based on changes  in their  individual  credit
characteristics including delinquency,  seasoning,  recent financial performance
of the borrower,  economic  factors,  changes in the interest rate  environment,
growth  of the  portfolio  as a  whole  or by  segment,  and  other  factors  as
warranted.  Loans are initially  graded when  originated.  They are re-graded as
they are renewed, when there is a new loan to the same borrower, when identified
facts demonstrate  heightened risk of nonpayment,  or if they become delinquent.
Re-grading of larger problem loans occurs at least  quarterly.  Confirmation  of
the quality of the grading  process is obtained by  independent  credit  reviews
conducted by consultants specifically hired for this purpose and by various bank
regulatory agencies.

The Company's method for assessing the appropriateness of the allowance includes
specific  allowances for identified problem loans and leases,  formula allowance
factors for pools of credits, and allowances for changing  environmental factors
(e.g.,  interest  rates,  growth,  economic  conditions,  etc.).  Allowances for
identified  problem loans are based on specific analysis of individual  credits.
Allowance  factors for loan pools are based on the  previous 5 years  historical
loss experience by product type.  Allowances for changing  environmental factors
are management's  best estimate of the probable impact these changes have had on
the loan portfolio as a whole.

The Components of the Allowance for Loan Losses

As noted  above,  the  overall  allowance  consists of a specific  allowance,  a
formula  allowance,  and an  allowance  for  environmental  factors.  The  first
component,  the specific  allowance,  results  from the  analysis of  identified
credits that meet management's criteria for specific evaluation. These loans are
reviewed  individually  to  determine  if such  loans are  considered  impaired.
Impaired loans are those where management has concluded that it is probable that
the borrower will be unable to pay all amounts due under the contractual  terms.
Loans specifically reviewed,  including those considered impaired, are evaluated
individually  by  management  for  loss  potential  by  evaluating   sources  of
repayment,  including  collateral as applicable,  and a specified  allowance for
loan losses is established where necessary.

                                       34



The second  component,  the formula  allowance,  is an estimate of the  probable
losses that have occurred across the major loan categories in the Company's loan
portfolio. This analysis is based on loan grades by pool and the loss history of
these pools. This analysis covers the Company's entire loan portfolio  including
unused  commitments but excludes any loans, that were analyzed  individually and
assigned a specific allowance as discussed above. The total amount allocated for
this component is determined by applying loss estimation  factors to outstanding
loans  and loan  commitments.  The  loss  factors  are  based  primarily  on the
Company's  historical  loss  experience  tracked  over a  five-year  period  and
adjusted as  appropriate  for the input of current  trends and  events.  Because
historical loss  experience  varies for the different  categories of loans,  the
loss  factors  applied to each  category  also differ.  In addition,  there is a
greater  chance that the Company has suffered a loss from a loan that was graded
less than satisfactory than if the loan was last graded satisfactory. Therefore,
for any given category,  a larger loss estimation factor is applied to less than
satisfactory  loans than to those that the Company last graded as  satisfactory.
The resulting formula allowance is the sum of the allocations determined in this
manner.

The third component,  the environmental factor allowance, is a component that is
not  allocated to specific  loans or groups of loans,  but rather is intended to
absorb losses that may not be provided for by the other components.

There are several  primary  reasons that the other  components  discussed  above
might not be  sufficient  to absorb the losses  present in  portfolios,  and the
environmental  factor  allowance  is used to provide  for the  losses  that have
occurred because of them.

The first  reason is that  there are  limitations  to any  credit  risk  grading
process.  The volume of loans makes it  impractical to re-grade every loan every
quarter.  Therefore,  it is possible that some  currently  performing  loans not
recently  graded will not be as strong as their last grading and an insufficient
portion of the  allowance  will have been  allocated  to them.  Grading and loan
review often must be done  without  knowing  whether all  relevant  facts are at
hand.  Troubled  borrowers may  deliberately  or  inadvertently  omit  important
information from reports or conversations  with lending officers regarding their
financial condition and the diminished strength of repayment sources.

The second  reason is that the loss  estimation  factors are based  primarily on
historical loss totals.  As such, the factors may not give sufficient  weight to
such considerations as the current general economic and business conditions that
affect the Company's  borrowers  and specific  industry  conditions  that affect
borrowers in that industry. The factors might also not give sufficient weight to
other  environmental  factors such as changing economic  conditions and interest
rates,  portfolio  growth,  entrance  into new  markets or  products,  and other
characteristics as may be determined by Management.

Specifically,  in assessing how much environmental factor allowance needed to be
provided at December 31, 2008, management considered the following:

        o with  respect to the  economy,  management  considered  the effects of
          changes in GDP,  unemployment,  CPI, debt statistics,  housing starts,
          housing sales,  auto sales,  agricultural  prices,  and other economic
          factors which serve as  indicators  of economic  health and trends and
          which may have an impact on the performance of our borrowers, and
        o with respect to changes in the interest rate  environment,  management
          considered  the recent  changes in  interest  rates and the  resultant
          economic impact it may have had on borrowers with high leverage and/or
          low profitability; and
        o with respect to changes in energy  prices,  management  considered the
          effect  that  increases,  decreases  or  volatility  may  have  on the
          performance of our borrowers, and
        o with  respect  to loans to  borrowers  in new  markets  and  growth in
          general,  management considered the relatively short seasoning of such
          loans and the lack of experience with such borrowers.

Each of these  considerations  was assigned a factor and applied to a portion or
the entire loan  portfolio.  Since these factors are not derived from experience
and are applied to large non-homogeneous groups of loans, they are available for
use across the portfolio as a whole.

Although the weakening economy and resultant recession called for an increase in
the factor related to economic conditions,  the reductions in interest rates and
energy  prices  coupled  with very little loan growth  resulted in a decrease in
these factors causing the overall  Environmental  Factors Allowance to decrease.
Also, in prior years, the Bank maintained a separate factor for Real Estate Risk
due to the fact that the Bank had little or no losses in this loan  category but
anticipated  that such  losses  would be  experienced  at some time.  During the
course  of 2008  the Bank  eliminated  this  environmental  factor  and  instead
provided  for this risk in the Formula  Allowance  based on actual and  expected
loss ratios. This not only resulted in a reduction of the Environmental  Factors
Allowance but also resulted in an increase in the Formula Allowance. The Formula
Allowance  was further  increased  due to increases in losses over the course of
2008 which in turn resulted in increases in the reserve factors for certain loan
types  accordingly.  These increased  factors  primarily  affected  construction
loans, HELOCs, and indirect auto loans.

                                       35


The  following  table sets forth the Bank's  allowance for loan losses as of the
dates indicated:
                                                           December 31,
                                   --------------------------------------------
                                     2008      2007      2006     2005    2004
(dollars in thousands)
Specific allowance                  $5,850   $1,791      $894     $754    $820
Formula allowance                   17,989    9,888     8,957    8,582   7,015
Environmental factors allowance      3,751    5,652     7,063    6,890   6,690
                                   --------------------------------------------
    Total allowance                $27,590  $17,331   $16,914  $16,226 $14,525
                                   ============================================
Allowance for loan losses to loans   1.73%    1.12%     1.12%    1.17%    1.24%

Based on the current conditions of the loan portfolio,  management believes that
the  $27,590,000  allowance  for loan losses at December 31, 2008 is adequate to
absorb probable  losses inherent in the Bank's loan portfolio.  No assurance can
be given,  however, that adverse economic conditions or other circumstances will
not result in increased losses in the portfolio.

The following table  summarizes,  for the years  indicated,  the activity in the
allowance for loan losses:




                                                                     December 31,
                                           -----------------------------------------------------------------
                                                2008         2007           2006         2005         2004
(dollars in thousands)                     -----------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                       
Balance, beginning of year                    $17,331       $16,914      $16,226      $14,525      $12,890
Addition through merger                             -             -            -            -            -
Provision charged to operations                20,950         3,032        1,289        2,169        2,901
Loans charged off:
   Commercial, financial and agricultural        (709)         (438)        (162)        (220)        (901)
   Consumer installment                        (7,298)       (3,320)      (1,625)      (1,459)        (731)
   Real estate mortgage                        (3,912)            -            -            -            -
                                           -----------------------------------------------------------------
     Total loans charged-off                  (11,919)       (3,758)      (1,787)      (1,679)      (1,632)
                                           -----------------------------------------------------------------
Recoveries:
   Commercial, financial and agricultural          31           179          269          396           70
   Consumer installment                         1,139           907          872          774          175
   Real estate mortgage                            58            57           45           41          121
                                           ----------------------------------------------------------------
     Total recoveries                           1,228         1,143        1,186        1,211          366
                                           ----------------------------------------------------------------
Net loans charged-off                         (10,691)       (2,615)        (601)        (468)      (1,266)
                                           ----------------------------------------------------------------
Balance, year end                             $27,590       $17,331      $16,914      $16,226      $14,525
                                           ================================================================
Average total  loans                       $1,549,014    $1,511,331   $1,447,163   $1,251,699   $1,060,556
                                           ----------------------------------------------------------------
Ratios:
Net charge-offs during period to average
   loans outstanding during period              0.69%        0.17%         0.04%        0.04%        0.12%
Provision for loan losses to
   average loans outstanding                    1.35%        0.20%         0.09%        0.17%        0.27%
Allowance for loan losses to loans at year end  1.73%        1.12%         1.12%        1.17%        1.24%
                                           ----------------------------------------------------------------


                                       36


The following  tables  summarize the allocation of the allowance for loan losses
between loan types:



                                              December 31, 2008         December 31, 2007           December 31, 2006
                                            ------------------------  -----------------------    ----------------------
                                                       Percent of               Percent of                 Percent of
                                                       loans in each            loans in each              loans in each
                                                       category to              category to                category to
  (dollars in thousands)                    Amount     total loans    Amount    total loans      Amount    total loans
                                                                                             
Balance at end of period applicable to:
Commercial, financial and agricultural      $7,002        11.9%       $2,010        10.6%        $1,806       10.2%
Consumer installment                         8,470        32.3%        6,796        34.5%         6,278       34.8%
Real estate mortgage                        10,967        50.5%        7,170        46.1%         7,222       45.0%
Real estate construction                     1,151         5.3%        1,355         8.8%         1,608       10.0%
                                           -------       ------      -------       ------       -------      ------
                                           $27,590       100.0%      $17,331       100.0%       $16,914      100.0%
                                           =======       ======      =======       ======       =======      ======

                                              December 31, 2005         December 31, 2004
                                           -------------------------   ----------------------
 (dollars in thousands)                                Percent of               Percent of
                                                       loans in each            loans in each
                                                       category to              category to
                                           Amount      total loans    Amount    total loans
Balance at end of period applicable to:
Commercial, financial and agricultural      $1,930        10.3%         $2,180      11.9%
Consumer installment                         6,099        36.7%          5,067      35.0%
Real estate mortgage                         6,967        45.0%          6,366      46.4%
Real estate construction                     1,230         8.0%            912       6.7%
                                           -------       ------        -------     ------
                                           $16,226       100.0%        $14,525     100.0%
                                           =======       ======        =======     ======


Other Real Estate Owned

The other real estate  owned  (OREO)  balance  was  $1,185,000  and  $187,000 at
December  31,  2008 and 2007,  respectively.  OREO  properties  may consist of a
mixture of land and single family residences.

Intangible Assets

At  December  31,  2008  and  2007,  the  Bank had  intangible  assets  totaling
$16,172,000 and  $16,695,000,  respectively.  Intangible  assets at December 31,
2008 and 2007 were comprised of the following:

                                            December 31,
                                         2008           2007
                                  -----------------------------
                                     (dollars in thousands)
        Core-deposit intangible         $653            $1,176
        Goodwill                      15,519            15,519
                                  -----------------------------
        Total intangible assets      $16,172           $16,695
                                  =============================

The core-deposit intangible assets resulted from the Bank's 1997 acquisitions of
certain  Wells Fargo  branches  and Sutter  Buttes  Savings  Bank,  and the 2003
acquisition of North State National Bank. At December 31, 2008 the  core-deposit
intangible  assets related to the Wells Fargo branches and Sutter Buttes Savings
Bank were fully amortized. The goodwill intangible asset resulted from the North
State National Bank acquisition.  Amortization of core deposit intangible assets
amounting to $523,000, $490,000, and $1,395,000, was recorded in 2008, 2007, and
2006, respectively.

                                       37


Deposits

Deposits  at  December  31,  2008  increased  $124,047,000  (8.0%) over the 2007
year-end balances to $1,669,270,000.  All categories of deposits were up in 2008
except for savings which was relatively flat.  Included in the December 31, 2008
certificate of deposit balances is $80,000,000 from the State of California. The
Bank  participates  in a deposit  program  offered  by the  State of  California
whereby the State may make deposits at the Bank's request  subject to collateral
and creditworthiness  constraints.  The negotiated rates on these State deposits
are generally  favorable to other  wholesale  funding  sources  available to the
Bank.

Deposits  at  December  31,  2007  decreased  $53,926,000  (3.4%)  over the 2006
year-end balances to  $1,545,223,000.  Savings deposits  increased in 2007 while
all other categories of deposits decreased in 2007. Included in the December 31,
2007   certificate  of  deposit  balances  is  $40,000,000  from  the  State  of
California.

Long-Term Debt

See Note 7 to the consolidated financial statements at Item 8 of this report for
information about the Company's other borrowings, including long-term debt.

Junior Subordinated Debt

See Note 8 to the consolidated financial statements at Item 8 of this report for
information about the Company's issuance of junior subordinated debt during 2008
and 2007.

Equity

See Note 10 and Note 19 in the  consolidated  financial  statements at Item 8 of
this report for a discussion of  shareholders'  equity and  regulatory  capital,
respectively.  Management  believes  that the  Company's  capital is adequate to
support anticipated  growth, meet the cash dividend  requirements of the Company
and meet the future risk-based capital requirements of the Bank and the Company.

Market Risk Management

Overview.  The goal for  managing the assets and  liabilities  of the Bank is to
maximize shareholder value and earnings while maintaining a high quality balance
sheet  without  exposing  the Bank to undue  interest  rate  risk.  The Board of
Directors  has  overall  responsibility  for the  Company's  interest  rate risk
management  policies.  The Bank has an Asset and Liability  Management Committee
(ALCO) which  establishes and monitors  guidelines to control the sensitivity of
earnings to changes in interest rates.

Asset/Liability  Management.  Activities involved in asset/liability  management
include  but are  not  limited  to  lending,  accepting  and  placing  deposits,
investing in  securities  and issuing  debt.  Interest  rate risk is the primary
market risk associated with asset/liability management.  Sensitivity of earnings
to interest rate changes arises when yields on assets change in a different time
period or in a different  amount from that of interest costs on liabilities.  To
mitigate  interest rate risk, the structure of the balance sheet is managed with
the goal  that  movements  of  interest  rates on  assets  and  liabilities  are
correlated  and  contribute  to earnings  even in periods of  volatile  interest
rates.  The  asset/liability  management  policy sets  limits on the  acceptable
amount of variance in net interest margin, net income and market value of equity
under changing interest environments.  Market value of equity is the net present
value  of  estimated  cash  flows  from  the  Bank's  assets,   liabilities  and
off-balance  sheet  items.  The Bank  uses  simulation  models to  forecast  net
interest margin, net income and market value of equity.

Simulation of net interest  margin,  net income and market value of equity under
various  interest  rate  scenarios is the primary tool used to measure  interest
rate risk. Using computer-modeling  techniques, the Bank is able to estimate the
potential impact of changing  interest rates on net interest margin,  net income
and market value of equity. A balance sheet forecast is prepared using inputs of
actual    loan,     securities    and    interest-bearing     liability    (i.e.
deposits/borrowings) positions as the beginning base.

                                       38



In the simulation of net interest  margin and net income under various  interest
rate scenarios,  the forecast balance sheet is processed  against seven interest
rate  scenarios.  These  seven  interest  rate  scenarios  include  a flat  rate
scenario,  which assumes  interest  rates are  unchanged in the future,  and six
additional rate ramp scenarios ranging from +300 to -300 basis points around the
flat scenario in 100 basis point  increments.  These ramp scenarios  assume that
interest  rates  increase  or  decrease  evenly  (in a  "ramp"  fashion)  over a
twelve-month period and remain at the new levels beyond twelve months.

The following table  summarizes the effect on net interest income and net income
due to changing interest rates as measured against a flat rate (no interest rate
change)  scenario.  The simulation  results shown below assume no changes in the
structure of the Company's  balance sheet over the twelve months being  measured
(a "flat"  balance  sheet  scenario),  and that deposit rates will track general
interest rate changes by approximately 50%:

Interest  Rate Risk  Simulation  of Net  Interest  Income  and Net  Income as of
December 31, 2008

                                   Estimated Change in    Estimated Change in
     Change in Interest       Net Interest Income (NII)      Net Income (NI)
     Rates (Basis Points)         (as % of "flat" NII)     (as % of "flat" NI)
     +300 (ramp)                        (4.91%)                (13.08%)
     +200 (ramp)                        (3.79%)                (10.11%)
     +100 (ramp)                        (1.76%)                 (4.71%)
     +   0 (flat)                            -                       -
     -100 (ramp)                         1.34%                   3.57%
     -200 (ramp)                         1.75%                   4.66%
     -300 (ramp)                         1.75%                   4.66%

In the  simulation  of  market  value of  equity  under  various  interest  rate
scenarios,  the forecast balance sheet is processed  against seven interest rate
scenarios.  These seven interest rate  scenarios  include the flat rate scenario
described  above,  and six additional rate shock scenarios  ranging from +300 to
-300 basis points around the flat scenario in 100 basis point increments.  These
rate shock scenarios assume that interest rates increase or decrease immediately
(in a "shock" fashion) and remain at the new level in the future.

The  following  table  summarizes  the  effect on market  value of equity due to
changing interest rates as measured against a flat rate (no change) scenario:

Interest Rate Risk Simulation of Market Value of Equity as of December 31, 2008

                                         Estimated Change in
     Change in Interest             Market Value of Equity (MVE)
     Rates (Basis Points)               (as % of "flat" MVE)
     +300 (shock)                             (11.35%)
     +200 (shock)                              (9.04%)
     +100 (shock)                              (5.32%)
     +   0 (flat)                                   -
     -100 (shock)                               7.16%
     -200 (shock)                              17.36%
     -300 (shock)                              27.16%

These  results  indicate  that given a "flat"  balance  sheet  scenario,  and if
deposit rates track  general  interest  rate changes by  approximately  50%, the
Company's balance sheet is slightly liability sensitive.  "Liability  sensitive"
implies that  earnings  decrease  when  interest  rates rise,  and increase when
interest rates decrease. The magnitude of all the simulation results noted above
is within the Bank's policy  guidelines.  The asset liability  management policy
limits  aggregate  market risk,  as measured in this  fashion,  to an acceptable
level within the context of risk-return trade-offs.

                                       39


The simulation  results noted above do not  incorporate  any management  actions
that might moderate the negative  consequences of interest rate  deviations.  In
addition, the simulation results noted above contain various assumptions such as
a flat balance sheet, and the rate that deposit interest rates change as general
interest rates change. Therefore, they do not reflect likely actual results, but
serve as estimates of interest rate risk.

As with any method of measuring  interest rate risk,  certain  shortcomings  are
inherent  in the method of  analysis  presented  in the  preceding  tables.  For
example,  although certain of the Bank's assets and liabilities may have similar
maturities  or  repricing  time frames,  they may react in different  degrees to
changes in market interest rates. In addition,  the interest rates on certain of
the Bank's asset and liability categories may precede, or lag behind, changes in
market  interest  rates.  Also,  the actual  rates of  prepayments  on loans and
investments could vary significantly  from the assumptions  utilized in deriving
the results as  presented in the  preceding  tables.  Further,  a change in U.S.
Treasury rates  accompanied by a change in the shape of the treasury yield curve
could result in different estimations from those presented herein.  Accordingly,
the results in the  preceding  tables should not be relied upon as indicative of
actual results in the event of changing market interest rates. Additionally, the
resulting  estimates  of changes in market  value of equity are not  intended to
represent, and should not be construed to represent, estimates of changes in the
underlying value of the Bank.

Interest rate sensitivity is a function of the repricing  characteristics of the
Bank's  portfolio  of assets  and  liabilities.  One  aspect of these  repricing
characteristics is the time frame within which the  interest-bearing  assets and
liabilities  are  subject to change in  interest  rates  either at  replacement,
repricing  or   maturity.   An  analysis  of  the   repricing   time  frames  of
interest-bearing  assets and  liabilities  is sometimes  called a "gap" analysis
because it shows the gap between assets and liabilities repricing or maturing in
each of a number of periods.  Another aspect of these repricing  characteristics
is the relative magnitude of the repricing for each category of interest earning
asset and  interest-bearing  liability  given various changes in market interest
rates.  Gap analysis gives no indication of the relative  magnitude of repricing
given various changes in interest rates.  Interest rate  sensitivity  management
focuses on the maturity of assets and  liabilities  and their  repricing  during
periods of changes in market interest rates.  Interest rate sensitivity gaps are
measured as the difference  between the volumes of assets and liabilities in the
Bank's current portfolio that are subject to repricing at various time horizons.

The following interest rate sensitivity table shows the Bank's repricing gaps as
of December 31, 2008. In this table transaction deposits,  which may be repriced
at will by the Bank, have been included in the less than 3-month  category.  The
inclusion of all of the transaction  deposits in the less than 3-month repricing
category  causes the Bank to appear  liability  sensitive.  Because the Bank may
reprice its transaction  deposits at will,  transaction  deposits may or may not
reprice  immediately with changes in interest rates. In recent years of moderate
interest  rate  changes  the  Bank's  earnings  have  reacted  as though the gap
position  is  slightly   asset   sensitive   mainly  because  the  magnitude  of
interest-bearing  liability  repricing  has  been  less  than the  magnitude  of
interest-earning asset repricing.  This difference in the magnitude of asset and
liability  repricing is mainly due to the Bank's strong core deposit base, which
although deposits may be repriced within three months, historically,  the timing
of their  repricing has been longer than three months and the magnitude of their
repricing has been minimal.

                                       40



Due to the limitations of gap analysis,  as described  above,  the Bank does not
actively  use gap analysis in managing  interest  rate risk.  Instead,  the Bank
relies on the more  sophisticated  interest rate risk simulation model described
above as its primary tool in measuring and managing interest rate risk.



Interest Rate Sensitivity - December 31, 2008                             Repricing within:
(dollars in thousands)                    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                             Less than 3          3 - 6           6 - 12        1 - 5          Over
                                             months              months           months        years        5 years
                                          ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                                 
Interest-earning  assets:
    Federal funds sold                           $ -               $ -              $ -            $ -           $ -
    Securities                                32,798            40,577           71,322         96,645        25,219
    Loans                                    666,446            90,124          126,234        589,548       118,497
    Interest-earning cash                     21,880                 -              100              -             -
                                          ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total interest-earning assets               $721,124           130,701          197,656        686,193       143,716
                                          ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Interest-bearing liabilities
    Transaction deposits                    $622,359               $ -              $ -            $ -           $ -
    Time                                     307,110           151,632          141,694         45,215            12
    Federal funds purchased                        -                 -                -              -             -
    Other borrowings                         101,939                24               42              -             -
    Junior subordinated debt                  41,238                 -                -              -             -
                                          ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total interest-bearing liabilities        $1,072,646           151,656          141,736         45,215            12
                                          ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Interest sensitivity gap                   ($351,522)          (20,955)          55,920        640,978       143,704
Cumulative sensitivity gap                 ($351,522)         (372,477)        (316,557)       324,421       468,125
As a percentage of earning assets:
 Interest sensitivity gap                   (18.70%)          (1.11%)             2.98%        34.11%          7.65%
 Cumulative sensitivity gap                 (18.70%)         (19.82%)           (16.84%)       17.26%         24.91%


Liquidity

Liquidity refers to the Bank's ability to provide funds at an acceptable cost to
meet loan demand and deposit  withdrawals,  as well as contingency plans to meet
unanticipated funding needs or loss of funding sources.  These objectives can be
met from  either  the  asset  or  liability  side of the  balance  sheet.  Asset
liquidity sources consist of the repayments and maturities of loans,  selling of
loans,  short-term money market investments,  maturities of securities and sales
of  securities  from the  available-for-sale  portfolio.  These  activities  are
generally  summarized as investing  activities in the Consolidated  Statement of
Cash  Flows.  Net  cash  used  by  investing  activities  totaled  approximately
$81,697,000 in 2008. Increased securities and loan balances were responsible for
the major use of funds in this category.

Liquidity is generated from  liabilities  through deposit growth and borrowings.
These  activities are included under  financing  activities in the  Consolidated
Statement of Cash Flows. In 2008,  financing  activities provided funds totaling
$42,467,000.  During  2008, a net increase in deposit  balances  provided  funds
amounting  to  $124,047,000  while  decreases  in Federal  funds  purchased  and
payments of  principal  on  long-term  other  borrowings  used  $56,000,000  and
$21,578,000 of funds,  respectively.  The Bank also had available  correspondent
banking lines of credit totaling  $50,000,000 at year-end 2008. In addition,  at
December  31,  2008,  the Company had loans and  securities  available to pledge
towards future borrowings from the Federal Home Loan Bank of up to $448,580,000.
As of December  31, 2008,  the Company had  $102,005,000  of long-term  debt and
other borrowings as described in Note 7 of the consolidated financial statements
of the  Company  and the  related  notes at Item 8 of this  report.  While these
sources are expected to continue to provide  significant amounts of funds in the
future, their mix, as well as the possible use of other sources,  will depend on
future  economic  and market  conditions.  Liquidity  is also  provided  or used
through the  results of  operating  activities.  In 2008,  operating  activities
provided cash of $36,787,000.

The Bank classifies its entire investment portfolio as available for sale (AFS).
The AFS  securities  plus  cash  and  cash  equivalents  in  excess  of  reserve
requirements totaled $340,598,000 at December 31, 2008, which was 16.7% of total
assets at that time. This was up from $310,837,000 and 15.7% at the end of 2007.

                                       41



It is  anticipated  that loan  demand will be weak during  2009,  although  such
demand  will be dictated by economic  and  competitive  conditions.  The Company
aggressively  solicits  non-interest  bearing  demand  deposits and money market
checking  deposits,  which are the least sensitive to interest rates. The growth
of deposit  balances is subject to  heightened  competition,  the success of the
Company's  sales  efforts,  delivery  of  superior  customer  service and market
conditions.  The recent  series of reductions in the federal funds rate resulted
in declining  short-term  interest rates,  which could impact deposit volumes in
the future.  Depending  on economic  conditions,  interest  rate  levels,  and a
variety of other conditions, deposit growth may be used to fund loans, to reduce
short-term  borrowings  or  purchase  investment  securities.  However,  due  to
concerns such as uncertainty in the general  economic  environment,  competition
and political  uncertainty,  loan demand and levels of customer deposits are not
certain.

The  principal  cash  requirements  of the Company are dividends on common stock
when  declared.  The Company is dependent  upon the payment of cash dividends by
the Bank to service  its  commitments.  Shareholder  dividends  are  expected to
continue subject to the Board's discretion and continuing  evaluation of capital
levels,  earnings, asset quality and other factors. The Company expects that the
cash  dividends  paid by the Bank to the Company will be sufficient to meet this
payment  schedule.  Dividends  from the Bank are  subject to certain  regulatory
restrictions.

The  maturity  distribution  of  certificates  of  deposit in  denominations  of
$100,000  or more is set  forth  in the  following  table.  These  deposits  are
generally  more rate  sensitive  than other  deposits and,  therefore,  are more
likely to be withdrawn to obtain higher yields elsewhere if available.  The Bank
participates in a program  wherein the State of California  places time deposits
with the Bank at the Bank's  option.  At December 31, 2008,  2007 and 2006,  the
Bank had $80,000,000, $40,000,000 and $20,000,000,  respectively, of these State
deposits.

Certificates of Deposit in Denominations of $100,000 or More

                                              Amounts as of December 31,
                                   ------------------------------------------
(dollars in thousands)                 2008           2007            2006
                                   ------------------------------------------
Time remaining until maturity:
Less than 3 months                  $174,715        $171,594       $125,088
3 months to 6 months                  62,051          51,729         77,585
6 months to 12 months                 55,105          26,968         37,171
More than 12 months                   18,319          12,686         14,306
                                    -----------------------------------------
  Total                             $310,190        $262,977       $254,150
                                    =========================================
Loan demand also affects the Bank's  liquidity  position.  The  following  table
presents the  maturities of loans,  net of deferred loan costs,  at December 31,
2008:


                                                                After
                                                                One But
                                                 Within         Within         After 5
                                                One Year        5 Years         Years          Total
                                             ---------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                    
                                                               (dollars in thousands)
Loans with predetermined interest rates:
  Commercial, financial and agricultural      $22,142          $36,663            $3,491        $62,296
  Consumer installment                         41,959           83,761            62,207        187,927
  Real estate mortgage                         39,906          113,597           118,014        271,517
  Real estate construction                     33,824           10,053               146         44,023
                                            -----------------------------------------------------------
                                             $137,831         $244,074          $183,858       $565,763
                                            -----------------------------------------------------------
Loans with floating interest rates:
  Commercial, financial and agricultural     $100,424          $25,562            $1,361       $127,347
  Consumer installment                        326,521                -                 -        326,521
  Real estate mortgage                         25,291          111,762           393,959        531,012
  Real estate construction                     21,427           11,709             7,070         40,206
                                             ----------------------------------------------------------
                                             $473,663         $149,033          $402,390     $1,025,086
                                             ----------------------------------------------------------
     Total loans                             $611,494         $393,107          $586,248     $1,590,849
                                             ==========================================================


                                       42



The maturity distribution and yields of the investment portfolio at December 31,
2008 is presented in the following table. The timing of the maturities indicated
in  the   table   below  is  based  on  final   contractual   maturities.   Most
mortgage-backed  securities return principal throughout their contractual lives.
As such,  the  weighted  average  life of  mortgage-backed  securities  based on
outstanding  principal balance is usually  significantly  shorter than the final
contractual  maturity  indicated  below.  At December 31, 2008,  the Bank had no
held-to-maturity securities.


                                                         After One Year    After Five Years
                                          Within         but Through       but Through        After Ten
                                         One Year        Five Years        Ten Years          Years              Total
                                       -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                       Amount  Yield     Amount Yield     Amount  Yield     Amount Yield     Amount  Yield
 (dollars in thousands)                -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                        
Securities Available-for-Sale                                       (dollars in thousands)
------------------------------
Obligations of US government
  corporations and agencies              $241   5.58%   $48,766  3.92%    $37,242  4.17%  $156,729  5.78%    $242,978  5.16%
Obligations of states and
  political subdivisions                  411   7.08%     3,204  7.39%     11,520  7.68%     7,529  6.44%      22,664  7.21%
Corporate bonds                             -   -             -  -              -  -           919  3.50%         919  3.50%
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total securities available-for-sale      $652   6.53%  $51,970  4.14%     $48,762  5.00%  $165,177  5.80%    $266,561  5.33%
============================================================================================================================


Off-Balance Sheet Items

The Bank has certain ongoing commitments under operating and capital leases. See
Note 5 of the financial statements at Item 8 of this report for the terms. These
commitments do not significantly  impact operating  results.  As of December 31,
2008 commitments to extend credit and commitments  related to the Bank's deposit
overdraft  privilege  product were the Bank's only  financial  instruments  with
off-balance sheet risk. The Bank has not entered into any material contracts for
financial  derivative   instruments  such  as  futures,   swaps,  options,  etc.
Commitments to extend credit were  $643,365,000 and $690,633,000 at December 31,
2008 and 2007, respectively,  and represent 40.4% of the total loans outstanding
at year-end 2008 versus 44.5% at December 31, 2007.  Commitments  related to the
Bank's deposit overdraft  privilege product totaled  $35,883,000 and $33,517,000
at December 31, 2008 and 2007, respectively.

Certain Contractual Obligations

The following chart summarizes certain contractual obligations of the Company as
of December 31, 2008:


                                                                Less than        1-3          3-5       More than
(dollars in thousands)                               Total      one year        years        years       5 years
                                                     ------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                             
FHLB loan, fixed rate of 5.77%
   payable on February 23, 2009                        1,000        1,000            -            -            -
Capital lease obligation(2)                               90           90            -            -            -
Other collateralized borrowings,
   fixed rate of  0.85 % payable on January 2, 2009   50,915       50,915            -            -            -
Repurchase Agreement(3)                               50,000            -            -       50,000            -
Junior subordinated debt(4)                           20,619            -            -            -       20,619
Junior subordinated debt(5)                           20,619            -            -            -       20,619
Operating lease obligations                            7,135        2,123        3,114        1,440          458
Deferred compensation(1)                               6,179          645        1,212          922        3,400
Supplemental retirement plans(1)                       4,316          583        1,117          971        1,645
                                                    -------------------------------------------------------------
Total contractual obligations                       $160,873      $55,356       $5,443      $53,333      $46,741
                                                    ==============================================================


(1)  These amounts  represent known certain  payments to participants  under the
     Company's deferred compensation and supplemental retirement plans. See Note
     14 in the  financial  statements  at Item 8 of this  report for  additional
     information related to the Company's deferred compensation and supplemental
     retirement plan liabilities.
(2)  Capital lease obligation on premises, effective rate of 13% payable monthly
     in varying amounts through December 1, 2009.
(3)  Repurchase agreement, adjustable rate of three-month LIBOR less 0.29% until
     August 30,  2009 with a floor  rate of 0.00% and a cap rate of 4.72%  after
     which,  rate  is  fixed  at  4.72%  and  is  callable  in its  entirety  by
     counterparty on a quarterly basis, matures on August 30, 2012.
(4)  Junior subordinated debt,  adjustable rate of three-month LIBOR plus 3.05%,
     callable in whole or in part by the Company on a quarterly  basis beginning
     October 7, 2008, matures October 7, 2033.
(5)  Junior subordinated debt,  adjustable rate of three-month LIBOR plus 2.55%,
     callable in whole or in part by the Company on a quarterly  basis beginning
     July 23, 2009, matures July 23, 2034.

                                       43


ITEM 7A. QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE  DISCLOSURES ABOUT MARKET RISK See "Market
Risk Management" under Item 7 of this report which is incorporated herein.

ITEM 8. FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND SUPPLEMENTARY DATA

INDEX TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                                                                        Page

     Consolidated Balance Sheets as of December 31, 2008 and 2007         45
     Consolidated Statements of Income for
         the years ended December 31, 2008, 2007, and 2006                46
     Consolidated Statements of Changes in Shareholders' Equity
         for the years ended December 31, 2008, 2007, and 2006            47
     Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows for the years ended
        December 31, 2008, 2007, and 2006                                 48
     Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements                           49
     Management's Report of Internal Control over Financial Reporting     76
     Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm's Reports              77


                                       44


                                TRICO BANCSHARES
                           CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS

                                                          At December 31,
                                                        2008              2007
                                                      --------------------------
Assets:                 (in thousands, except share data)
Cash and due from banks                                  $86,355      $88,798
                                                      --------------------------
  Cash and cash equivalents                               86,355       88,798
Securities available-for-sale                            266,561      232,427
Federal Home Loan Bank stock, at cost                      9,235        8,766
Loans, net of allowance for loan losses
     of $27,590 and $17,331                            1,563,259    1,534,635
Foreclosed assets, net of allowance for losses
     of $230 and $180                                      1,185          187
Premises and equipment, net                               18,841       20,492
Cash value of life insurance                              46,815       44,981
Accrued interest receivable                                7,935        8,554
Goodwill                                                  15,519       15,519
Other intangible assets, net                                 653        1,176
Other assets                                              26,832       25,086
                                                      --------------------------
    Total assets                                      $2,043,190   $1,980,621
                                                      ==========================
Liabilities and Shareholders' Equity:
Liabilities:
Deposits:
    Noninterest-bearing demand                          $401,247     $378,680
    Interest-bearing                                   1,268,023    1,166,543
                                                      --------------------------
Total deposits                                         1,669,270    1,545,223
Federal funds purchased                                        -       56,000
Accrued interest payable                                   6,146        7,871
Reserve for unfunded commitments                           2,565        2,090
Other liabilities                                         24,034       23,195
Other borrowings                                         102,005      116,126
Junior subordinated debt                                  41,238       41,238
                                                      --------------------------
    Total liabilities                                  1,845,258    1,791,743
                                                      --------------------------
Commitments and contingencies (Notes 5, 9, 14 and 16)
Shareholders' equity:
Common stock, no par value: 50,000,000 shares authorized;
  issued and outstanding:
    15,756,101 at December 31, 2008                      78,246
    15,911,550 at December 31, 2007                                    78,775

Retained earnings                                        117,630      111,655
Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss, net          2,056       (1,552)
  of tax)                                            ---------------------------
    Total shareholders' equity                           197,932      188,878
                                                     ---------------------------
    Total liabilities and shareholders' equity        $2,043,190   $1,980,621
                                                     ===========================

The  accompanying  notes are an integral  part of these  consolidated  financial
statements.

                                       45


                                TRICO BANCSHARES
                        CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF INCOME

                                                       Years ended December 31,
                                                  ------------------------------
                                                     2008        2007      2006
                                                  ------------------------------
Interest and dividend income:              (in thousands, except per share data)
    Loans, including fees                         $107,896    $117,639  $109,769
    Debt securities:
       Taxable                                      11,526       7,712     8,373
       Tax exempt                                    1,187       1,454     1,749
    Dividends                                          469         446       376
    Interest bearing cash at
      Federal Reserve and other banks                   31           -         -
    Federal funds sold                                   3          17        56
                                                  ------------------------------
       Total interest and dividend income          121,112     127,268   120,323
                                                  ------------------------------
Interest expense:
    Deposits                                        24,461     31,423     25,460
    Federal funds purchased                          1,999      2,880      4,116
    Other borrowings                                 2,512      2,983      1,667
    Junior subordinated debt                         2,580      3,296      3,202
                                                  ------------------------------
       Total interest expense                       31,552     40,582     34,445
                                                  ------------------------------
Net interest income                                 89,560     86,686     85,878

Provision for loan losses                           20,950      3,032      1,289
                                                  ------------------------------
Net interest income after provision for loan        68,610     83,654     84,589
  losses                                          ------------------------------
Noninterest income:
    Service charges and fees                        20,555     21,200     19,809
    Gain on sale of loans                            1,127        994      1,224
    Commissions on sale of non-deposit
      investment products                            2,069      2,331      1,946
    Increase in cash value of life insurance         1,834      1,445      1,767
    Other                                            1,502      1,620      1,509
                                                  ------------------------------
       Total noninterest income                     27,087     27,590     26,255

Noninterest expense:
    Salaries and related benefits                   38,112     38,066     36,455
    Other                                           30,626     30,840     30,271
                                                  ------------------------------
       Total noninterest expense                    68,738     68,906     66,726
                                                  ------------------------------
Income before income taxes                          26,959     42,338     44,118
                                                  ------------------------------
    Provision for income taxes                      10,161     16,645     17,288
                                                  ------------------------------
Net income                                         $16,798    $25,693    $26,830
                                                  ==============================
Earnings per share:
    Basic                                            $1.07      $1.62      $1.70
    Diluted                                          $1.05      $1.57      $1.64

The  accompanying  notes are an integral  part of these  consolidated  financial
statements.

                                       46



                                TRICO BANCSHARES
           CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CHANGES IN SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY
                  Years Ended December 31, 2008, 2007 and 2006

                                                                                 Accumulated
                                             Shares of                           Other
                                              Common      Common      Retained   Comprehensive
                                               Stock      Stock       Earnings   (Loss) Income   Total
 (in thousands, except share data)       --------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                 
Balance at December 31, 2005            15,707,835     $71,412     $81,906       ($3,825)   $149,493
Comprehensive income:
    Net income                                                      26,830                    26,830
    Change in net unrealized loss on
       Securities available for sale, net                                            519         519
                                                                                             -------
       Total comprehensive income                                                             27,349
Adjustment to initially apply FASB
    Statement No. 158, net of tax                                                 (1,215)     (1,215)
Stock option vesting                                       662                                   662
Stock options exercised                    190,287       1,646                                 1,646
Tax benefit of stock options exercised                     205                                   205
Repurchase of common stock                 (40,915)       (186)       (923)                   (1,109)
Dividends paid ($0.48 per share)                                    (7,595)                   (7,595)
                                        -------------------------------------------------------------
Balance at December 31, 2006            15,857,207     $73,739    $100,218       ($4,521)   $169,436
Comprehensive income:
    Net income                                                      25,693                    25,693
    Change in net unrealized gain on
       Securities available for sale, net                                          2,983       2,983
    Change in minimum pension liability, net                                         (14)        (14)
                                                                                             -------
       Total comprehensive income                                                             28,662
Stock option vesting                                       782                                   782
Stock options exercised                    382,350       4,080                                 4,080
Tax benefit of stock options exercised                   1,731                                 1,731
Repurchase of common stock                (328,007)     (1,557)     (5,986)                   (7,543)
Dividends paid ($0.52 per share)                                    (8,270)                   (8,270)
                                        -------------------------------------------------------------
Balance at December 31, 2007            15,911,550     $78,775    $111,655       ($1,552)   $188,878
Comprehensive income:
    Net income                                                      16,798                    16,798
    Change in net unrealized gain on
       Securities available for sale, net                                          2,804       2,804
    Change in joint beneficiary agreement
       liability, net                                                                 54          54
    Change in minimum pension liability, net                                         750         750
                                                                                             --------
       Total comprehensive income                                                             20,406
Cummulative effect of change in accounting
     principle, net of tax                                            (522)                     (522)
Stoc option vesting                                        629                                   629
Stock options exercised                     17,620         142                                   142
Reversal of tax benefit of stock options                  (444)                                 (444)
  exercised
Repurchase of common stock                (173,069)       (856)     (2,108)                   (2,964)
Dividends paid ($0.52 per share)                                    (8,193)                   (8,193)
                                        -------------------------------------------------------------
Balance at December 31, 2008            15,756,101     $78,246    $117,630        $2,056    $197,932
                                        =============================================================
The  accompanying  notes are an integral  part of these  consolidated  financial
statements.


                                       47



                                TRICO BANCSHARES
                      CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
                                                                              Years Ended December 31,
                                                                ---------------------------------------------
                                                                     2008            2007             2006
                                                                ---------------------------------------------
                                                                                             
Operating activities:                                                              (in thousands)
   Net income                                                     $16,798            $25,693            $26,830
   Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash provided
     by operating activities:
       Depreciation of premises and equipment, and amortization     3,433              3,719              3,710
       Amortization of intangible assets                              523                490              1,395
       Provision for loan losses                                   20,950              3,032              1,289
       Amortization of investment securities premium, net             303                647                898
       Gain on sale of investments                                      -                  -                (12)
       Originations of loans for resale                           (74,956)           (63,777)           (69,707)
       Proceeds from sale of loans originated for resale           75,338             64,106             70,257
       Gain on sale of loans                                       (1,127)              (994)            (1,224)
       Change in market value of mortgage servicing rights          1,860                490                400
       Loss on sale of fixed assets                                     2                  6                 28
       Increase in cash value of life insurance                    (1,834)            (1,445)            (1,767)
       Stock option vesting expense                                   629                782                662
       Stock option excess tax benefits                               444             (1,731)              (205)
       Deferred income tax benefit                                 (5,698)              (506)            (1,679)
       Change in:
         Interest receivable                                          619                173             (1,086)
         Interest payable                                          (1,725)               323              3,042
         Other assets and liabilities, net                          1,228              1,129                 37
                                                                 -----------------------------------------------
         Net cash provided by operating activities                 36,787             32,137             32,868
                                                                 -----------------------------------------------
Investing activities:
   Proceeds from maturities of securities available-for-sale       50,414             49,256             52,043
   Proceeds from sale of securities available-for-sale                  -                  -             10,779
   Purchases of securities available-for-sale                     (80,012)           (78,822)              (896)
   Purchase of Federal Home Loan Bank stock                          (469)              (446)              (718)
   Loan originations and principal collections, net               (51,000)           (44,889)          (125,445)
   Proceeds from sale of premises and equipment                         2                 12                  5
   Proceeds from sale of other real estate owned                      428                  -                  -
   Purchases of premises and equipment                             (1,060)            (1,751)            (3,781)
                                                                 -----------------------------------------------
         Net cash used by investing activities                    (81,697)           (76,640)           (68,013)
                                                                 -----------------------------------------------
Financing activities:
   Net (decrease) increase in deposits                            124,047            (53,926)           102,352
   Net change in federal funds purchased                          (56,000)            18,000            (58,800)
   Increase in long-term other borrowings                               -             50,000                  -
   Payments of principal on long-term other borrowings            (21,578)               (67)               (58)
   Net change in short-term other borrowings                        7,457             26,282              8,579
   Stock option excess tax benefits                                  (444)             1,731                205
   Repurchase of common stock                                      (2,822)            (4,167)                 -
   Dividends paid                                                  (8,193)            (8,270)            (7,595)
   Exercise of stock options                                            -                704                537
                                                                  ----------------------------------------------
         Net cash provided by financing activities                 42,467             30,287             45,220
                                                                  ----------------------------------------------
Net change in cash and cash equivalents                            (2,443)           (14,216)            10,075
                                                                  ----------------------------------------------
Cash and cash equivalents and beginning of year                    88,798            103,014             92,939
                                                                  ----------------------------------------------
Cash and cash equivalents at end of year                          $86,355            $88,798           $103,014
                                                                  ==============================================
Supplemental disclosure of noncash activities:
   Unrealized gain (loss) on securities available for sale         $4,839             $5,147               $895
   Loans transferred to other real estate                           1,426                187                  -
   Market value of share tendered by employees in-lieu of
      cash to pay for exercise of options and/or related taxes        142              3,376              1,109
Supplemental disclosure of cash flow activity:
   Cash paid for interest expense                                  32,277             40,259             31,403
   Cash paid for income taxes                                      14,850             16,300             19,825

The  accompanying  notes are an integral  part of these  consolidated  financial
statements.


                                       48


TRICO BANCSHARES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
Years Ended December 31, 2008, 2007 and 2006

Note 1 - Summary of Significant Accounting Policies

Principles of Consolidation
The consolidated  financial  statements include the accounts of the Company, and
its  wholly-owned  subsidiary,  Tri Counties Bank (the "Bank").  All significant
intercompany accounts and transactions have been eliminated in consolidation.

Nature of  Operations  The Company  operates  32 branch  offices and 25 in-store
branch offices in the  California  counties of Butte,  Contra Costa,  Del Norte,
Fresno,  Glenn, Kern, Lake, Lassen,  Madera,  Mendocino,  Merced,  Napa, Nevada,
Placer, Sacramento,  Shasta, Siskiyou,  Stanislaus, Sutter, Tehama, Tulare, Yolo
and Yuba.  The Company's  operating  policy since its  inception has  emphasized
retail banking.  Most of the Company's  customers are retail customers and small
to medium sized businesses.

Use of Estimates in the  Preparation of Financial  Statements The preparation of
financial statements in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted
in the United  States of  America  requires  Management  to make  estimates  and
assumptions  that  affect the  reported  amounts of assets and  liabilities  and
disclosure of  contingent  assets and  liabilities  at the date of the financial
statements  and the  reported  amounts  of  revenues  and  expenses  during  the
reporting  period.  On an on-going basis,  the Company  evaluates its estimates,
including  those  related to the  adequacy  of the  allowance  for loan  losses,
investments,  intangible  assets,  income taxes and  contingencies.  The Company
bases its estimates on historical  experience  and on various other  assumptions
that are believed to be reasonable under the circumstances, the results of which
form the basis for  making  judgments  about the  carrying  values of assets and
liabilities that are not readily apparent from other sources. Actual results may
differ from these  estimates  under  different  assumptions or  conditions.  The
allowance for loan losses,  goodwill and other  intangible  assessments,  income
taxes, and the valuation of mortgage  servicing rights,  are the only accounting
estimates  that   materially   affect  the  Company's   consolidated   financial
statements.

Significant Group Concentration of Credit Risk
The Company grants agribusiness,  commercial, consumer, and residential loans to
customers  located  throughout the northern San Joaquin  Valley,  the Sacramento
Valley  and  northern  mountain  regions  of  California.   The  Company  has  a
diversified  loan  portfolio  within  the  business  segments  located  in  this
geographical  area. The Company currently  classifies all its operation into one
business segment that it denotes as community banking.

Cash and Cash Equivalents
For  purposes  of the  consolidated  statements  of cash  flows,  cash  and cash
equivalents include cash on hand, amounts due from banks and federal funds sold.

Investment Securities
The Company  classifies its debt and marketable  equity  securities  into one of
three  categories:  trading,  available-for-sale  or  held-to-maturity.  Trading
securities  are bought and held  principally  for the  purpose of selling in the
near term.  Held-to-maturity  securities are those  securities which the Company
has the  ability and intent to hold until  maturity.  All other  securities  not
included in trading or held-to-maturity are classified as available-for-sale. In
2008 and 2007,  the Company  did not have any  securities  classified  as either
held-to-maturity or trading.

Available-for-sale  securities are recorded at fair value.  Unrealized gains and
losses,  net of the related tax effect,  on  available-for-sale  securities  are
reported  as a separate  component  of other  accumulated  comprehensive  income
(loss) in shareholders' equity until realized.

Premiums and  discounts  are  amortized or accreted over the life of the related
investment  security  as an  adjustment  to yield using the  effective  interest
method.  Dividend and interest income are recognized when earned. Realized gains
and losses for  securities  are included in earnings  and are derived  using the
specific  identification  method for  determining  the cost of securities  sold.
Unrealized  losses  due to  fluctuations  in fair  value of  securities  held to
maturity  or  available  for sale are  recognized  through  earnings  when it is
determined that an other than temporary decline in value has occurred.

Federal Home Loan Bank Stock
The Bank is a member of the Federal  Home Loan Bank of San  Francisco  ("FHLB"),
and as a condition of membership,  it is required to purchase stock.  The amount
of FHLB  stock  required  to be  purchased  is based on the  borrowing  capacity
desired by the Bank. While technically  these are considered equity  securities,
there is no market for the FHLB stock.  Therefore,  the shares are considered as
restricted investment securities. Such investment is carried at cost.

                                       49


Loans Held for Sale
Loans  originated  and intended for sale in the secondary  market are carried at
the  lower  of  aggregate  cost  or  fair  value,  as  determined  by  aggregate
outstanding  commitments from investors of current investor yield  requirements.
Net unrealized losses are recognized through a valuation allowance by charges to
income.  At December 31, 2008 and 2007, the Company's  balance of loans held for
sale was immaterial.

Mortgage  loans held for sale are  generally  sold with the  mortgage  servicing
rights  retained by the Company.  The carrying  value of mortgage  loans sold is
reduced by the cost allocated to the associated mortgage servicing rights. Gains
or losses on the sale of loans that are held for sale are recognized at the time
of the sale and determined by the  difference  between net sale proceeds and the
net book  value of the  loans  less the  estimated  fair  value of any  retained
mortgage servicing rights.

Loans
Loans are reported at the principal amount  outstanding,  net of unearned income
and the allowance for loan losses.  Loan  origination  and  commitment  fees and
certain  direct  loan  origination  costs are  deferred,  and the net  amount is
amortized as an adjustment  of the related  loan's yield over the actual life of
the loan.  Loans on which the  accrual of  interest  has been  discontinued  are
designated  as  nonaccrual  loans.  Accrual of  interest  on loans is  generally
discontinued  either  when  reasonable  doubt  exists  as to  the  full,  timely
collection  of interest or principal or when a loan becomes  contractually  past
due by 90 days or more with respect to interest or principal.  When loans are 90
days past due, but in Management's  judgment are well secured and in the process
of  collection,  they may be  classified  as  accrual.  When a loan is placed on
nonaccrual  status,  all  interest  previously  accrued  but  not  collected  is
reversed.  Income on such loans is then  recognized only to the extent that cash
is received and where the future  collection of principal is probable.  Interest
accruals are resumed on such loans only when they are brought fully current with
respect to interest and principal and when, in the judgment of  Management,  the
loans are estimated to be fully  collectible  as to both principal and interest.
All impaired loans are classified as nonaccrual loans.

Reserve for Unfunded Commitments
The reserve for unfunded  commitments  is  established  through a provision  for
losses - unfunded  commitments charged to noninterest  expense.  The reserve for
unfunded  commitments is an amount that Management  believes will be adequate to
absorb  probable  losses  inherent in  existing  commitments,  including  unused
portions of  revolving  lines of credits  and other  loans,  standby  letters of
credits,  and unused  deposit  account  overdraft  privilege.  The  reserve  for
unfunded  commitments is based on evaluations of the  collectibility,  and prior
loss experience of unfunded commitments. The evaluations take into consideration
such  factors as changes in the nature and size of the loan  portfolio,  overall
loan portfolio quality, loan concentrations,  specific problem loans and related
unfunded  commitments,  and  current  economic  conditions  that may  affect the
borrower's or depositor's ability to pay.

Allowance for Loan Losses
The allowance for loan losses is established through a provision for loan losses
charged to expense. Loans and deposit related overdrafts are charged against the
allowance for loan losses when Management  believes that the  collectibility  of
the  principal  is unlikely  or, with  respect to  consumer  installment  loans,
according to an  established  delinquency  schedule.  The allowance is an amount
that Management  believes will be adequate to absorb probable losses inherent in
existing  loans  and  leases,   based  on  evaluations  of  the  collectibility,
impairment and prior loss experience of loans and leases.  The evaluations  take
into  consideration  such  factors  as  changes  in the  nature  and size of the
portfolio,  overall portfolio  quality,  loan  concentrations,  specific problem
loans, and current economic conditions that may affect the borrower's ability to
pay. The Company defines a loan as impaired when it is probable the Company will
be unable to collect all amounts due according to the  contractual  terms of the
loan  agreement.  Impaired  loans are  measured  based on the  present  value of
expected future cash flows discounted at the loan's original  effective interest
rate. As a practical  expedient,  impairment may be measured based on the loan's
observable  market  price or the fair  value  of the  collateral  if the loan is
collateral  dependent.  When the measure of the  impaired  loan is less than the
recorded  investment in the loan, the impairment is recorded through a valuation
allowance.

Credit  risk is inherent in the  business of lending.  As a result,  the Company
maintains  an  allowance  for loan  losses  to  absorb  losses  inherent  in the
Company's  loan  portfolio.  This is  maintained  through  periodic  charges  to
earnings.  These  charges are shown in the  Consolidated  Income  Statements  as
provision for loan losses. All specifically identifiable and quantifiable losses
are  immediately  charged off against the allowance.  However,  for a variety of
reasons,  not all losses are immediately known to the Company and, of those that
are known,  the full extent of the loss may not be quantifiable at that point in
time.  The balance of the Company's  allowance for loan losses is meant to be an
estimate of these unknown but probable  losses  inherent in the  portfolio.  For
purposes of this discussion, "loans" shall include all loans and lease contracts
that are part of the Company's portfolio.

                                       50

The Company  formally  assesses  the  adequacy of the  allowance  on a quarterly
basis.  Determination  of the  adequacy is based on ongoing  assessments  of the
probable  risk in the  outstanding  loan  portfolio,  and to a lesser extent the
Company's loan commitments. These assessments include the periodic re-grading of
credits based on changes in their individual  credit  characteristics  including
delinquency,  seasoning,  recent financial performance of the borrower, economic
factors, changes in the interest rate environment,  growth of the portfolio as a
whole or by segment, and other factors as warranted.  Loans are initially graded
when  originated.  They are  re-graded as they are renewed,  when there is a new
loan to the same borrower,  when identified facts demonstrate heightened risk of
nonpayment,  or if they become  delinquent.  Re-grading of larger  problem loans
occur at least quarterly.  Confirmation of the quality of the grading process is
obtained by  independent  credit reviews  conducted by consultants  specifically
hired for this purpose and by various bank regulatory agencies.

The Company's method for assessing the appropriateness of the allowance for loan
losses includes specific  allowances for identified  problem loans and leases as
determined  by SFAS 114,  formula  allowance  factors for pools of credits,  and
allowances for changing  environmental  factors (e.g.,  interest rates,  growth,
economic  conditions,  etc.).  Allowance factors for loan pools are based on the
previous 5 years  historical  loss  experience by product type.  Allowances  for
specific loans are based on SFAS 114 analysis of individual credits.  Allowances
for  changing  environmental  factors  are  Management's  best  estimate  of the
probable impact these changes have had on the loan portfolio as a whole.

Based on the current conditions of the loan portfolio,  Management believes that
the  allowance  for loan  losses  ($27,590,000)  and the  reserve  for  unfunded
commitments  ($2,565,000),  which  collectively stand at $30,155,000 at December
31, 2008, are adequate to absorb  probable losses inherent in the Company's loan
portfolio.  No assurance can be given, however, that adverse economic conditions
or other circumstances will not result in increased losses in the portfolio.

Mortgage Servicing Rights
Mortgage  servicing  rights (MSRs)  represent  the  Company's  right to a future
stream of cash flows based upon the  contractual  servicing fee associated  with
servicing mortgage loans. Our MSRs arise from residential mortgage loans that we
originate  and sell,  but retain the right to  service  the loans.  For sales of
residential  mortgage  loans, a portion of the cost of  originating  the loan is
allocated  to the  servicing  right based on the fair values of the loan and the
servicing  right.  The net gain from the  retention  of the  servicing  right is
included in gain on sale of loans in  noninterest  income when the loan is sold.
Fair  value  is  based  on  market  prices  for  comparable  mortgage  servicing
contracts, when available, or alternatively,  is based on a valuation model that
calculates  the present  value of estimated  future net  servicing  income.  The
valuation model incorporates  assumptions that market  participants would use in
estimating  future  net  servicing  income,  such as the  cost to  service,  the
discount rate, the custodial earnings rate, an inflation rate, ancillary income,
prepayment  speeds and  default  rates and  losses.  MSRs are  included in other
assets. Servicing fees are recorded in noninterest income when earned.

The determination of fair value of our MSRs requires management judgment because
they are not actively traded.  The determination of fair value for MSRs requires
valuation  processes  which combine the use of  discounted  cash flow models and
extensive  analysis  of current  market  data to arrive at an  estimate  of fair
value. The cash flow and prepayment assumptions used in our discounted cash flow
model are based on empirical data drawn from the  historical  performance of our
MSRs,   which  we  believe  are  consistent  with  assumptions  used  by  market
participants  valuing similar MSRs, and from data obtained on the performance of
similar MSRs. The key assumptions used in the valuation of MSRs include mortgage
prepayment  speeds and the discount  rate.  These  variables  can, and generally
will, change from quarter to quarter as market conditions and projected interest
rates change.  The key risks inherent with MSRs are prepayment speed and changes
in interest rates. The Company uses an independent third party to determine fair
value of MSRs.

The following tables summarize the activity in, and the main assumptions we used
to  determine  the fair  value of  mortgage  servicing  rights  for the  periods
indicated (dollars in thousands):
                                           Years ended December 31,
                                          -------------------------
                                               2008         2007
                                          -------------------------
Mortgage servicing rights:
Balance at beginning of period               $4,087        $3,912
Additions                                       745           665
Change in fair value                         (1,860)         (490)
                                          -------------------------
Balance at end of period                     $2,972        $4,087
                                          =========================
Servicing fees received                      $1,036          $997
Balance of loans serviced at:
     Beginning of period                   $406,743      $389,636
     End of period                         $431,195      $406,743
Weighted-average prepayment speed (CPR)        25.4%         12.7%
Discount rate                                   9.0%         10.0%

The changes in fair value of MSRs that  occurred  during 2008 were mainly due to
changes in estimate life of the MSRs and the discount  rate. The changes in fair
value of MSRs that  occurred  during 2007 were mainly due to changes in estimate
life of the MSRs.
                                       51


Off-Balance Sheet Credit Related Financial Instruments
In the ordinary course of business,  the Company has entered into commitments to
extend credit, including commitments under credit card arrangements,  commercial
letters of credit, and standby letters of credit. Such financial instruments are
recorded when they are funded.


Premises and Equipment
Land is carried at cost. Buildings and equipment, including those acquired under
capital  lease,   are  stated  at  cost  less   accumulated   depreciation   and
amortization.  Depreciation  and  amortization  expenses are computed  using the
straight-line  method over the estimated  useful lives of the related  assets or
lease terms.  Asset lives range from 3-10 years for  furniture and equipment and
15-40 years for land improvements and buildings.

Foreclosed Assets
Assets acquired  through,  or in lieu of, loan foreclosure are held for sale and
are initially recorded at fair value at the date of foreclosure,  establishing a
new cost basis.  Subsequent to  foreclosure,  management  periodically  performs
valuations  and the assets are carried at the lower of  carrying  amount or fair
value less cost to sell. Revenue and expenses from operations and changes in the
valuation allowance are included in other noninterest expense.

Goodwill and Other Intangible Assets
Goodwill  represents  the  excess  of costs  over  fair  value of net  assets of
businesses acquired. Goodwill and other intangible assets acquired in a purchase
business  combination  and determined to have an indefinite  useful life are not
amortized,  but instead  tested for  impairment  at least  annually.  Intangible
assets with estimable useful lives are amortized over their respective estimated
useful lives to their estimated residual values, and reviewed for impairment.

The  Company has  identifiable  intangible  assets  consisting  of core  deposit
premiums and minimum  pension  liability.  Core deposit  premiums are  amortized
using an  accelerated  method  over a period  of ten  years.  Intangible  assets
related to minimum pension  liability are adjusted annually based upon actuarial
estimates.

The following table summarizes the Company's goodwill  intangible as of December
31, 2008 and 2007.

                               December 31,                         December 31,
   (Dollar in Thousands)         2007       Additions    Reductions         2008
                               -------------------------------------------------
   Goodwill                    $15,519         -             -           $15,519
                               =================================================

The following  table  summarizes  the Company's  core deposit  intangibles as of
December 31, 2008 and 2007.
                                December 31,                        December 31,
  (Dollar in Thousands)          2007       Additions    Reductions         2008
                               -------------------------------------------------
  Core deposit intangibles      $3,365        -               -           $3,365
  Accumulated amortization      (2,189)       -           ($523)         (2,712)
                               -------------------------------------------------
  Core deposit intangibles, net $1,176        -           ($523)            $653
                               =================================================

Core deposit  intangibles are amortized over their expected  useful lives.  Such
lives are  periodically  reassessed  to  determine  if any  amortization  period
adjustments  are  indicated.   The  following  table  summarizes  the  Company's
estimated core deposit  intangible  amortization for each of the five succeeding
years:
                                           Estimated Core Deposit
                                           Intangible Amortization
                       Years Ended         (Dollar in thousands)
                       -----------         -----------------------
                          2009                    $328
                          2010                    $260
                          2011                     $65
                       Thereafter                    -

Impairment of Long-Lived Assets and Goodwill
Long-lived  assets,  such as premises and equipment,  and purchased  intangibles
subject to amortization,  are reviewed for impairment whenever events or changes
in  circumstances  indicate  that the  carrying  amount  of an asset  may not be
recoverable.  Recoverability  of  assets  to be held and used is  measured  by a
comparison of the carrying amount of an asset to estimated  undiscounted  future
cash flows expected to be generated by the asset.  If the carrying  amount of an
asset  exceeds  its  estimated  future  cash  flows,  an  impairment  charge  is
recognized  by the amount by which the carrying  amount of the asset exceeds the
fair value of the asset. Assets to be disposed of would be separately  presented
in the balance  sheet and reported at the lower of the  carrying  amount or fair
value  less  costs  to sell,  and are no  longer  depreciated.  The  assets  and
liabilities of a disposed  group  classified as held for sale would be presented
separately in the appropriate asset and liability sections of the balance sheet.

                                       52


On December 31 of each year,  goodwill is tested for  impairment,  and is tested
for impairment  more  frequently if events and  circumstances  indicate that the
asset might be impaired. An impairment loss is recognized to the extent that the
carrying amount exceeds the asset's fair value.  This  determination  is made at
the  reporting  unit  level  and  consists  of two  steps.  First,  the  Company
determines  the fair value of a reporting  unit and  compares it to its carrying
amount.  Second,  if the  carrying  amount of a reporting  unit exceeds its fair
value, an impairment loss is recognized for any excess of the carrying amount of
the reporting unit's goodwill over the implied fair value of that goodwill.  The
implied fair value of goodwill is determined by allocating the fair value of the
reporting unit in a manner similar to a purchase price allocation.  The residual
fair value after this allocation is the implied fair value of the reporting unit
goodwill.  Currently,  and  historically,  the Company is  comprised of only one
reporting  unit that operates  within the business  segment it has identified as
"community banking".

Income Taxes
The  Company's  accounting  for income taxes is based on an asset and  liability
approach.  The Company  recognizes the amount of taxes payable or refundable for
the current  year,  and deferred tax assets and  liabilities  for the future tax
consequences  that have  been  recognized  in its  financial  statements  or tax
returns.  The  measurement  of  tax  assets  and  liabilities  is  based  on the
provisions of enacted tax laws.

Stock-Based Compensation

The  Company  adopted  the  provisions  of  Statement  of  Financial  Accounting
Standards No. 123 (revised 2004), Share-Based Payment (SFAS 123R), on January 1,
2006.  SFAS  123R  requires  that  stock-based   compensation   transactions  be
recognized as compensation cost, over the requisite service period in the income
statement based on their fair values on the  measurement  date,  which,  for the
Company, is the date of the grant. SFAS 123R applies to new awards and to awards
modified,  repurchased,  or  cancelled  after  January  1,  2006.  Additionally,
compensation  cost for the portion of awards for which the requisite service has
not  been  rendered  (generally   referring  to  non-vested  awards)  that  were
outstanding  as of January 1, 2006 are  recognized  as the  remaining  requisite
service is rendered  during the period of and/or the periods  after the adoption
of SFAS 123R.

Earnings Per Share
Basic  earnings per share  represents  income  available to common  shareholders
divided by the  weighted-average  number of common shares outstanding during the
period.  Diluted earnings per share reflects additional common shares that would
have been outstanding if dilutive  potential  common shares had been issued,  as
well as any  adjustments  to income  that would  result from  assumed  issuance.
Potential  common  shares that may be issued by the Company  relate  solely from
outstanding stock options, and are determined using the treasury stock method.

Earnings per share have been computed based on the following:

                                                        Years ended December 31,
                                                 -------------------------------
                                                   2008         2007        2006
                                                 -------------------------------
                                                           (in thousands)
Net income                                        $16,798    $25,693    $26,830
Average number of common shares outstanding        15,771     15,898     15,812
Effect of dilutive stock options                      280        466        571
Average number of common shares outstanding      -------------------------------
   used to calculate diluted earnings per share    16,051     16,364     16,383
                                                 ===============================

There were  291,490,  307,050 and 0 options  excluded  from the  computation  of
diluted earnings per share for the years ended December 31, 2008, 2007 and 2006,
respectively, because the effect of these options was antidilutive.

                                       53


Comprehensive Income
Accounting principles generally require that recognized revenue, expenses, gains
and losses be  included in net income.  Although  certain  changes in assets and
liabilities,   such  as  unrealized  gains  and  losses  on   available-for-sale
securities,  are reported as a separate  component of the equity  section of the
balance  sheet,   such  items,   along  with  net  income,   are  components  of
comprehensive  income. The components of other comprehensive  income and related
tax  effects  are as  follows:


                                                                          Years Ended December 31,
                                                                       ---------------------------
                                                                         2008       2007       2006
 (in thousands)                                                        ----------------------------
                                                                                      
Unrealized holding gains (losses) on  available-for-sale  securities   $4,839      $5,147     $895
Tax effect                                                             (2,035)     (2,164)    (376)
                                                                       ----------------------------
Unrealized  holding gains (losses) on available-for-sale securities,
  net of tax                                                            2,804       2,983      519
                                                                       ----------------------------
Change in minimum pension liability                                     1,293         (24)       -
Tax effect                                                               (543)         10        -
                                                                       ----------------------------
   Change in minimum pension liability, net of tax                        750         (14)       -
                                                                       ----------------------------
Change in joint beneficiary agreement liability                            94           -        -
Tax effect                                                                (40)          -        -
                                                                       ----------------------------
   Change in joint beneficiary agreement liability, net of tax             54           -        -
                                                                       ----------------------------
                                                                       $3,608      $2,969     $519
                                                                       ============================


In September 2006, the Financial  Accounting  Standards Board (FASB) issued FASB
Statement of Financial Accounting  Standards No. 158, Employers'  Accounting for
Defined  Benefit  Pension and Other  Postretirement  Plans, an amendment of FASB
Statements No. 87, 88 106, and 132(R) (SFAS 158). SFAS 158 became  effective for
the Company on December  31, 2006.  The Company was  required to  recognize  the
funded  status  of its  defined  benefit  post-retirement  benefit  plans in its
consolidated  financial  statements  for the year ended  December 31, 2006,  and
recorded a corresponding reduction of $1,215,000 (after tax) to the December 31,
2006 balance of accumulated other  comprehensive  loss in shareholders'  equity.
The impact of the  adoption  of SFAS 158 is included in the amounts in the table
below   related  to  minimum   pension   liability.   See   "Recent   Accounting
Pronouncements"  below and Note 14 for further  discussion  of the impact of the
adoption of SFAS 158. The components of accumulated  other  comprehensive  loss,
included in shareholders' equity, are as follows:


                                                                                       December 31,
                                                                                ----------------------
                                                                                  2008          2007
  (in thousands)                                                                ----------------------
                                                                                          
Net unrealized gains (losses) on available-for-sale securities                   $6,131        $1,292
Tax effect                                                                       (2,578)         (543)
                                                                                ----------------------
    Unrealized holding gains (losses) on available-for-sale securities, net of    3,553           749
      tax                                                                       ----------------------
Minimum pension liability                                                        (2,677)       (3,970)
Tax effect                                                                        1,126         1,669
                                                                                ----------------------
   Minimum pension liability, net of tax                                         (1,551)       (2,301)
                                                                                ----------------------
Joint beneficiary agreement liability                                                94             -
Tax effect                                                                          (40)            -
                                                                                ----------------------
   Joint beneficiary agreement liability, net of tax                                 54             -
                                                                                ----------------------
Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss)                                    $2,056       ($1,552)
                                                                                ======================


Recent Accounting Pronouncements
In  September  2006,  the FASB issued FASB  Statement  of  Financial  Accounting
Standards No. 157,  Fair Value  Measurements  (SFAS 157).  SFAS 157 defines fair
value,  establishes a framework for measuring  fair value in generally  accepted
accounting  principles,  and expands  disclosures about fair value measurements.
SFAS 157 was  effective  for the  Company  on January 1, 2008 and did not have a
significant impact on the Company's consolidated financial statements.

                                       54


In  September  2006,  the FASB issued FASB  Statement  of  Financial  Accounting
Standards No. 158,  Employers'  Accounting for Defined Benefit Pension and Other
Postretirement Plans, an amendment of FASB Statements No. 87, 88 106, and 132(R)
(SFAS  158).  SFAS 158  requires  an employer to  recognize  the  overfunded  or
underfunded  status of  defined  benefit  postretirement  plans as an asset or a
liability in its statement of financial position.  The funded status is measured
as the difference  between plan assets at fair value and the benefit  obligation
(the projected benefit  obligation for pension plans or the accumulated  benefit
obligation for other postretirement benefit plans). An employer is also required
to measure the funded status of a plan as of the date of its year-end  statement
of financial  position  with  changes in the funded  status  recognized  through
comprehensive  income. SFAS 158 also requires certain disclosures  regarding the
effects on net  periodic  benefit  cost for the next fiscal year that arise from
delayed recognition of gains or losses,  prior service costs or credits, and the
transition asset or obligation. The Company was required to recognize the funded
status of its defined benefit  post-retirement benefit plans in its consolidated
financial  statements  for the year ended  December  31,  2006.  The Company had
previously   recognized   the  funded  status  of  its  Executive  and  Director
Supplemental  Retirement plans in prior consolidated  financial statements.  The
Company  has  no  other  defined  benefit  post-retirement  benefit  plans.  The
requirement to measure plan assets and benefit obligations as of the date of the
year-end  statement  of  financial  position  is  effective  for  the  Company's
consolidated  financial  statements  beginning  with the fiscal year ended after
December 15, 2008.  The Company  currently  uses December 31 as the  measurement
date for its defined benefit post-retirement benefit plans.

In February  2007,  the FASB  issued  FASB  Statement  of  Financial  Accounting
Standards  No. 159, The Fair Value  Option for  Financial  Assets and  Financial
Liabilities - Including an amendment to FASB Statement No. 115 (SFAS 159).  SFAS
159 permits entities to choose to measure many financial instruments and certain
other items at fair value.  The objective is to improve  financial  reporting by
providing  entities  with the  opportunity  to mitigate  volatility  in reported
earnings caused by measuring related assets and liabilities  differently without
having to apply complex hedge accounting provisions.  SFAS 159 was effective for
the  Company  on January  1, 2008 and did not have a  significant  impact on the
Company's consolidated financial statements.

FASB Emerging Issues Task Force ("EITF") Issue No. 06-4, Accounting for Deferred
Compensation and Postretirement Benefit Aspects of Endorsement Split Dollar Life
Insurance  Arrangements.  EITF 06-4 requires the  recognition of a liability and
related  compensation  expense for bank owned life insurance policies with joint
beneficiary  agreements  that  provide a benefit to an employee  that extends to
post-retirement  periods. Under EITF 06-4, life insurance policies purchased for
the purpose of providing  such  benefits do not  effectively  settle an entity's
obligation to the employee.  Accordingly,  the entity must recognize a liability
and related  compensation  expense during the  employee's  active service period
based on the future  cost of  insurance  to be  incurred  during the  employee's
retirement.  If the  entity  has agreed to  provide  the  employee  with a death
benefit, then the liability for the future death benefit should be recognized by
following the guidance in SFAS 106,  Employer's  Accounting  for  Postretirement
Benefits  Other Than  Pensions.  The Company  adopted EITF 06-4  effective as of
January 1, 2008 as a change in accounting  principle through a cumulative-effect
adjustment to retained earnings of $522,000 net of tax.

In November 2007, the SEC issued Staff Accounting Bulletin No. 109, Written Loan
Commitments Recorded at Fair Value through Earnings (SAB 109). SAB 109 provides
guidance on the accounting for written loan commitments recorded at fair value
under generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP). Specifically, the SAB
revises the Staff's views on incorporating expected net future cash flows
related to loan servicing activities in the fair value measurement of a written
loan commitment. SAB 109, which supersedes SAB 105, Application of Accounting
Principles to Loan Commitments, requires the expected net future cash flows
related to the associated servicing of the loan be included in the measurement
of all written loan commitments that are accounted for at fair value through
earnings. SAB 109 was effective on January 1, 2008 for the Company. Adoption of
SAB 109 did not a material impact on the Company's financial statements.


In December  2007,  the FASB  issued  FASB  Statement  of  Financial  Accounting
Standards  No. 141  (revised),  Business  Combinations  (SFAS  141R).  SFAS 141R
replaces SFAS 141. SFAS 141R retains the  fundamental  requirements  in SFAS 141
that the  acquisition  method of accounting  (which SFAS 141 called the purchase
method)  be used  for  all  business  combinations  and  for an  acquirer  to be
identified for each business combination. SFAS 141R also retains the guidance in
SFAS 141 for  identifying  and  recognizing  intangible  assets  separately from
goodwill.  SFAS 141R requires an acquirer to recognize the assets acquired,  the
liabilities  assumed,  and any  noncontrolling  interest in the  acquiree at the
acquisition  date,  measured at their fair values as of that date,  with limited
exceptions  specified in the Statement.  SFAS 141R replaces the  cost-allocation
process of SFAS 141,  which  required the cost of an acquisition to be allocated
to the  individual  assets  acquired  and  liabilities  assumed  based  on their
estimated  fair  values.  SFAS 141  required  the  acquirer to include the costs
incurred to effect the  acquisition  (acquisition-related  costs) in the cost of
the  acquisition  that was allocated to the assets  acquired and the liabilities
assumed.  SFAS 141R requires  those costs to be recognized  separately  from the
acquisition.  In addition, in accordance with SFAS 141, restructuring costs that
the acquirer  expected but was not obligated to incur were recognized as if they
were a  liability  assumed  at the  acquisition  date.  SFAS 141R  requires  the
acquirer to recognize those costs separately from the business combination. SFAS
141R applies  prospectively  to business  combinations for which the acquisition
date is on or after the beginning of the first annual reporting period beginning
on or  after  December 15,  2008.  The  impact  of SFAS  141R  on the  Company's
financial  statements  will be contingent on the terms and  conditions of future
business combinations.

In March 2008, the FASB issued FASB Statement of Financial  Accounting Standards
No. 161,  Disclosures About Derivative  Instruments and Hedging  Activities,  an
Amendment  of FASB  Statement  No. 133 (SFAS  161).  SFAS 161  amends  SFAS 133,
Accounting  for  Derivative  Instruments  and Hedging  Activities,  to amend and
expand the disclosure  requirements of SFAS 133 to provide greater  transparency
about (i) how and why an entity uses derivative instruments, (ii) how derivative
instruments  and related  hedge items are  accounted  for under SFAS 133 and its
related interpretations, and (iii) how derivative instruments and related hedged
items affect an entity's  financial  position,  results of  operations  and cash
flows. To meet those objectives, SFAS 161 requires qualitative disclosures about
objectives and strategies for using derivatives,  quantitative disclosures about
fair value amounts of gains and losses on derivative instruments and disclosures
about credit-risk-related contingent features in derivative agreements. SFAS 161
is  effective  for the Company on January 1, 2009 and is not  expected to have a
significant impact on the Company's financial statements.

In May 2008,  the FASB issued FASB Statement of Financial  Accounting  Standards
No. 162, The Hierarchy of Generally Accepted  Accounting  Principles (SFAS 162).
SFAS 162 identifies  the sources of accounting  principles and the framework for
selecting the principles to be used in the  preparation of financial  statements
of  nongovernmental  entities that are presented in  conformity  with  generally
accepted accounting principles (GAAP) in the United States (the GAAP hierarchy).
The hierarchical guidance provided by SFAS 162 did not have a significant impact
on the Company's financial statements.

                                       55


In October 2008,  the FASB issued  Financial  Accounting  Standards  Board Staff
Position FAS 157-3 (FSP 157-3),  Determining the Fair Value of a Financial Asset
When  the  Market  for  That  Asset  Is Not  Active.  FSP  157-3  clarifies  the
application of FASB Statement No. 157, Fair Value Measurements, in a market that
is not  active and  provides  an example to  illustrate  key  considerations  in
determining  the fair  value of a  financial  asset  when  the  market  for that
financial  asset is not active.  The Company was subject to the provision of the
FSP effective  September 30, 2008. The  implementation  of FSP FAS 157-3 did not
affect the Company's fair value measurements

Reclassifications
Certain amounts  previously  reported in the 2007 and 2006 financial  statements
have  been   reclassified   to   conform   to  the  2008   presentation.   These
reclassifications  did not  affect  previously  reported  net  income  or  total
shareholders' equity.

Note 2 - Restricted Cash Balances

Reserves (in the form of deposits with the Federal  Reserve Bank) of $12,318,000
and $10,388,000  were maintained to satisfy Federal  regulatory  requirements at
December  31, 2008 and 2007.  These  reserves  are included in cash and due from
banks in the accompanying balance sheets.

Note 3 - Investment Securities

The amortized  cost and estimated  fair values of investments in debt and equity
securities are summarized in the following tables:


                                                                                   December 31, 2008
                                                             --------------------------------------------------------
                                                                               Gross           Gross      Estimated
                                                              Amortized     Unrealized      Unrealized      Fair
                                                                Cost           Gains          Losses        Value
                                                             --------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                                
Securities Available-for-Sale                                                       (in thousands)
-----------------------------
Obligations of U.S. government corporations and agencies       $236,786         $6,193           ($2)      $242,977
Obligations of states and political subdivisions                 22,644            293          (272)        22,665
Corporate debt securities                                         1,000              -           (81)           919
                                                             --------------------------------------------------------

       Total securities available-for-sale                     $260,430         $6,486         ($355)      $266,561
                                                             ========================================================

                                                                                   December 31, 2007
                                                                              Gross            Gross      Estimated
                                                              Amortized    Unrealized       Unrealized      Fair
                                                                Cost           Gains          Losses        Value
                                                             --------------------------------------------------------
Securities Available-for-Sale                                                       (in thousands)
-----------------------------
Obligations of U.S. government corporations and agencies       $202,885         $1,702         ($813)      $203,774
Obligations of states and political subdivision                  27,250            414           (16)        27,648
Corporate debt securities                                         1,000              5             -          1,005
                                                             --------------------------------------------------------
      Total securities available-for-sale                        $231,135         $2,121        ($829)      $232,427
                                                             ========================================================


The amortized cost and estimated  fair value of debt  securities at December 31,
2008 by contractual  maturity are shown below. Actual maturities may differ from
contractual  maturities  because  borrowers may have the right to call or prepay
obligations with or without call or prepayment penalties.  At December 31, 2008,
obligations  of U.S.  government  corporations  and  agencies  with a cost basis
totaling  $236,786,000  consist almost  entirely of  mortgage-backed  securities
whose contractual maturity, or principal repayment, will follow the repayment of
the  underlying  mortgages.  For  purposes of the  following  table,  the entire
outstanding  balance  of  these   mortgage-backed   securities  issued  by  U.S.
government  corporations  and agencies is  categorized  based on final  maturity
date. At December 31, 2008, the Company  estimates the average remaining life of
these  mortgage-backed  securities  issued by U.S.  government  corporations and
agencies to be approximately 1.7 years. Average remaining life is defined as the
time span after which the principal balance has been reduced by half.
                                                             Estimated
                                           Amortized           Fair
                                             Cost              Value
                                        ------------------------------
Investment Securities                           (in thousands)
---------------------
Due in one year                                $649              $652
Due after one year through five years        51,218            51,970
Due after five years through ten years       47,839            48,762
Due after ten years                         160,724           165,177
                                       --------------------------------
Totals                                     $260,430          $266,561
                                       ================================
                                       56


Proceeds from sales of investment securities were as follows:

                          Gross           Gross          Gross
  For the Year          Proceeds          Gains         Losses
  ------------------------------------------------------------
                          (in thousands)

       2008                   --              --            --
       2007                   --              --            --
       2006              $10,779            $107          ($95)

Investment  securities  with an aggregate  carrying  value of  $231,056,000  and
$212,687,000  at  December  31,  2008 and 2007,  respectively,  were  pledged as
collateral for specific borrowings, lines of credit and local agency deposits.

Gross  unrealized  losses on  investment  securities  and the fair  value of the
related  securities,  aggregated by investment  category and length of time that
individual securities have been in a continuous  unrealized loss position,  were
as follows:



                                                   Less than 12 months   12 months or more            Total
                                                   -------------------   -----------------     ------------------

                                                   Fair    Unrealized    Fair    Unrealized    Fair    Unrealized
                                                   Value      Loss       Value      Loss       Value      Loss
                                                   --------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                        
December 31, 2008                                                      (in thousands)
Securities Available-for-Sale:
Obligations of U.S. government                     $1,130      (82)       $18       ($1)     $1,148      ($83)
   corporations and agencies
Obligations of states and political subdivisions    6,882     (272)         -         -       6,882      (272)
                                                   -------------------------------------------------------------
Total securities available-for-sale                $8,012    ($354)       $18       ($1)     $8,030     ($355)
                                                   ==============================================================

                                                   Less than 12 months   12 months or more            Total
                                                   -------------------   -----------------     ------------------
                                                   Fair    Unrealized    Fair    Unrealized    Fair    Unrealized
                                                   Value      Loss       Value      Loss       Value      Loss
                                                   --------------------------------------------------------------
December 31, 2007                                                       (in thousands)
Securities Available-for-Sale:
Obligations of U.S. government
   corporations and agencies                       $5,280      ($3)   $85,377     ($811)    $90,657     ($814)
Obligations of states and political subdivisions    1,645      (12)     1,245        (3)      2,890       (15)
                                                   -------------------------------------------------------------
Total securities available-for-sale                $6,925     ($15)   $86,622     ($814)    $93,547     ($829)
                                                   ==============================================================



Obligations of U.S. government  corporations and agencies: The unrealized losses
on investments in obligations of U.S. government  corporations and agencies were
caused  by  interest  rate  increases.  The  contractual  cash  flows  of  these
securities are guaranteed by U.S.  Government  Sponsored  Entities  (principally
Fannie Mae and Freddie  Mac). It is expected  that the  securities  would not be
settled at a price less than the amortized cost of the  investment.  Because the
decline in fair value is  attributable  to  changes  in  interest  rates and not
credit quality, and because the Company has the ability and intent to hold these
investments until a market price recovery or maturity, these investments are not
considered  other-than-temporarily  impaired.  At  December  31,  2008,  12 debt
securities representing obligations of U.S. government corporations and agencies
had  unrealized  losses with aggregate  depreciation  of 7.2% from the Company's
amortized cost basis.

Obligations  of states and  political  subdivisions:  The  unrealized  losses on
investments in obligations of states and political  subdivisions  were caused by
interest rate increases. It is expected that the securities would not be settled
at a price less than the amortized cost of the  investment.  Because the decline
in fair  value is  attributable  to  changes  in  interest  rates and not credit
quality,  and  because  the  Company  has the  ability  and intent to hold these
investments until a market price recovery or maturity, these investments are not
considered  other-than-temporarily  impaired.  At  December  31,  2008,  13 debt
securities  representing  obligations of states and political  subdivisions  had
unrealized  losses  with  aggregate  depreciation  of 3.9%  from  the  Company's
amortized cost basis.

                                       57




Note 4 - Loans

A summary of the balances of loans follows:             December 31,
                                               ----------------------------
                                                    2008           2007
                                               ----------------------------
                                                       (in thousands)
Mortgage loans on real estate:
   Residential 1-4 family                         $121,915       $112,732
   Commercial                                      684,519        607,147
                                               ----------------------------
     Total mortgage loan on real estate            806,434        719,879
                                               ----------------------------
Consumer:
   Home equity lines of credit                     350,548        309,362
   Home equity loans                                67,749         84,010
   Auto Indirect                                    77,460        122,141
   Other                                            15,420         15,892
                                                ---------------------------
     Total consumer loans                          511,177        531,405
                                                ---------------------------
Commercial                                         189,592        164,734
Construction:                                   ---------------------------
   Residential                                      17,104         27,464
   Commercial                                       67,465        108,647
                                                ---------------------------
     Total construction                             84,569        136,111
                                                ---------------------------
Total loans                                      1,591,772      1,552,129
                                                ---------------------------
Less:  Allowance for loan losses                   (27,590)       (17,331)
       Net deferred loan (fees) costs                 (923)          (163)
                                                ---------------------------
Total loans, net                                $1,563,259     $1,534,635
                                                ===========================

Loans with an aggregate  carrying value of  $1,026,739,000  and  $485,638,000 at
December  31,  2008 and 2007,  respectively,  were  pledged  as  collateral  for
specific borrowings and lines of credit.

Loans  classified  as  nonaccrual,  net of  guarantees  of the U.S.  government,
including  its  agencies  and its  government-sponsored  agencies,  amounted  to
approximately  $27,338,000,  $7,511,000,  and  $4,444,000  at December 31, 2008,
2007, and 2006, respectively. These nonaccrual loans were classified as impaired
and are included in the recorded  balance in impaired  loans for the  respective
years shown  below.  If interest  on those loans had been  accrued,  such income
would have been approximately  $2,901,000,  $621,000, and $357,000 in 2008, 2007
and  2006,  respectively.  Loans 90 days  past due and  still  accruing,  net of
guarantees   of  the  U.S.   government,   including   its   agencies   and  its
government-sponsored  agencies,  amounted  to  approximately  $187,000,  $0, and
$68,000 at December 31, 2008, 2007 and 2006, respectively.

As of December 31, the Company's  recorded  investment in impaired loans, net of
guarantees of the U.S.  government,  and the related valuation allowance were as
follows (in thousands):

                                                                   December 31,
                                                               -----------------
                                                                 2008       2007
                                                               -----------------
Impaired loans with no allocated allowance, net of guarantees   $14,813   $4,299
Impaired loans with allocated allowance, net of guarantees       12,525    3,212
                                                               -----------------
Total impaired loans                                            $27,338   $7,511
                                                               =================
Allowance for loan losses allocated to impaired loans            $5,430   $1,395
                                                               =================

This  valuation  allowance  is included in the  allowance  for loan losses shown
above for the respective year. The average recorded investment in impaired loans
was  $17,425,000,  $5,978,000,  and  $3,703,000 for the years ended December 31,
2008, 2007 and 2006,  respectively.  The Company  recognized  interest income on
impaired  loans of  $1,753,000,  $859,000,  and  $761,000  for the  years  ended
December 31, 2008, 2007 and 2006, respectively.

                                       58


The  following  tables  summarize the activity in the allowance for loan losses,
reserve for unfunded  commitments,  and allowance for losses (which is comprised
of the allowance for loan losses and the reserve for unfunded  commitments)  for
the periods indicated (dollars in thousands):

                                                Years Ended December 31,
                                          --------------------------------------
                                            2008          2007           2006
   Allowance for loan losses:             --------------------------------------
   Balance at beginning of year           $17,331       $16,914         $16,226
   Provision for loan losses               20,950         3,032           1,289
   Loans charged off:
     Real estate mortgage:
       Residential                           (691)            -               -
       Commercial                             (18)            -               -
     Consumer:
       Home equity lines                   (2,942)         (678)            (39)
       Home equity loans                     (409)            -               -
       Auto indirect                       (2,710)       (1,581)           (690)
       Other consumer                      (1,237)       (1,062)           (896)
     Commercial                              (709)         (437)           (162)
     Construction:
       Residential                         (3,203)            -               -
       Commercial                               -             -               -
                                          --------------------------------------
   Total loans charged off                (11,919)       (3,758)         (1,787)
   Recoveries of previously
     charged off loans:
     Real estate mortgage:
       Residential                              -             -               -
       Commercial                              58            57              45
     Consumer:
       Home equity lines                       13             1              39
       Home equity loans                        -             5               3
       Auto indirect                          441           261             203
       Other consumer                         685           640             627
     Commercial                                31           179             269
     Construction:
       Residential                              -             -               -
       Commercial                               -             -               -
                                         ---------------------------------------
   Total recoveries of previously
     charged-off loans                      1,228         1,143           1,186
                                         ---------------------------------------
       Net charge-offs                    (10,691)       (2,615)           (601)
                                         ---------------------------------------
   Balance at end of year                 $27,590       $17,331         $16,914
                                         =======================================
   Reserve for unfunded commitments:
   Balance at beginning of year            $2,090        $1,849          $1,813
   Provision for losses -
     Unfunded commitments                     475           241              36
                                          --------------------------------------
   Balance at end of year                  $2,565        $2,090          $1,849
                                          ======================================
   Balance at end of year:
   Allowance for loan losses              $27,590       $17,331         $16,914
   Reserve for unfunded commitments         2,565        $2,090           1,849
                                          --------------------------------------
   Allowance for losses                   $30,155       $19,421         $18,763
                                          ======================================
   As a percentage of total loans:
   Allowance for loan losses                 1.73%         1.12%          1.12%
   Reserve for unfunded commitments          0.16%         0.13%          0.12%
                                          --------------------------------------
   Allowance for losses                      1.89%         1.25%          1.24%
                                          ======================================

                                       59



Note 5 - Premises and Equipment

Premises and equipment were comprised of:
                                              December 31,
                                   ---------------------------------
                                     2008                     2007
                                   ---------------------------------
                                             (in thousands)
Premises                            $19,197                 $18,966
Furniture and equipment              23,456                  23,248
                                   ---------------------------------
                                     42,653                  42,214
Less:  Accumulated depreciation     (27,661)                (25,536)
                                   ---------------------------------
                                     14,992                  16,678
Land and land improvements            3,849                   3,814
                                   ---------------------------------
                                    $18,841                 $20,492
                                   =================================

Depreciation of premises and equipment amounted to $2,707,000,  $3,071,000,  and
$3,209,000 in 2008, 2007, and 2006, respectively.

The  Company  leases  one  building  for which the lease is  accounted  for as a
capital  lease.  The cost  basis of the  building  under this  capital  lease is
$831,000 with accumulated  depreciation of $800,000 and $773,000 at December 31,
2008 and 2007, respectively. The cost basis and accumulated depreciation of this
building  under  capital  lease are  recorded  in the  balance of  premises  and
equipment. Depreciation related to this building under capital lease is included
in the depreciation of premises and equipment noted above.

At December 31, 2008, future minimum  commitments under  non-cancelable  capital
and operating  leases with initial or remaining terms of one year or more are as
follows:

                                         Capital           Operating
                                         Leases               Leases
                                        ----------------------------
                                               (in thousands)
2009                                      $96               $2,123
2010                                        -                1,802
2011                                        -                1,312
2012                                        -                  883
2013                                        -                  557
Thereafter                                  -                  458
                                        ---------------------------
Future minimum lease payments              96               $7,135
                                                           =======
Less amount representing interest           6
                                         -----
Present value of future lease payments    $90
                                         =====

Rent expense under operating leases was $2,672,000 in 2008,  $2,273,000 in 2007,
and $2,175,000 in 2006.

Note 6 - Deposits

A summary of the balances of deposits follows:
                                                   December 31,
                                           -------------------------
                                               2008           2007
                                           -------------------------
                                                  (in thousands)
Noninterest-bearing demand                   $401,247       $378,680
Interest-bearing demand                       241,560        216,952
Savings                                       380,799        383,233
Time certificates, $100,000 and over          310,190        262,977
Other time certificates                       335,474        303,381
                                           -------------------------
   Total deposits                          $1,669,270     $1,545,223
                                           =========================

Certificate of deposit balances of $80,000,000 and $40,000,000 from the State of
California  were included in time  certificates,  $100,000 and over, at December
31, 2008 and 2007,  respectively.  The Bank  participates  in a deposit  program
offered by the State of  California  whereby the State may make  deposits at the
Bank's request  subject to collateral  and credit  worthiness  constraints.  The
negotiated rates on these State deposits are generally more favorable than other
wholesale funding sources  available to the Bank.  Overdrawn deposit balances of
$1,989,000 and $1,512,000 were classified as consumer loans at December 31, 2008
and 2007, respectively.

                                       60



At December 31, 2008, the scheduled  maturities of time deposits were as follows
(in thousands):

                       Scheduled
                      Maturities
                      ----------
2009                    $600,437
2010                      27,004
2011                       6,561
2012                       9,184
2013                       2,466
Thereafter                    12
                      ----------
   Total                $645,664
                      ==========

Note 7 - Other Borrowings

A summary of the balances of other borrowings follows:


                                                                                           December 31,
                                                                                    ------------------------
                                                                                        2008          2007
                                                                                    ------------------------
                                                                                               
                                                                                          (in  thousands)
Borrowing under security repurchase agreement,  rate of 3-month LIBOR less 0.29%
     with a floor of 0% and a cap of  4.72%,  adjustable  on a  quarterly  basis
     until August 30, 2009.  From August 30, 2009 until final maturity on August
     30, 2012,  rate is fixed at 4.72% and principal is callable in its entirety
     by lender on a quarterly basis.                                                  $50,000      $50,000
FHLB loan, fixed rate of 5.41% payable on April 7, 2008, callable
   in its entirety by FHLB on a quarterly basis beginning April 7, 2003                    -        20,000
FHLB loan, fixed rate of 5.35% payable on December 9, 2008                                 -         1,500
FHLB loan, fixed rate of 5.77% payable on February 23, 2009                            1,000         1,000
Capital lease obligation on premises, effective rate of 13% payable
  monthly in varying amounts through December 1, 2009                                     90           168
Other collateralized borrowings, fixed rate of  0.85% payable on January 2, 2009      50,915        43,458
                                                                                     ----------------------
Total other borrowings                                                               $102,005      $116,126
                                                                                     ======================


During August 2007,  the Company  entered into a security  repurchase  agreement
with principal  balance of $50,000,000 and terms as described above. The Company
did not enter into any other  repurchase  agreements  during  2008 or 2007.  The
average  balance of repurchase  agreements for 2008 and 2007 was $50,000,000 and
$16,986,000,   respectively,   with  an   average   rate  of  2.88%  and  4.72%,
respectively.

The Company maintains a collateralized line of credit with the Federal Home Loan
Bank of San  Francisco.  Based on the FHLB stock  requirements  at December  31,
2008,  this line  provided  for  maximum  borrowings  of  $449,580,000  of which
$1,000,000  was  outstanding,  leaving  $448,580,000  available.  The  total  of
borrowings  from  the FHLB at  December  31,  2008  consists  of the  $1,000,000
described in the table above.

At  December  31,  2008,  the Company had  $50,915,000  of other  collateralized
borrowings.  Other  collateralized  borrowings are generally  overnight maturity
borrowings from non-financial institutions that are collateralized by securities
owned by the Company.

The Company  maintains a collateralized  line of credit with the Federal Reserve
Bank of San  Francisco.  Based on the  collateral  pledged at December 31, 2008,
this line  provided  for  maximum  borrowings  of  $4,332,000  of which none was
outstanding, leaving $4,332,000 available.

The Company has  available  unused  correspondent  banking  lines of credit from
commercial banks totaling $50,000,000 for federal funds transactions at December
31, 2008.

                                       61


Note 8 - Junior Subordinated Debt

On July 31, 2003, the Company formed a subsidiary  business trust, TriCo Capital
Trust I, to issue trust preferred securities.  Concurrently with the issuance of
the trust preferred  securities,  the trust issued 619 shares of common stock to
the Company for $1,000 per share or an aggregate of $619,000.  In addition,  the
Company  issued a Junior  Subordinated  Debenture  to the Trust in the amount of
$20,619,000.  The terms of the  Junior  Subordinated  Debenture  are  materially
consistent  with the terms of the  trust  preferred  securities  issued by TriCo
Capital  Trust I. Also on July 31,  2003,  TriCo  Capital  Trust I completed  an
offering of 20,000 shares of cumulative  trust preferred  securities for cash in
an  aggregate  amount  of  $20,000,000.   The  trust  preferred  securities  are
mandatorily  redeemable  upon  maturity on October 7, 2033 with an interest rate
that resets quarterly at three-month LIBOR plus 3.05%. TriCo Capital Trust I has
the right to redeem the trust preferred  securities on or after October 7, 2008.
The trust preferred securities were issued through an underwriting  syndicate to
which the Company paid underwriting  fees of $7.50 per trust preferred  security
or an  aggregate  of  $150,000.  The net  proceeds of  $19,850,000  were used to
finance the opening of new  branches,  improve  bank  services  and  technology,
repurchase  shares of the Company's  common stock under its repurchase  plan and
increase the Company's capital. The trust preferred securities have not been and
will not be  registered  under  the  Securities  Act of  1933,  as  amended,  or
applicable  state  securities  laws and were sold pursuant to an exemption  from
registration  under the Securities Act of 1933. The trust  preferred  securities
may not be  offered  or sold in the  United  States  absent  registration  or an
applicable exemption from the registration requirements of the Securities Act of
1933, as amended, and applicable state securities laws.

The $20,619,000 of junior subordinated  debentures issued by TriCo Capital Trust
I were reflected as junior subordinated debt in the consolidated  balance sheets
at December 31, 2008 and 2007.  The common stock issued by TriCo Capital Trust I
was recorded in other assets in the consolidated  balance sheets at December 31,
2008 and 2007.

On June 22, 2004, the Company formed a second subsidiary  business trust,  TriCo
Capital Trust II, to issue trust  preferred  securities.  Concurrently  with the
issuance  of the trust  preferred  securities,  the trust  issued  619 shares of
common stock to the Company for $1,000 per share or an aggregate of $619,000. In
addition, the Company issued a Junior Subordinated Debenture to the Trust in the
amount  of  $20,619,000.  The terms of the  Junior  Subordinated  Debenture  are
materially consistent with the terms of the trust preferred securities issued by
TriCo Capital Trust II. Also on June 22, 2004,  TriCo Capital Trust II completed
an offering of 20,000 shares of cumulative  trust preferred  securities for cash
in an  aggregate  amount of  $20,000,000.  The trust  preferred  securities  are
mandatorily redeemable upon maturity on July 23, 2034 with an interest rate that
resets quarterly at three-month LIBOR plus 2.55%. TriCo Capital Trust II has the
right to redeem the trust  preferred  securities on or after July 23, 2009.  The
trust  preferred  securities  were issued through an  underwriting  syndicate to
which the Company paid underwriting  fees of $2.50 per trust preferred  security
or an aggregate of $50,000. The net proceeds of $19,950,000 were used to finance
the opening of new branches,  improve bank services and  technology,  repurchase
shares of the Company's  common stock under its repurchase plan and increase the
Company's capital.  The trust preferred securities have not been and will not be
registered  under the  Securities Act of 1933, as amended,  or applicable  state
securities laws and were sold pursuant to an exemption from  registration  under
the Securities Act of 1933. The trust preferred securities may not be offered or
sold in the United States absent  registration  or an applicable  exemption from
the  registration  requirements  of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended,  and
applicable state securities laws.

The $20,619,000 of junior subordinated  debentures issued by TriCo Capital Trust
II were reflected as junior subordinated debt in the consolidated balance sheets
at December 31, 2008 and 2007. The common stock issued by TriCo Capital Trust II
was recorded in other assets in the consolidated  balance sheets at December 31,
2008 and 2007.

The debentures  issued by TriCo Capital Trust I and TriCo Capital Trust II, less
the common  securities  of TriCo  Capital  Trust I and TriCo  Capital  Trust II,
continue to qualify as Tier 1 or Tier 2 capital under interim guidance issued by
the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (Federal Reserve Board).

Note 9 - Commitments and Contingencies (See also Notes 5 and 16)

The  Company  has  entered  into  employment  agreements  or change  of  control
agreements with certain officers of the Company providing  severance payments to
the officers in the event of a change in control of the Company and  termination
for other than cause or after a substantial and material change in the officer's
title, compensation or responsibilities.

The  Company is a  defendant  in legal  actions  arising  from  normal  business
activities.  Management  believes,  after consultation with legal counsel,  that
these  actions  are  without  merit  or that  the  ultimate  liability,  if any,
resulting  from them  will not  materially  affect  the  Company's  consolidated
financial position or results from operations.

                                       62


Note 10 - Shareholders' Equity

Dividends Paid
The  Bank  paid to the  Company  cash  dividends  in the  aggregate  amounts  of
$12,348,000,  $13,941,000,  and $8,995,000 in 2008, 2007 and 2006, respectively.
The Bank is regulated by the Federal Deposit  Insurance  Corporation  (FDIC) and
the State of California Department of Financial Institutions. California banking
laws limit the Bank's  ability to pay  dividends  to the lesser of (1)  retained
earnings  or (2)  net  income  for  the  last  three  fiscal  years,  less  cash
distributions  paid during such period.  Under this regulation,  at December 31,
2008, the Bank may pay dividends of $40,325,000.

Shareholders' Rights Plan
On June 25, 2001, the Company  announced that its Board of Directors adopted and
entered  into a  Shareholder  Rights  Plan  designed  to  protect  and  maximize
shareholder  value and to assist the Board of  Directors  in  ensuring  fair and
equitable  benefit to all  shareholders in the event of a hostile bid to acquire
the Company.

The Company  adopted this Rights Plan to protect  stockholders  from coercive or
otherwise unfair takeover  tactics.  In general terms, the Rights Plan imposes a
significant  penalty  upon any person or group that  acquires 15% or more of the
Company's  outstanding  common stock without  approval of the Company's Board of
Directors.  The Rights Plan was not adopted in response to any known  attempt to
acquire control of the Company.

Under the Rights  Plan, a dividend of one  Preferred  Stock  Purchase  Right was
declared  for each  common  share held of record as of the close of  business on
July 10, 2001.  No separate  certificates  evidencing  the Rights will be issued
unless and until they become exercisable.

The Rights  generally  will not become  exercisable  unless an acquiring  entity
accumulates or initiates a tender offer to purchase 15% or more of the Company's
common stock. In that event, each Right will entitle the holder,  other than the
unapproved acquirer and its affiliates,  to purchase either the Company's common
stock or shares in an acquiring entity at one-half of market value.

The Right's initial  exercise price,  which is subject to adjustment,  is $49.00
per Right. The Company's Board of Directors generally will be entitled to redeem
the Rights at a  redemption  price of $.01 per Right until an  acquiring  entity
acquires a 15% position. The Rights expire on July 10, 2011.

Stock Repurchase Plan

On August 21, 2007,  the Board of  Directors  adopted a plan to  repurchase,  as
conditions  warrant,  up to 500,000 shares of the Company's  common stock on the
open  market.  The  timing of  purchases  and the  exact  number of shares to be
purchased will depend on market  conditions.  The 500,000 shares  authorized for
repurchase under this stock repurchase plan  represented  approximately  3.2% of
the Company's  15,814,662  outstanding common shares as of August 21, 2007. This
stock  repurchase  plan has no  expiration  date.  As of December 31, 2008,  the
Company had repurchased 166,600 shares under this plan.

                                       63


Note 11 - Stock Options

In May 2001,  the Company  adopted the TriCo  Bancshares  2001 Stock Option Plan
(2001 Plan) covering officers, employees,  directors of, and consultants to, the
Company.  Under the 2001  Plan,  the option  price  cannot be less than the fair
market  value of the  Common  Stock at the date of grant  except  in the case of
substitute options. Options for the 2001 Plan expire on the tenth anniversary of
the  grant  date.   Vesting   schedules  under  the  2001  Plan  are  determined
individually for each grant.

In May 1995,  the Company  adopted the TriCo  Bancshares  1995  Incentive  Stock
Option Plan (1995 Plan) covering key employees.  Under the 1995 Plan, the option
price  cannot be less than the fair market value of the Common Stock at the date
of grant. Options for the 1995 Plan expire on the tenth anniversary of the grant
date. Vesting schedules under the 1995 Plan are determined individually for each
grant.

As of December 31, 2008, options for the purchase of 148,140 and 0 common shares
remained available for grant under the 2001 and 1995 Plans, respectively.  Stock
option activity is summarized in the following table:

                                                                      Weighted
                                                                      Average
                                   Number         Option Price        Exercise
                                  Of Shares       Per Share           Price

Outstanding at December 31, 2007  1,351,181     $5.65  to  $25.91     $14.68
   Options granted                   83,300    $15.40  to  $17.25     $15.84
     Options exercised              (17,620)    $8.06  to   $8.20      $8.08
     Options forfeited              (12,060)   $21.54  to  $22.54     $22.42
Outstanding at December 31, 2008  1,404,801     $5.65  to  $25.91     $14.77

The following table shows the number, weighted-average exercise price, intrinsic
value, and weighted average remaining  contractual life of options  exercisable,
options not yet  exercisable  and total options  outstanding  as of December 31,
2008:


                                                   Currently     Currently Not  Total
(dollars in thousands except exercise price)       Exercisable   Exercisable    Outstanding
                                                                          
Number of options                                  1,153,121      251,680       1,404,801
Weighted average exercise price                       $13.54       $20.40          $14.77
Intrinsic value (thousands)                          $13,225       $1,150         $14,375
Weighted average remaining contractual term (yrs.)      4.23         8.54            5.00


The 251,680  options that are not currently  exercisable as of December 31, 2008
are expected to vest, on a weighted-average basis, over the next 3.14 years, and
the Company is expected to recognize  $1,452,000 of pre-tax  compensation  costs
related to these options as they vest.

The following table shows the total intrinsic  value of options  exercised,  the
total  fair  value of  options  vested,  total  compensation  costs for  options
recognized  in income,  and total tax benefit  recognized  in income  related to
compensation costs for options during the periods indicated:

                                                    Years Ended December 31,
                                                2008        2007        2006
                                              ----------------------------------
Intrinsic value of options exercised          $250,000  $2,765,000  $3,446,000
Fair value of options that vested             $604,000    $782,000    $662,000
Total compensation costs for options          $629,000    $782,000    $662,000
  recongnized in income
Total tax benefit recognized in income
   related to compensation costs for options  $230,000    $264,000    $188,000
Weighted average fair value of grants (per       $4.54       $7.70       $8.50
  option)

The Company did not modify any option grants in 2008, 2007, or 2006.

The fair  value  of the  Company's  stock  option  grants  is  estimated  on the
measurement date,  which, for the Company,  is the date of grant. The fair value
of stock options is estimated using the Black-Scholes  option-pricing model. The
Company  estimated  expected  market price  volatility  and expected term of the
options  based  on  historical  data and  other  factors.  The  weighted-average
assumptions  used to determine the fair value of options granted are detailed in
the table below:
                                                Years Ended December 31,
                                             2008         2007        2006
Assumptions used to value option grants:   --------------------------------
Average expected terms (years)                8.5          8.1         7.1
Volatility                                   33.2%        32.4%       32.6%
Annual rate of dividends                     3.12%        2.31%       1.91%
Discount rate                                3.85%        4.81%       4.86%

                                       64



Note 12 - Other Noninterest Income and Expenses

The components of other noninterest income were as follows (in thousands):

                                           Years Ended December 31,
                                       2008            2007         2006
                                     ------------------------------------
Sale of customer checks                $215            $210         $210
Lease brokerage income                  257             267          247
Commission rebates                      173             626          653
Gain on sale of foreclosed assets        51               -            -
Other                                   806             517          399
                                     ------------------------------------
     Total other noninterest income  $1,502          $1,620       $1,509
                                     ====================================

Mortgage  loan  servicing  fees,  net of change in fair value of  mortgage  loan
servicing rights, totaling ($824,000),  $508,000, and $558,000, were recorded in
service  charges and fees  noninterest  income for the years ended  December 31,
2008, 2007, and 2006, respectively.

The components of salaries and benefits expense were as follows (in thousands):
                                                        Years Ended December 31,
                                                         2008     2007     2006
                                                      --------------------------
Base salaries, net of deferred loan origination costs  $25,374  $24,582  $22,788
Incentive compensation                                   2,860    3,808    4,633
Benefits and other compensation costs                    9,878    9,676    9,034
                                                      --------------------------
     Total salaries and benefits expense               $38,112  $38,066  $36,455
                                                      ==========================

The components of other noninterest expense were as follows (in thousands):
                                                  Years Ended December 31,
                                                 2008        2007        2006
                                              ----------------------------------
Equipment and data processing                  $6,405       $6,300      $5,926
Occupancy                                       4,929        4,786       4,450
ATM network charges                             2,081        1,857       1,839
Telecommunications                              1,914        1,706       1,573
Professional fees                               1,853        1,516       1,652
Advertising                                     1,751        2,186       2,090
Courier service                                 1,069        1,223       1,308
Postage                                           930          916       1,006
Operational losses                                577          454         374
Assessments                                       570          331         326
Intangible amortization                           523          490       1,395
Change in reserve for unfunded commitments        475          241          36
Other                                           7,549        8,834       8,296
                                              ----------------------------------
     Total other noninterest expense          $30,626      $30,840     $30,271
                                              ==================================

                                       65



Note 13 - Income Taxes

The components of consolidated income tax expense are as follows:

                           2008             2007            2006
                       -------------------------------------------
Current tax expense                   (in thousands)
     Federal           $11,789           $12,750          $14,155
     State               4,070             4,401            4,812
                       -------------------------------------------
                        15,859            17,151           18,967
                       -------------------------------------------
Deferred tax benefit
     Federal            (4,221)             (337)          (1,329)
     State              (1,477)             (169)            (350)
                       -------------------------------------------
                        (5,698)             (506)          (1,679)
                       -------------------------------------------
Total tax expense      $10,161           $16,645          $17,288
                       ===========================================

A deferred tax asset or  liability is  recognized  for the tax  consequences  of
temporary  differences  in the  recognition of revenue and expense for financial
and tax reporting  purposes.  The net change during the year in the deferred tax
asset or liability results in a deferred tax expense or benefit.

Taxes  recorded  directly  to  shareholders'  equity  are  not  included  in the
preceding table.  These taxes (benefits)  relating to changes in minimum pension
liability  amounting to $543,000 in 2008,  ($10,000) in 2007,  and ($880,000) in
2006,  unrealized gains and losses on  available-for-sale  investment securities
amounting to $2,035,000 in 2008, $2,164,000 in 2007, and $376,000 in 2006, taxes
(benefits)  related to employee stock options of $444,000 in 2008,  ($1,731,000)
in 2007,  and  ($205,000)  in 2006,  and  benefits  related  to changes in joint
beneficiary agreement liability of ($340,000) in 2008, were recorded directly to
shareholders' equity.

The temporary  differences,  tax effected,  which give rise to the Company's net
deferred tax asset recorded in other assets are as follows as of December 31 for
the years indicated:

                                                  2008              2007
                                                ---------------------------
Deferred tax assets:                                  (in thousands)
  Allowance for losses                          $12,679            $8,166
  Deferred compensation                           3,648             3,477
  Accrued pension liability                       3,506             3,104
  Additional minimum pension liability            1,126             1,669
  State taxes                                     1,424             1,434
  Intangible amortization                           815             1,070
  Stock option expense                              689               448
  Nonaccrual interest                               483               261
  Joint beneficiary agreement liability             429                 -
  OREO write downs                                  140                76
  Capital lease                                      25                46
                                                ---------------------------
    Total deferred tax assets                    24,964            19,751
                                                ---------------------------
Deferred tax liabilities:
  Securities income                              (1,332)           (1,134)
  Unrealized gain on securities                  (2,578)             (543)
  Depreciation                                     (406)             (543)
  Core deposit premium                             (274)             (494)
  Merger related fixed asset valuations            (379)             (379)
  Securities accretion                             (179)             (123)
  Mortgage servicing rights valuation              (232)             (558)
  Other, net                                       (444)             (297)
                                                ---------------------------
   Total deferred tax liability                  (5,824)           (4,071)
                                                ---------------------------
Net deferred tax asset                          $19,140           $15,680
                                                ===========================

The  Company  believes  that a valuation  allowance  is not needed to reduce the
deferred  tax assets as it is more  likely  than not that the  results of future
operations will generate  sufficient  taxable income to realize the deferred tax
assets.

The Company adopted the provisions of FASB Interpretation No. 48, Accounting for
Uncertainty in Income Taxes, on January 1, 2007. The Company had no unrecognized
tax benefits  which would require an adjustment to the January 1, 2007 beginning
balance of retained  earnings.  The Company had no unrecognized  tax benefits at
January 1, 2007, December 31, 2007, or December 31, 2008.

The Company  recognizes  interest accrued and penalties  related to unrecognized
tax benefits in tax expense.  During the years ended  December 31, 2008 and 2007
the Company recognized no interest and penalties.

                                       66



The Company  files  income tax  returns in the U.S.  federal  jurisdiction,  and
California.  With few  exceptions,  the  Company  is no longer  subject  to U.S.
federal or state/local  income tax  examinations  by tax  authorities  for years
before 2005.

The provisions for income taxes  applicable to income before taxes for the years
ended December 31, 2008, 2007 and 2006 differ from amounts  computed by applying
the statutory Federal income tax rates to income before taxes. The effective tax
rate and the statutory federal income tax rate are reconciled as follows:

                                                     Years Ended December 31,
                                                   ---------------------------
                                                    2008        2007     2006
                                                   ---------------------------
Federal statutory income tax rate                   35.0%       35.0%    35.0%
State income taxes, net of federal tax benefit       6.3         6.6      6.6
Tax-exempt interest on municipal obligations        (1.5)       (1.1)    (1.3)
Increase in cash value of insurance policies        (2.4)       (1.2)    (1.4)
Other                                                0.3         -        0.3
                                                   ---------------------------
Effective Tax Rate                                  37.7%       39.3%    39.2%
                                                   ===========================
Note 14 - Retirement Plans

401(k) Plan
The Company  sponsors a 401(k) Plan whereby  substantially  all employees age 21
and over with 90 days of service may participate.  Participants may contribute a
portion of their  compensation  subject to certain  limits  based on federal tax
laws.  The Company does not  contribute to the 401(k) Plan.  The Company did not
incur any material  expenses  attributable to the 401(k) Plan during 2008, 2007,
and 2006.

Employee Stock Ownership Plan
Substantially  all employees  with at least one year of service are covered by a
discretionary  employee stock ownership plan (ESOP).  Contributions  are made to
the plan at the discretion of the Board of Directors.  Contributions to the plan
totaling  $1,560,000  in 2008,  $1,560,000 in 2007,  and  $1,498,000 in 2006 are
included in salary expense.  Company shares owned by the ESOP are paid dividends
and included in the  calculation  of earnings per share  exactly as other common
shares outstanding.

Deferred Compensation Plans
The Company has deferred  compensation  plans for directors and key  executives,
which allow directors and key executives designated by the Board of Directors of
the Company to defer a portion of their compensation.  The Company has purchased
insurance on the lives of the  participants  and intends to hold these  policies
until  death  as  a  cost  recovery  of  the  Company's  deferred   compensation
obligations  of  $8,676,000,  and  $8,269,000  at  December  31,  2008 and 2007,
respectively.  Earnings credits on deferred  balances totaling $787,000 in 2008,
$742,000 in 2007, and $724,000 in 2006 are included in noninterest expense.

Supplemental Retirement Plans
The Company has supplemental  retirement plans for directors and key executives.
These  plans are  non-qualified  defined  benefit  plans and are  unsecured  and
unfunded.  The Company has purchased  insurance on the lives of the participants
and  intends  to hold  these  policies  until  death as a cost  recovery  of the
Company's  retirement  obligations.  The cash values of the  insurance  policies
purchased  to fund the  deferred  compensation  obligations  and the  retirement
obligations  were  $46,815,000  and  $44,981,000  at December 31, 2008 and 2007,
respectively.

The  Company  recorded  in  other  liabilities  an  additional  minimum  pension
liability of $2,677,000 and $3,970,000  related to the  supplemental  retirement
plans as of December 31, 2008 and 2007,  respectively.  These amounts  represent
the amount by which the projected benefit obligations for these retirement plans
exceeded the fair value of plan assets plus amounts  previously  accrued related
to the plans. The projected benefit obligation is recorded in other liabilities.
At  December  31,  2006,  the Company  adopted  SFAS 158,  which was  previously
discussed  in Note 1. The  incremental  impact  of  adoption  of SFAS 158 was an
increase in additional  minimum  liability of $2,095,000,  which was offset by a
reduction of  shareholders'  equity of  $1,215,000,  representing  the after-tax
impact of the adoption, and the related deferred tax asset of $880,000.

At December  31, 2008 and 2007,  the  additional  minimum  pension  liability of
$2,677,000 and  $3,970,000  were offset by a reduction of  shareholders'  equity
accumulated other comprehensive loss of $1,551,000 and $2,301,000, respectively,
representing the after-tax impact of the additional  minimum pension  liability,
and the related  deferred tax asset of $1,125,000 and $1,669,000,  respectively.
The Company expects to recognize approximately $99,000 of the net actuarial loss
reported in the  following  table as of December  31, 2008 as a component of net
periodic benefit cost during 2009.

                                       67



Amounts recognized as a component of accumulated other  comprehensive loss as of
year-end that have not been recognized as a component of the combined net period
benefit cost of the Company's defined benefit pension plans are presented in the
following table.
                                                               December 31,
                                                            2008           2007
(in thousands)                                           -----------------------
Net actuarial loss                                       ($1,926)       ($2,823)
Deferred tax benefit                                         810           1,187
                                                         -----------------------
Amount included in accumulated other comprehensive loss,
  net of tax                                             ($1,116)       ($1,636)
                                                         =======================

Information  pertaining to the activity in the  supplemental  retirement  plans,
using a measurement date of December 31, is as follows:
                                                                December 31,
                                                            2008           2007
(in thousands)                                           -----------------------
Change in benefit obligation:
Benefit obligation at beginning of year                  ($11,353)    ($10,378)
Service cost                                                 (555)        (599)
Interest cost                                                (664)        (583)
Amendments                                                    214            -
Actuarial gain/(loss)                                         749         (320)
Benefits paid                                                 593          527
                                                         -----------------------
Benefit obligation at end of year                        ($11,016)    ($11,353)
                                                         =======================
Change in plan assets:
Fair value of plan assets at beginning of year             $    --       $    --
                                                         -----------------------
Fair value of plan assets at end of year                   $    --       $    --
                                                         =======================
Funded status                                            ($11,016)    ($11,353)
Unrecognized net obligation existing at January 1, 1986        21           23
Unrecognized net actuarial loss                             1,926        2,823
Unrecognized prior service cost                               730        1,124
Accumulated other comprehensive income                     (2,677)      (3,970)
                                                         -----------------------
Accrued benefit cost                                     ($11,016)    ($11,353)
                                                         =======================
Accumulated benefit obligation                            ($8,712)     ($8,588)

The following table sets forth the net periodic  benefit cost recognized for the
supplemental retirement plans:
                                                        Years Ended December 31,
                                                       2008       2007      2006
                                                      --------------------------
                                                             (in thousands)
Net pension cost included the following components:
Service cost-benefits earned during the period          $555       $599     $555
Interest cost on projected benefit obligation            664        583      528
Amortization of net obligation at transition               2          2        2
Amortization of prior service cost                       180        181      201
Recognized net actuarial loss                            148        113      134
                                                      --------------------------
Net periodic pension cost                             $1,549     $1,478   $1,420
                                                      ==========================

The following table sets forth assumptions used in accounting for the plans:

                                                        Years Ended December 31,
                                                          2008     2007    2006
                                                        ------------------------
Discount rate used to calculate benefit obligation         6.50%   6.00%   5.75%
Discount rate used to calculate net periodic pension cost  6.00%   5.75%   5.50%
Average annual increase in executive compensation          4.00%   4.00%   5.00%
Average annual increase in director compensation           2.50%   2.50%   2.50%

                                       68


The following table sets forth the expected benefit payments to participants and
estimated  contributions  to be  made  by the  Company  under  the  supplemental
retirement plans for the years indicated:

                                     Expected Benefit           Estimated
                                       Payments to               Company
   Years Ended                        Participants            Contributions
   -----------                       ----------------         -------------
                                     (in thousands)
      2009                                 $733                   $733
      2010                                  733                    733
      2011                                  759                    759
      2012                                  808                    808
      2013                                  828                    828
    2014-2018                            $4,176                 $4,176

Note 15 - Related Party Transactions

Certain directors,  officers,  and companies with which they are associated were
customers of, and had banking  transactions with, the Company or the Bank in the
ordinary  course of  business.  It is the  Company's  policy  that all loans and
commitments to lend to officers and directors be made on substantially  the same
terms, including interest rates and collateral,  as those prevailing at the time
for comparable transactions with other borrowers of the Bank.

The following table summarizes the activity in these loans for 2008 and 2007 (in
thousands):

Balance December 31, 2006                       6,537
Advances/new loans                              3,909
Removed/payments                               (5,228)
                                              --------
Balance December 31, 2007                      $5,218
Advances/new loans                                392
Removed/payments                               (3,292)
                                              --------
Balance December 31, 2008                      $2,318
                                              ========

Note 16 - Financial Instruments With Off-Balance Sheet Risk

The Company is a party to financial  instruments with off-balance  sheet risk in
the normal  course of business  to meet the  financing  needs of its  customers.
These  financial  instruments  include  commitments  to extend  credit,  standby
letters of credit,  and deposit account overdraft  privilege.  Those instruments
involve, to varying degrees, elements of risk in excess of the amount recognized
in the balance  sheet.  The contract  amounts of those  instruments  reflect the
extent of  involvement  the  Company  has in  particular  classes  of  financial
instruments.

The Company's exposure to loss in the event of nonperformance by the other party
to the financial instrument for commitments to extend credit and standby letters
of credit written is represented by the contractual amount of those instruments.
The Company uses the same credit policies in making  commitments and conditional
obligations as it does for on-balance sheet instruments.  The Company's exposure
to loss in the  event of  nonperformance  by the  other  party to the  financial
instrument  for  deposit  account  overdraft  privilege  is  represented  by the
overdraft privilege amount disclosed to the deposit account holder.



                                                          December 31,
                                                     2008              2007
                                                   --------------------------
                                                          in thousands)
Financial instruments whose amounts represent risk:
  Commitments  to extend credit:
    Commercial loans                               $138,666         $141,914
    Consumer loans                                  452,349          464,154
    Real estate mortgage loans                       22,217           23,326
    Real estate construction loans                   24,708           56,212
    Standby letters of credit                         5,425            5,027
  Deposit account overdraft privilege                35,883           33,517

Commitments  to extend  credit are  agreements  to lend to a customer as long as
there is no violation of any condition established in the contract.  Commitments
generally have fixed expiration  dates of one year or less or other  termination
clauses  and may require  payment of a fee.  Since many of the  commitments  are
expected to expire without being drawn upon, the total commitment amounts do not
necessarily  represent  future cash  requirements.  The Company  evaluates  each
customer's credit  worthiness on a case-by-case  basis. The amount of collateral
obtained,  if deemed necessary by the Company upon extension of credit, is based
on Management's  credit evaluation of the customer.  Collateral held varies, but
may include  accounts  receivable,  inventory,  property,  plant and  equipment,
residential properties and income-producing commercial properties.

                                       69


Standby letters of credit are conditional  commitments  issued by the Company to
guarantee the performance of a customer to a third party.  Those  guarantees are
primarily issued to support private borrowing arrangements. Most standby letters
of credit are issued for one year or less.  The credit risk  involved in issuing
letters of credit is  essentially  the same as that  involved in extending  loan
facilities to customers. Collateral requirements vary, but in general follow the
requirements for other loan facilities.

Deposit  account  overdraft  privilege  amount  represents the unused  overdraft
privilege  balance  available to the Company's  deposit account holders who have
deposit accounts covered by an overdraft privilege.  The Company has established
an overdraft  privilege for certain of its deposit account  products whereby all
holders of such accounts who bring their accounts to a positive balance at least
once every thirty days receive the overdraft privilege.  The overdraft privilege
allows  depositors  to overdraft  their  deposit  account up to a  predetermined
level. The predetermined  overdraft limit is set by the Company based on account
type.

Note 17 - Disclosure of Fair Value of Financial Instruments

The Company utilizes fair value measurements to record fair value adjustments to
certain  assets  and  liabilities  and  to  determine  fair  value  disclosures.
Securities available-for-sale and mortgage servicing rights are recorded at fair
value on a recurring basis. Additionally,  from time to time, the Company may be
required to record at fair value other assets on a nonrecurring  basis,  such as
loans held for sale,  loans held for investment and certain other assets.  These
nonrecurring  fair value adjustments  typically involve  application of lower of
cost or market accounting or impairment write-downs of individual assets.

The Company groups assets and  liabilities at fair value in three levels,  based
on the  markets  in  which  the  assets  and  liabilities  are  traded  and  the
reliability of the assumptions used to determine fair value. These levels are:
Level 1 - Valuation is based upon quoted prices for identical instruments traded
          in active markets
Level 2 - Valuation  is based upon  quoted  prices for  similar  instruments  in
          active markets,  quoted prices for identical or similar instruments in
          markets that are not active, and model-based  valuation techniques for
          which all significant assumptions are observable in the market.
Level 3 - Valuation is generated from  model-based  techniques that use at least
          one  significant  assumption  not  observable  in  the  market.  These
          unobservable  assumptions reflect estimates of assumptions that market
          participants  would use in pricing the asset or  liability.  Valuation
          techniques include use of option pricing models,  discounted cash flow
          models and similar techniques.

Securities  available-for-sale  are recorded at fair value on a recurring basis.
Fair value  measurement  is based upon quoted  prices,  if available.  If quoted
prices are not  available,  fair values are measured using  independent  pricing
models or other  model-based  valuation  techniques such as the present value of
future  cash  flows,  adjusted  for the  security's  credit  rating,  prepayment
assumptions  and  other  factors  such  as  credit  loss  assumptions.  Level  1
securities  include  those  traded on an active  exchange,  such as the New York
Stock Exchange,  U.S. Treasury  securities that are traded by dealers or brokers
in active  over-the-counter  markets and money market funds.  Level 2 securities
include  mortgage-backed  securities  issued by government  sponsored  entities,
municipal bonds and corporate debt securities.  Securities classified as Level 3
include asset-backed securities in less liquid markets.

The Company does not record loans at fair value on a recurring  basis.  However,
from time to time,  a loan is  considered  impaired  and an  allowance  for loan
losses is  established.  Loans for which it is probable that payment of interest
and principal will not be made in accordance with the  contractual  terms of the
loan  agreement  are  considered   impaired.   Once  a  loan  is  identified  as
individually  impaired,  management  measures impairment in accordance with SFAS
114, Accounting by Creditors for Impairment of a Loan (SFAS 114). The fair value
of  impaired  loans  is  estimated  using  one  of  several  methods,  including
collateral value,  market value of similar debt,  enterprise value,  liquidation
value and discounted cash flows. Those impaired loans not requiring an allowance
represent  loans  for  which  the  fair  value  of the  expected  repayments  or
collateral exceed the recorded  investments in such loans. At December 31, 2008,
substantially  all of the total impaired loans were evaluated  based on the fair
value of the collateral.  In accordance  with SFAS 157,  impaired loans where an
allowance  is  established  based  on  the  fair  value  of  collateral  require
classification  in  the  fair  value  hierarchy.  When  the  fair  value  of the
collateral is based on an observable  market price or a current  appraised value
which uses substantially  observable data, the Company records the impaired loan
as nonrecurring  Level 2. When an appraised value is not available or management
determines  the fair  value of the  collateral  is  further  impaired  below the
appraised value, or the appraised value contains a significant  assumption,  and
there is no observable  market price,  the Company  records the impaired loan as
nonrecurring Level 3.

Mortgage  servicing rights are carried at fair value. A valuation  model,  which
utilizes a discounted  cash flow analysis  using a discount rate and  prepayment
speed assumptions is used in the completion of the fair value measurement. While
the prepayment speed assumption is currently quoted for comparable  instruments,
the  discount  rate  assumption  currently  requires  a  significant  degree  of
management  judgment.  As such, the Company classifies mortgage servicing rights
subjected to recurring fair value adjustments as Level 3.
                                       70


Goodwill and identified  intangible assets are subject to impairment  testing. A
projected  cash flow  valuation  method is used in the  completion of impairment
testing.  This  valuation  method  requires a  significant  degree of management
judgment as there are  unobservable  inputs for these  assets.  In the event the
projected  undiscounted  net  operating  cash  flows are less than the  carrying
value, the asset is recorded at fair value as determined by the valuation model.
As such, the Company  classifies  goodwill and other intangible assets subjected
to nonrecurring fair value adjustments as Level 3.

The table below presents the recorded amount of assets and liabilities  measured
at fair value on a recurring basis:

Fair value at December 31, 2008           Total   Level 1     Level 2   Level 3
Securities available-for-sale           $266,561       -     $266,561         -
Mortgage servicing rights                  2,972       -            -     2,972
                                        ----------------------------------------
Total assets measured at fair value     $269,533       -     $266,561     2,972
                                        ========================================

The table below presents the recorded amount of assets and liabilities  measured
at fair value on a nonrecurring basis:

Fair value at December 31, 2008           Total    Level 1   Level 2    Level 3
Impaired loans                           $27,164        -         -     $27,164
                                        ----------------------------------------
Total assets measured at fair value      $27,164        -         -     $27,164
                                        ========================================

The following  methods and  assumptions  were used to estimate the fair value of
each class of financial  instrument  for which it is practical to estimate  that
value.  Cash and due from banks, fed funds purchased and sold,  accrued interest
receivable  and payable,  and short-term  borrowings  are considered  short-term
instruments. For these short-term instruments their carrying amount approximates
their fair value.

Securities
For all  securities,  fair  values are based on quoted  market  prices or dealer
quotes. See Note 3 for further analysis.

Loans
The fair  value of  variable  rate  loans is the  current  carrying  value.  The
interest rates on these loans are regularly  adjusted to market rates.  The fair
value of other types of fixed rate loans is estimated by discounting  the future
cash flows using current rates at which similar loans would be made to borrowers
with similar credit ratings for the same remaining maturities. The allowance for
loan losses is a reasonable estimate of the valuation allowance needed to adjust
computed fair values for credit quality of certain loans in the portfolio.

Cash Value of Life Insurance
The  fair  values  of  insurance  policies  owned  are  based  on the  insurance
contract's cash surrender value.

Deposit Liabilities and Long-Tem Debt
The fair value of demand deposits,  savings  accounts,  and certain money market
deposits is the amount payable on demand at the reporting date.  These values do
not consider the estimated fair value of the Company's core deposit  intangible,
which is a significant unrecognized asset of the Company. The fair value of time
deposits and debt is based on the discounted value of contractual cash flows.

Securities  Sold under  Agreements to Repurchase  and Federal Funds  Purchase or
Sold
For  short-term  instruments,  including  securities  sold under  agreements  to
repurchase  and  federal  funds  purchased  or sold,  the  carrying  amount is a
reasonable estimate of fair value.

Other Borrowings
The fair value of other  borrowings is calculated  based on the discounted value
of the  contractual  cash flows using current rates at which such borrowings can
currently be obtained.

Junior Subordinated Debentures
The fair value of junior subordinated debentures is estimated using a discounted
cash flow model. The future cash flows of these  instruments are extended to the
next available  redemption  date or maturity date as appropriate  based upon the
spreads of recent  issuances or quotes from brokers for comparable  bank holding
companies  compared  to the  contractual  spread  of  each  junior  subordinated
debenture measured at fair value.

Commitments to Extend Credit and Standby Letters of Credit
The fair value of commitments is estimated  using the fees currently  charged to
enter into similar  agreements,  taking into account the remaining  terms of the
agreements and the present credit  worthiness of the counter parties.  For fixed
rate loan commitments,  fair value also considers the difference between current
levels of interest rates and the committed  rates.  The fair value of letters of
credit is based on fees  currently  charged  for  similar  agreements  or on the
estimated  cost to terminate them or otherwise  settle the  obligation  with the
counter parties at the reporting date.

                                       71



Fair values for financial  instruments are management's  estimates of the values
at which the  instruments  could be exchanged in a transaction  between  willing
parties.  These estimates are subjective and may vary significantly from amounts
that would be realized in actual  transactions.  In addition,  other significant
assets are not  considered  financial  assets  including,  any mortgage  banking
operations,  deferred tax assets, and premises and equipment.  Further,  the tax
ramifications  related to the realization of the unrealized gains and losses can
have a  significant  effect  on the  fair  value  estimates  and  have  not been
considered in any of these estimates.

The estimated fair values of the Company's financial instruments are as follows:




                                                  December 31, 2008                  December 31, 2007
                                            ---------------------------       -----------------------------
                                             Carrying           Fair            Carrying           Fair
                                              Amount           Value             Amount            Value
                                            ---------------------------       -----------------------------
                                                                                      
Financial Assets:                                 (in thousands)                     (in thousands)
  Cash and due from banks                     $86,355          $86,355           $88,798           $88,798
  Federal funds sold                                -                -                 -                 -
  Securities available-for-sale               266,561          266,561           232,427           232,427
  Federal Home Loan Bank stock, at cost         9,235            9,235             8,766             8,766
  Loans, net                                1,563,259        1,623,697         1,534,635         1,554,266
  Cash value of life insurance                 46,815           46,815            44,981            44,981
  Accrued interest receivable                   7,935            7,935             8,554             8,554
Financial liabilities:
  Deposits                                  1,669,270        1,646,561         1,545,223         1,483,542
  Accrued interest payable                      6,146            6,146             7,871             7,871
  Federal funds purchased                           -                -            56,000            56,000
  Other borrowings                            102,005          101,681           116,126           120,088
  Junior subordinated debt                     41,238           21,856            41,238            41,238

                                             Contract           Fair            Contract           Fair
Off-balance sheet:                            Amount            Value            Amount            Value
                                            --------------------------        -----------------------------
 Commitments                                 $637,940           $6,379          $685,606            $6,856
 Standby letters of credit                      5,425               54             5,027                50
 Overdraft privilege commitments               35,883              359            33,517               335


                                       72



Note 18 - TriCo Bancshares Financial Statements



                 TriCo Bancshares (Parent Only) Balance Sheets
                                                                                 December 31,
                                                                          -------------------------
                                                                              2008           2007
                                                                          -------------------------
                                                                                       
Assets                                                                          (in thousands)
Cash and Cash equivalents                                                   $1,071          $1,405
Investment in Tri Counties Bank                                            237,473         227,946
Other assets                                                                 1,239           1,427
                                                                          -------------------------
   Total assets                                                           $239,783        $230,778
Liabilities and shareholders' equity                                      =========================
Other liabilities                                                             $613            $662
Junior subordinated debt                                                    41,238          41,238
                                                                          -------------------------
   Total liabilities                                                       $41,851         $41,900
                                                                          -------------------------
Shareholders' equity:
Common stock, no par value: authorized 50,000,000 shares;
 issued and outstanding 15,756,101 and 15,911,550 shares, respectively     $78,246         $78,775
Retained earnings                                                          117,630         111,655
Accumulated other comprehensive loss, net                                    2,056          (1,552)
                                                                          -------------------------
    Total shareholders' equity                                            $197,932        $188,878
                                                                          -------------------------
    Total liabilities and shareholder's equity                            $239,783        $230,778
                                                                          =========================




                                                                    Years ended December 31,
                                                             ------------------------------------
Statements of Income                                            2008         2007        2006
                                                             ------------------------------------
                                                                                    
                                                                         (in thousands)
Dividend income                                                   $2           $18          $18
Interest expense                                              (2,580)       (3,296)      (3,202)
Administration expense                                          (536)         (701)        (584)
                                                             ------------------------------------
Loss before equity in net income of Tri Counties Bank         (3,114)       (3,980)      (3,768)
Equity in net income of Tri Counties Bank:
   Distributed                                                12,349        13,941        8,995
   Undistributed                                               6,256        14,055       20,014
Income tax benefit                                             1,307         1,677        1,589
                                                             ------------------------------------
Net income                                                   $16,798       $25,693      $26,830
                                                             ====================================

Statements of Cash Flows                                            Years ended December 31,
                                                             ------------------------------------
                                                                 2008          2007        2006
                                                             ------------------------------------
Operating activities:                                                     (in thousands)
   Net income                                                  $16,798     $25,693       $26,830
   Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash provided
         by operating activities:
     Undistributed equity in Tri Counties Bank                  (6,256)    (14,055)      (20,014)
    Stock option vesting expense                                   629         782           662
    Stock option excess tax benefits                               444      (1,731)         (205)
     Net change in other assets and liabilities                   (490)       (754)         (167)
                                                             ------------------------------------
     Net cash provided by operating activities                  11,125       9,935         7,106
Investing activities: None
Financing activities:
   Issuance of common stock through option exercise                  -         704           537
   Stock option excess tax benefits                               (444)      1,731           205
   Repurchase of common stock                                   (2,822)     (4,167)           --
   Cash dividends paid  --  common                              (8,193)     (8,270)       (7,595)
                                                             ------------------------------------
     Net cash used for financing activities                    (11,459)    (10,002)       (6,853)
                                                             ------------------------------------
         Increase (decrease) in cash and cash equivalents         (334)        (67)          253
Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of year                   1,405       1,472         1,219
                                                             ------------------------------------
Cash and cash equivalents at end of year                        $1,071      $1,405        $1,472
                                                             ====================================


                                       73



Note 19 - Regulatory Matters

The Company is subject to various regulatory capital  requirements  administered
by federal banking  agencies.  Failure to meet minimum capital  requirements can
initiate certain mandatory,  and possibly  additional  discretionary  actions by
regulators  that,  if  undertaken,  could have a direct  material  effect on the
Company's consolidated  financial statements.  Under capital adequacy guidelines
and the regulatory framework for prompt corrective action, the Company must meet
specific capital guidelines that involve quantitative  measures of the Company's
assets,  liabilities  and certain  off-balance-sheet  items as calculated  under
regulatory   accounting   practices.   The   Company's   capital   amounts   and
classification are also subject to qualitative judgments by the regulators about
components, risk weightings and other factors.

Quantitative  measures  established  by  regulation to ensure  capital  adequacy
require  the Company to  maintain  minimum  amounts and ratios (set forth in the
table below) of total and Tier 1 capital to risk-weighted  assets, and of Tier 1
capital to average assets.  Management  believes,  as of December 31, 2008, that
the Company meets all capital adequacy requirements to which it is subject.

As of December 31, 2008, the most recent  notification from the FDIC categorized
the  Bank  as  well  capitalized  under  the  regulatory  framework  for  prompt
corrective  action. To be categorized as well capitalized the Bank must maintain
minimum total  risk-based,  Tier 1 risk-based and Tier 1 leverage  ratios as set
forth  in the  table  below.  There  are no  conditions  or  events  since  that
notification that Management  believes have changed the institution's  category.
The Bank's actual capital amounts and ratios are also presented in the table.



                                                                                                             Minimum
                                                                                                           To Be Well
                                                                                                        Capitalized Under
                                                                                   Minimum              Prompt Corrective
                                                        Actual               Capital Requirement        Action Provisions
                                               ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                  Amount       Ratio           Amount       Ratio        Amount      Ratio
                                               ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                                   
As of December 31, 2008:                                                   (dollars in thousands)
Total Capital (to Risk Weighted Assets):
    Consolidated                              $244,032         12.42%         $157,155      8.0%       N/A           N/A
    Tri Counties Bank                         $243,557         12.41%         $157,055      8.0%      $196,318       10.0%
Tier 1 Capital (to Risk Weighted Assets):
    Consolidated                              $219,407         11.17%          $78,577       4.0%      N/A           N/A
    Tri Counties Bank                         $218,948         11.15%          $78,527       4.0%     $117,791       6.0%
Tier 1 Capital (to Average Assets):
    Consolidated                              $219,407         11.09%          $79,147       4.0%      N/A           N/A
    Tri Counties Bank                         $218,948         11.07%          $79,093       4.0%      $98,866       5.0%

As of December 31, 2007:
Total Capital (to Risk Weighted Assets):
   Consolidated                               $232,747         11.90%         $156,501      8.0%       N/A           N/A
   Tri Counties Bank                          $231,815         11.86%         $156,387      8.0%      $195,484       10.0%
Tier 1 Capital (to Risk Weighted Assets):
   Consolidated                               $213,326         10.90%          $78,251       4.0%      N/A           N/A
   Tri Counties Bank                          $212,394         10.87%          $78,194       4.0%     $117,290        6.0%
Tier 1 Capital (to Average Assets):
   Consolidated                               $213,326         11.16%          $76,429       4.0%      N/A           N/A
   Tri Counties Bank                          $212,394         11.12%          $76,366       4.0%     $95,458        5.0%


                                       74



Note 20 - Summary of Quarterly Results of Operations (unaudited)

The following  table sets forth the results of operations  for the four quarters
of 2008 and 2007, and is unaudited;  however,  in the opinion of Management,  it
reflects  all  adjustments  (which  include only normal  recurring  adjustments)
necessary to present fairly the summarized results for such periods.



                                                                    2008 Quarters Ended
                                                    --------------------------------------------------------
                                                     December 31,  September 30,    June 30,       March 31,
                                                    --------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                       
                                                          (dollars in thousands, except per share data)
Interest income                                        $29,679        $29,971        $30,332       $31,130
Interest expense                                         7,064          7,252          7,471         9,765
                                                       -------        -------        -------       -------
Net interest income                                     22,615         22,719         22,861        21,365
Provision for loan losses                                5,450          2,600          8,800         4,100
                                                       -------        -------        -------       -------
Net interest income after
   provision for loan losses
Noninterest income                                       6,165          6,792          7,280         6,850
Noninterest expense                                     16,732         16,589         17,844        17,573
                                                       -------        -------        -------        -------
Income before income taxes                               6,598         10,322          3,497         6,542
Income tax expense                                       2,357          4,087          1,223         2,494
                                                      --------       --------       --------      ---------
Net income                                            $  4,241       $  6,235       $  2,274      $  4,048
                                                      ========       ========       ========      ========
Per common share:
   Net income (diluted)                               $   0.26       $   0.39       $   0.14      $   0.25
                                                      ========       ========       ========      ========
   Dividends                                          $   0.13       $   0.13       $   0.13      $   0.13
                                                      ========       ========       ========      ========


                                                                    2007 Quarters Ended
                                                    --------------------------------------------------------
                                                     December 31,    September 30,    June 30,     March 31,
                                                    --------------------------------------------------------
                                                          (dollars in thousands, except per share data)
Interest income                                        $32,179        $32,442        $31,986       $30,661
Interest expense                                        10,869         10,602          9,895         9,216
                                                       -------        -------        -------       -------
Net interest income                                     21,310         21,840         22,091        21,445
Provision for loan losses                                1,350            700            500           482
                                                       -------        -------         ------       -------
Net interest income after
   provision for loan losses                            19,960         21,140        21,591         20,963
Noninterest income                                       7,114          6,847          7,029         6,600
Noninterest expense                                     17,751         16,752         17,443        16,960
                                                       -------         ------        -------        ------
Income before income taxes                               9,323         11,235         11,177        10,603
Income tax expense                                       3,622          4,442          4,422         4,159
                                                      --------        -------        -------       -------
Net income                                            $  5,701       $  6,793       $  6,755      $  6,444
                                                      ========       ========       ========      ========
Per common share:
   Net income (diluted)                               $   0.35      $   0.42       $   0.41         $   0.39
                                                      ========      ========       ========         ========
   Dividends                                          $   0.13      $   0.13       $   0.13         $   0.13
                                                      ========      ========       ========         ========


                                       75



MANAGEMENT'S REPORT ON INTERNAL CONTROL OVER FINANCIAL REPORTING

Management of TriCo  Bancshares is responsible for  establishing and maintaining
effective  internal  control over  financial  reporting.  Internal  control over
financial  reporting  is a process  designed  to  provide  reasonable  assurance
regarding  the  reliability  of  financial  reporting  and  the  preparation  of
financial  statements for external  purposes in accordance  with U.S.  generally
accepted accounting principles.

Under the supervision and with the  participation  of management,  including the
principal  executive  officer  and  principal  financial  officer,  the  Company
conducted an evaluation of the  effectiveness of internal control over financial
reporting  based on the  framework in Internal  Control -  Integrated  Framework
issued by the Committee of Sponsoring  Organizations of the Treadway Commission.
Based on this  evaluation  under the framework in Internal  Control - Integrated
Framework,  management  of the Company  has  concluded  the  Company  maintained
effective internal control over financial reporting,  as such term is defined in
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 Rules 13a-15(f), as of December 31, 2008.

Internal control over financial  reporting cannot provide absolute  assurance of
achieving  financial reporting  objectives because of its inherent  limitations.
Internal  control over  financial  reporting is a process  that  involves  human
diligence  and  compliance  and is subject to lapses in judgment and  breakdowns
resulting from human  failures.  Internal  control over financial  reporting can
also be circumvented by collusion or improper  management  override.  Because of
such  limitations,  there  is a risk  that  material  misstatements  may  not be
prevented  or detected  on a timely  basis by internal  control  over  financial
reporting.  However,  these  inherent  limitations  are  known  features  of the
financial  reporting  process.  Therefore,  it is  possible  to design  into the
process safeguards to reduce, though not eliminate, this risk.


Management is also responsible for the preparation and fair  presentation of the
consolidated  financial statements and other financial  information contained in
this report. The accompanying consolidated financial statements were prepared in
conformity with U.S. generally accepted  accounting  principles and include,  as
necessary, best estimates and judgments by management.

Moss Adams LLP, an independent  registered  public  accounting firm, has audited
the  Company's  consolidated  financial  statements as of and for the year ended
December 31, 2008,  and the  Company's  effectiveness  of internal  control over
financial reporting as of December 31, 2008, as stated in its reports, which are
included herein.


/s/ Richard P. Smith
-------------------------------------
Richard P. Smith
President and Chief Executive Officer

/s/ Thomas J. Reddish
-------------------------------------
Thomas J. Reddish
Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer


March 12, 2009

                                       76


Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

To the Board of Directors and Stockholders
TriCo Bancshares


We have audited the accompanying consolidated balance sheets of TriCo Bancshares
and  subsidiary,  (the Company) as of December 31, 2008 and 2007 and the related
consolidated  statements  of income,  changes in  shareholders'  equity and cash
flows for the years then ended. We have also audited TriCo  Bancshares  internal
control over  financial  reporting  as of December  31, 2008,  based on criteria
established in Internal  Control - Integrated  Framework issued by the Committee
of  Sponsoring   Organizations  of  the  Treadway  Commission  (COSO).   TriCo's
management  is  responsible  for these  financial  statements,  for  maintaining
effective internal control over financial  reporting,  and for its assessment of
the   effectiveness   of  internal   control  over  financial   reporting.   Our
responsibility  is to express an opinion on these  financial  statements  and an
opinion on the  effectiveness  of the Company's  internal control over financial
reporting based on our audits.

We conducted  our audit in accordance  with the standards of the Public  Company
Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that we plan
and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial
statements  are free of material  misstatement  and whether  effective  internal
control over  financial  reporting was maintained in all material  respects.  An
audit includes examining,  on a test basis,  evidence supporting the amounts and
disclosures in the financial  statements.  An audit also includes  assessing the
accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, as well
as evaluating the overall financial statement presentation. An audit of internal
control over financial reporting includes obtaining an understanding of internal
control over financial  reporting,  assessing the risk that a material  weakness
exists,  testing  and  evaluating  the design  and  operating  effectiveness  of
internal  control  based  on  the  assessed  risk,  and  performing  such  other
procedures as we considered necessary in the circumstances.  We believe that our
audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.

A company's  internal control over financial  reporting is a process designed to
provide reasonable  assurance  regarding the reliability of financial  reporting
and the preparation of financial  statements for external purposes in accordance
with generally accepted accounting principles. A company's internal control over
financial  reporting  includes those policies and procedures that (1) pertain to
the  maintenance  of records that, in reasonable  detail,  accurately and fairly
reflect the transactions and dispositions of assets of the company;  (2) provide
reasonable  assurance  that  transactions  are  recorded as  necessary to permit
preparation  of financial  statements  in  accordance  with  generally  accepted
accounting  principles,  and that receipts and  expenditures  of the company are
being made only in accordance with authorizations of management and directors of
the company; and (3) provide reasonable assurance regarding prevention or timely
detection of  unauthorized  acquisition,  use, or  disposition  of the company's
assets that could have a material effect on the financial statements.

Because of its inherent  limitations,  internal control over financial reporting
may not prevent or detect misstatements.  Also, projections of any evaluation of
the  effectiveness  to future  periods are subject to the risk that controls may
become  inadequate  because  of  changes  in  conditions,  or that the degree of
compliance with the policies or procedures may deteriorate.

In our opinion, the consolidated  financial statements referred to above present
fairly, in all material respects,  the consolidated  financial position of TriCo
Bancshares  and  subsidiary  as of December 31, 2008 and 2007 and the results of
their  operations  and cash flows for the years then  ended in  conformity  with
accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America.  Also,
in our opinion TriCo Bancshares maintained, in all material respects,  effective
internal  control over  financial  reporting  as of December 31, 2008,  based on
criteria  established in Internal  Control - Integrated  Framework issued by the
COSO.

As  discussed  in  Notes  1 and 17 to  the  consolidated  financial  statements,
effective  January 1, 2008,  the Company  adopted the provisions of Statement of
Financial  Accounting  Standard  (SFAS) No.  157,  Fair Value  Measurements  and
Emerging  Task Force (EITF)  06-04,  Accounting  for Deferred  Compensation  and
Postretirement Benefits Aspects of Split Dollar Life Insurance Arrangements.

/s/ Moss Adams LLP

Stockton, California
March 12, 2009

                                       77


Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

The Board of Directors and Shareholders
TriCo Bancshares:

We have audited the accompanying  consolidated  statements of income, changes in
shareholders'  equity,  and cash flows of TriCo  Bancshares and subsidiary  (the
Company) for the year ended  December 31,  2006.  These  consolidated  financial
statements   are  the   responsibility   of  the   Company's   management.   Our
responsibility  is  to  express  an  opinion  on  these  consolidated  financial
statements based on our audit.

We conducted  our audit in accordance  with the standards of the Public  Company
Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that we plan
and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial
statements are free of material misstatement.  An audit includes examining, on a
test basis,  evidence  supporting  the amounts and  disclosures in the financial
statements.  An audit also includes assessing the accounting principles used and
significant  estimates  made by  management,  as well as evaluating  the overall
financial  statement  presentation.   We  believe  that  our  audit  provides  a
reasonable basis for our opinion.

In our opinion, the consolidated  financial statements referred to above present
fairly,  in all material  respects,  the results of operations and cash flows of
TriCo  Bancshares  and  subsidiary  for the year  ended  December 31,  2006,  in
conformity with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles.


/s/ KPMG LLP

Sacramento, California
March 13, 2007




                                       78


ITEM  9.  CHANGES  IN AND  DISAGREEMENTS  WITH  ACCOUNTANTS  ON  ACCOUNTING  AND
FINANCIAL DISCLOSURE

On March 15, 2007,  our audit  committee  dismissed  our  principal  independent
auditor,  KPMG,  LLP,  and  engaged  the  services  of Moss Adams LLP as our new
principal independent auditor on March 15, 2007, for the year ended December 31,
2007.  During the years  ended  December  31, 2005 and 2006,  and the  following
interim  period  through  March 15,  2007,  we did not  consult  with Moss Adams
regarding any of the matters or events set forth in Item  304(a)(2)(i)  and (ii)
of Regulation S-K.

During the years ended  December 31, 2005 and 2006,  and the  following  interim
period  through March 15, 2007,  there were no  disagreements  between TriCo and
KPMG on any matter of accounting  principles or practices,  financial  statement
disclosure, or auditing scope or procedure, which disagreements, if not resolved
to KPMG's satisfaction,  would have caused KPMG to make reference to the subject
matter of the  disagreement  in  connection  with its  reports on our  financial
statements for such periods. Also, none of the reportable events described under
Item  304(a)(1)(v)  of Regulation S-K occurred  within the two most recent years
ended December 31, 2005 and 2006 or within the following  interim period through
March 15, 2007.

The audit reports of KPMG on our consolidated financial statements as of and for
the years ended  December 31, 2005 and 2006 did not contain any adverse  opinion
or disclaimer of opinion, nor were they qualified or modified as to uncertainty,
audit scope or  accounting  principles.  We requested  KPMG to furnish us with a
letter addressed to the Securities and Exchange  Commission stating whether they
agreed  with the above  statements.  A copy of that  letter  was filed  with the
Commission on a Form 8-K filed on March 21, 2007.

ITEM 9A. CONTROLS AND PROCEDURES

(a) Evaluation of Disclosure Controls and Procedures

As of December 31, 2008,  the end of the period covered by this Annual Report on
Form 10-K, the Company's  Chief Executive  Officer and Chief  Financial  Officer
evaluated the effectiveness of the Company's  disclosure controls and procedures
(as defined in Rule 13a-15(e) under the Securities  Exchange Act of 1934). Based
upon that evaluation,  the Company's Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial
Officer each concluded  that as of December 31, 2008,  the Company's  disclosure
controls and procedures were effective to ensure that the  information  required
to be disclosed by the Company in this Annual  Report on Form 10-K was recorded,
processed,  summarized  and reported  within the time  periods  specified in the
SEC's rules and instructions for Form 10-K.

(b) Management's Report on Internal Control over Financial Reporting and
Attestation Report of Registered Public Accounting Firm

Management's report on internal control over financial reporting is set forth on
page  76  of  this  report  and  is  incorporated   herein  by  reference.   The
effectiveness of the Company's  internal control over financial  reporting as of
December 31, 2008 has been audited by Moss Adams LLP, an independent  registered
public  accounting firm, as stated in its report,  which is set forth on page XX
of this report and is incorporated herein by reference.

(c) Changes in Internal Control over Financial Reporting

No change in the Company's  internal control over financial  reporting  occurred
during  the  fourth  quarter  of the year  ended  December  31,  2008,  that has
materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the Company's
internal control over financial reporting.


ITEM 9B. OTHER INFORMATION

All information  required to be disclosed in a current report on Form 8-K during
the fourth quarter of 2008 was so disclosed.


                                       79



                                    PART III

ITEM 10.  DIRECTORS, EXECUTIVE OFFICERS AND CORPORATE GOVERNANCE

The  information  required by this Item 10 is  incorporated  herein by reference
from the Company's  Proxy Statement for the annual meeting of shareholders to be
held on May 19,  2009,  which  will be filed  with the  Commission  pursuant  to
Regulation 14A.

ITEM 11.  EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

The  information  required by this Item 11 is  incorporated  herein by reference
from the Company's  Proxy Statement for the annual meeting of shareholders to be
held on May 19,  2009,  which  will be filed  with the  Commission  pursuant  to
Regulation 14A.

ITEM 12.  SECURITY  OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN  BENEFICIAL  OWNERS AND  MANAGEMENT AND
RELATED STOCKHOLDER MATTERS

The  information  required by this Item 12 is  incorporated  herein by reference
from the Company's  Proxy Statement for the annual meeting of shareholders to be
held on May 19,  2009,  which  will be filed  with the  Commission  pursuant  to
Regulation 14A.

ITEM  13.  CERTAIN   RELATIONSHIPS  AND  RELATED   TRANSACTIONS,   AND  DIRECTOR
INDEPENDENCE

The  information  required by this Item 13 is  incorporated  herein by reference
from the Company's  Proxy Statement for the annual meeting of shareholders to be
held on May 19,  2009,  which  will be filed  with the  Commission  pursuant  to
Regulation 14A.

ITEM 14.  PRINCIPAL ACCOUNTANT FEES AND SERVICES

The  information  required by this Item 14 is  incorporated  herein by reference
from the Company's  Proxy Statement for the annual meeting of shareholders to be
held on May 19,  2009,  which  will be filed  with the  Commission  pursuant  to
Regulation 14A.

                                     PART IV

ITEM 15.  EXHIBITS AND FINANCIAL STATEMENT SCHEDULES

(a) Documents filed as part of this report:

        1. All Financial Statements.

          The  consolidated  financial  statements  of  Registrant  are included
          beginning  at page 41 of Item 8 of this report,  and are  incorporated
          herein by reference.

        2. Financial statement schedules.

          Schedules have been omitted because they are not applicable or are not
          required under the instructions contained in Regulation S-X or because
          the  information  required to be set forth  therein is included in the
          consolidated  financial  statements or notes thereto at Item 8 of this
          report.

        3. Exhibits.

          The exhibit list required by this item is incorporated by reference to
          the Exhibit Index filed with this report.

                                       80



(b) Exhibits filed:

     See  Exhibit  Index  under  Item  15(a)(3)  above for the list of  exhibits
     required to be filed by Item 601 of regulation S-K with this report.

(c) Financial statement schedules filed:

     See Item 15(a)(2) above.

                                   SIGNATURES

Pursuant to the  requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities  Exchange
Act of 1934,  the  Registrant  has duly  caused  this report to be signed on its
behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.

Date:  March 12, 2009                        TRICO BANCSHARES

                              By:      /s/ Richard P. Smith
                                       ----------------------------------------
                                       Richard P. Smith, President
                                       and Chief Executive Officer

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, this report
has been signed below by the  following  persons on behalf of the  Registrant in
the capacities and on the dates indicated.



Date:  March 12, 2009                  /s/ Richard P. Smith
                                       ----------------------------------------
                                       Richard P. Smith, President, Chief
                                       Executive Officer and Director
                                       (Principal Executive Officer)



Date:  March 12, 2009                  /s/ Thomas J. Reddish
                                       ----------------------------------------
                                       Thomas J. Reddish, Executive Vice
                                       President and Chief Financial Officer
                                       (Principal Financial and Accounting
                                       Officer)



Date:  March 12, 2009                  /s/ Donald J. Amaral
                                       ----------------------------------------
                                       Donald J. Amaral, Director



Date:  March 12, 2009                  /s/ William J. Casey
                                       ----------------------------------------
                                       William J. Casey, Director and Chairman
                                       of the Board



Date:  March 12, 2009                  /s/ Craig S. Compton
                                       ----------------------------------------
                                       Craig S. Compton, Director

                                       81



Date:  March 12, 2009                  /s/ L. Gage Chrysler
                                       ----------------------------------------
                                       L. Gage Chrysler, Director



Date:  March 12, 2009                  /s/ John S.A. Hasbrook
                                       ----------------------------------------
                                       John S.A. Hasbrook, Director



Date:  March 12, 2009                  /s/ Michael W. Koehnen
                                       ----------------------------------------
                                       Michael W. Koehnen, Director



Date:  March 12, 2009                  /s/ Donald E. Murphy
                                       ----------------------------------------
                                       Donald E. Murphy, Director and
                                       Vice Chairman of the Board



Date:  March 12, 2009                  /s/ Steve G. Nettleton
                                       ----------------------------------------
                                       Steve G. Nettleton, Director



Date:  March 12, 2009                  /s/ Carroll R. Taresh
                                       ----------------------------------------
                                       Carroll R. Taresh, Director



Date:  March 12, 2009                  /s/ Alex A. Vereschagin. Jr.
                                       ----------------------------------------
                                       Alex A. Vereschagin, Jr., Director

                                       82



Exhibit No.                                         Exhibit Index

     3.1*      Restated  Articles of  Incorporation  dated May 9, 2003, filed as
               Exhibit  3.1 to  TriCo's  Quarterly  Report  on Form 10-Q for the
               quarter ended March 31, 2003.

     3.2*      Bylaws of TriCo Bancshares,  as amended,  filed as Exhibit 3.2 to
               TriCo's Form S-4  Registration  Statement  dated January 16, 2003
               (No. 333-102546).

     4*       Certificate of  Determination  of Preferences of Series AA Junior
               Participating  Preferred  Stock  filed as Exhibit  3.3 to TriCo's
               Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended September 30,
               2001.

     10.1*     Rights  Agreement  dated June 25, 2001,  between TriCo and Mellon
               Investor  Services  LLC filed as  Exhibit 1 to  TriCo's  Form 8-A
               dated July 25, 2001.

     10.2*     Form of Change of Control  Agreement dated as of August 23, 2005,
               between  TriCo,  Tri Counties Bank and each of Bruce Belton,  Dan
               Bailey,   Craig  Carney,  Gary  Coelho,   Rick  Miller,   Richard
               O'Sullivan, Thomas Reddish, and Ray Rios filed as Exhibit 10.2 to
               TriCo's  Quarterly  Report  on Form  10-Q for the  quarter  ended
               September 30, 2005.

     10.6*     TriCo's 1995 Incentive  Stock Option Plan filed as Exhibit 4.1 to
               TriCo's  Form S-8  Registration  Statement  dated August 23, 1995
               (No. 33-62063).

     10.7*     TriCo's 2001 Stock Option Plan, as amended, filed as Exhibit 10.7
               to TriCo's  Quarterly  Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter  ended
               June 30, 2005.

     10.8*     Amended  Employment  Agreement  between  TriCo and Richard  Smith
               dated as of August  23,  2005  filed as  Exhibit  10.8 to TriCo's
               Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended September 30,
               2005.

     10.9*     Tri Counties Bank Executive  Deferred  Compensation Plan restated
               April 1, 1992,  and  January  1, 2005  filed as  Exhibit  10.9 to
               TriCo's  Quarterly  Report  on Form  10-Q for the  quarter  ended
               September 30, 2005.

     10.10*    Tri  Counties  Bank  Deferred  Compensation  Plan  for  Directors
               effective  January  1, 2005  filed as  Exhibit  10.10 to  TriCo's
               Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended September 30,
               2005.

     10.11*    2005 Tri Counties Bank Deferred  Compensation Plan for Executives
               and Directors  effective January 1, 2005 and amended November 12,
               2008 filed as Exhibit 99.1 to TriCo's  Form 8-K dated  January 5,
               2009.

     10.13*    Tri Counties  Bank  Supplemental  Retirement  Plan for  Directors
               dated September 1, 1987, as restated January 1, 2001, and amended
               and  restated  January 1, 2004 filed as Exhibit  10.12 to TriCo's
               Quarterly  Report on Form  10-Q for the  quarter  ended  June 30,
               2004.

     10.14*    2004 TriCo Bancshares  Supplemental Retirement Plan for Directors
               effective  January  1, 2004  filed as  Exhibit  10.13 to  TriCo's
               Quarterly  Report on Form  10-Q for the  quarter  ended  June 30,
               2004.

     10.15*    Tri  Counties  Bank   Supplemental   Executive   Retirement  Plan
               effective  September 1, 1987, as amended and restated  January 1,
               2004 filed as Exhibit 10.14 to TriCo's  Quarterly  Report on Form
               10-Q for the quarter ended June 30, 2004.

     10.16*    2004 TriCo  Bancshares  Supplemental  Executive  Retirement  Plan
               effective  January 1, 2004 and amended December 30, 2008 filed as
               Exhibit 99.2 to TriCo's Form 8-K dated January 5, 2009.

                                       83



     10.17*    Form of Joint  Beneficiary  Agreement  effective  March 31,  2003
               between Tri Counties Bank and each of George Barstow, Dan Bailey,
               Dan Bay, Ron Bee, Craig Carney, Robert Elmore, Greg Gill, Richard
               Miller,  Richard  O'Sullivan,  Thomas  Reddish,  Jerald Sax,  and
               Richard Smith, filed as Exhibit 10.14 to TriCo's Quarterly Report
               on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended September 30, 2003.

     10.18*    Form of Joint  Beneficiary  Agreement  effective  March 31,  2003
               between Tri  Counties  Bank and each of Don  Amaral,  Dan Bailey,
               William Casey,  Craig Compton,  John Hasbrook,  Michael  Koehnen,
               Donald Murphy,  Carroll  Taresh,  and Alex  Vereshagin,  filed as
               Exhibit  10.15 to TriCo's  Quarterly  Report on Form 10-Q for the
               quarter ended September 30, 2003.

     10.19*    Form of  Tri-Counties  Bank  Executive  Long Term Care  Agreement
               effective June 10, 2003 between Tri Counties Bank and each of Dan
               Bailey,  Craig Carney,  Richard Miller,  Richard O'Sullivan,  and
               Thomas  Reddish,  filed as  Exhibit  10.16 to  TriCo's  Quarterly
               Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended September 30, 2003.

     10.20*    Form of  Tri-Counties  Bank  Director  Long Term  Care  Agreement
               effective June 10, 2003 between Tri Counties Bank and each of Don
               Amaral, Dan Bailey,  William Casey, Craig Compton, John Hasbrook,
               Michael  Koehnen,   Donald  Murphy,   Carroll  Taresh,  and  Alex
               Vereschagin,  filed as Exhibit 10.17 to TriCo's  Quarterly Report
               on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended September 30, 2003.

     10.21*    Form of  Indemnification  Agreement between TriCo  Bancshares/Tri
               Counties Bank and each of the  directors of TriCo  Bancshares/Tri
               Counties  Bank  effective on the date that each director is first
               elected,  filed as Exhibit 10.18 to TriCo'S Annual Report on Form
               10-K for the year ended December 31, 2003.

     10.22*    Form of  Indemnification  Agreement between TriCo  Bancshares/Tri
               Counties Bank and each of Dan Bailey,  Craig Carney, Rick Miller,
               Richard O'Sullivan,  Thomas Reddish,  Ray Rios, and Richard Smith
               filed as Exhibit 10.21 to TriCo's  Quarterly  Report on Form 10-Q
               for the quarter ended June 30, 2004.

     21.1      Subsidiaries of the Registrant

     23.1      Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm's Consent

     23.2      Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm's Consent

     31.1      Rule 13a-14(a)/15d-14(a) Certification of CEO

     31.2      Rule 13a-14(a)/15d-14(a) Certification of CFO

     32.1      Section 1350 Certification of CEO

     32.2      Section 1350 Certification of CFO

       *   Management contract or compensatory plan or arrangement


Exhibit 21

Subsidiaries of TriCo Bancshares
As of December 31, 2008
--------------------------------

Subsidiary                                    State and Form of Organization
----------                                    ------------------------------
Tri Counties Bank                             California banking corporation,
TriCo Capital Trust I                         Delaware business trust
TriCo Capital Trust II                        Delaware business trust

                                       84



Exhibit 23.1

Consent of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

We consent to the incorporation by reference in Registration  Statement Nos. No.
033-62063, No. 333-6664 and No. 333-115455 on Form S-8 of our report dated March
12,  2009,   relating  to  the   consolidated   financial   statements  and  the
effectiveness of internal controls over financial  reporting,  appearing in this
Annual Report on Form 10-K of TriCo  Bancshares  for the year ended December 31,
2008.


/s/ Moss Adams LLP

Stockton, California
March 12, 2009

Exhibit 23.2


Consent of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

The Board of Directors
TriCo Bancshares:

We consent to the incorporation by reference in the registration statement (Nos.
333-115455,  033-62063,  and  333-66064)  on Form  S-8 of TriCo  Bancshares  and
subsidiary of our report dated March 13, 2007, with respect to the  consolidated
balance sheet of TriCo  Bancshares  and  subsidiary as of December 31, 2006, and
the related consolidated  statements of income, changes in shareholders' equity,
and cash flows for each of the years in the two-year  period ended  December 31,
2006, which report appears in the December 31, 2007,  annual report on Form 10-K
of TriCo Bancshares.

/s/ KPMG LLP

Sacramento, California
March 12, 2009

                                       85



Exhibit 31.1

Rule 13a-14/15d-14 Certification of CEO

I, Richard P. Smith, certify that;

   1.     I have reviewed this annual report on Form 10-K of TriCo Bancshares;
   2.     Based on my knowledge,  this annual report does not contain any untrue
          statement  of a  material  fact  or  omit to  state  a  material  fact
          necessary to make the statements  made, in light of the  circumstances
          under which such  statements were made, not misleading with respect to
          the period covered by this annual report;
   3.     Based on my knowledge,  the financial statements,  and other financial
          information  included in this  annual  report,  fairly  present in all
          material respects the financial  condition,  results of operations and
          cash flows of the registrant as of, and for, the periods  presented in
          this annual report;
   4.     The registrant's  other  certifying  officer and I are responsible for
          establishing  and maintaining  disclosure  controls and procedures (as
          defined in Exchange Act Rules  13a-15(e) and  15d-15(e))  and internal
          control  over  financial  reporting  (as defined in Exchange Act Rules
          13a-15(f) and 15d-15(f)) for the registrant and we have:
          a.   Designed such disclosure controls and procedures,  or caused such
               disclosure  controls  and  procedures  to be  designed  under our
               supervision to ensure that material  information  relating to the
               registrant,  including  its  consolidated  subsidiaries,  is made
               known to us by others within those entities,  particularly during
               the period in which this annual report is being prepared;
          b.   Designed  such  internal  control over  financial  reporting,  or
               caused such  internal  control  over  financial  reporting  to be
               designed under our supervision,  to provide reasonable  assurance
               regarding  the   reliability  of  financial   reporting  and  the
               preparation  of financial  statements  for  external  purposes in
               accordance with generally accepted accounting principles;
          c.   Evaluated  the  effectiveness  of  the  registrant's   disclosure
               controls  and   procedures  and  presented  in  this  report  our
               conclusions  about the  effectiveness of the disclosure  controls
               and  procedures,  as of the  end of the  period  covered  by this
               report based on such evaluations; and
          d.   Disclosed in this report any change in the registrant's  internal
               control  over  financial   reporting  that  occurred  during  the
               registrant's fourth quarter that has materially  affected,  or is
               reasonably likely to materially affect, the registrant's internal
               control over financial reporting; and
   5.     The registrant's other certifying officer and I have disclosed,  based
          on our most recent  evaluation  of  internal  control  over  financial
          reporting, to the registrant's auditors and the audit committee of the
          registrant's board of directors:
          a.   All  significant  deficiencies  and  material  weaknesses  in the
               design or operation of internal control over financial  reporting
               which are reasonably  likely to adversely affect the registrant's
               ability  to  record,  process,  summarize  and  report  financial
               information; and
          b.   Any fraud,  whether or not material,  that involves management or
               other employees who have a significant  role in the  registrant's
               internal control over financial reporting.


Date:  March 12, 2009                    /s/ Richard P. Smith
                                        ---------------------------------------
                                        Richard P. Smith
                                        President and Chief Executive Officer

                                       86



Exhibit 31.2

Rule 13a-14/15d-14 Certification of CFO

I, Thomas J. Reddish, certify that;

1.     I have reviewed this annual report on Form 10-K of TriCo Bancshares;
   2.     Based on my knowledge,  this annual report does not contain any untrue
          statement  of a  material  fact  or  omit to  state  a  material  fact
          necessary to make the statements  made, in light of the  circumstances
          under which such  statements were made, not misleading with respect to
          the period covered by this annual report;
   3.     Based on my knowledge,  the financial statements,  and other financial
          information  included in this  annual  report,  fairly  present in all
          material respects the financial  condition,  results of operations and
          cash flows of the registrant as of, and for, the periods  presented in
          this annual report;
   4.     The registrant's  other  certifying  officer and I are responsible for
          establishing  and maintaining  disclosure  controls and procedures (as
          defined in Exchange Act Rules  13a-15(e) and  15d-15(e))  and internal
          control  over  financial  reporting  (as defined in Exchange Act Rules
          13a-15(f) and 15d-15(f)) for the registrant and we have:
          a.   Designed such disclosure controls and procedures,  or caused such
               disclosure  controls  and  procedures  to be  designed  under our
               supervision to ensure that material  information  relating to the
               registrant,  including  its  consolidated  subsidiaries,  is made
               known to us by others within those entities,  particularly during
               the period in which this annual report is being prepared;
          b.   Designed  such  internal  control over  financial  reporting,  or
               caused such  internal  control  over  financial  reporting  to be
               designed under our supervision,  to provide reasonable  assurance
               regarding  the   reliability  of  financial   reporting  and  the
               preparation  of financial  statements  for  external  purposes in
               accordance with generally accepted accounting principles;
          c.   Evaluated  the  effectiveness  of  the  registrant's   disclosure
               controls  and   procedures  and  presented  in  this  report  our
               conclusions  about the  effectiveness of the disclosure  controls
               and  procedures,  as of the  end of the  period  covered  by this
               report based on such evaluations; and
          d.   Disclosed in this report any change in the registrant's  internal
               control  over  financial   reporting  that  occurred  during  the
               registrant's fourth quarter that has materially  affected,  or is
               reasonably likely to materially affect, the registrant's internal
               control over financial reporting; and
   5.     The registrant's other certifying officer and I have disclosed,  based
          on our most recent  evaluation  of  internal  control  over  financial
          reporting, to the registrant's auditors and the audit committee of the
          registrant's board of directors:
          a.   All  significant  deficiencies  and  material  weaknesses  in the
               design or operation of internal control over financial  reporting
               which are reasonably  likely to adversely affect the registrant's
               ability  to  record,  process,  summarize  and  report  financial
               information; and
          b.   Any fraud,  whether or not material,  that involves management or
               other employees who have a significant  role in the  registrant's
               internal control over financial reporting.


Date: March 12, 2009                    /s/ Thomas J. Reddish
                                        ----------------------------
                                        Thomas J. Reddish
                                        Executive Vice President and
                                          Chief Financial

                                       87



Exhibit 32.1

Section 1350 Certification of CEO

In connection with the Annual Report of TriCo Bancshares (the "Company") on Form
10-K for the year  ended  December  31,  2008 as filed with the  Securities  and
Exchange  Commission  on the date hereof (the  "Report"),  I,  Richard P. Smith,
President and Chief Executive  Officer of the Company,  certify,  pursuant to 18
U.S.C.  Section 1350, as adopted  pursuant to Section 906 of the  Sarbanes-Oxley
Act of 2002, that:

        (1)    The Report fully complies with the  requirements of section 13(a)
               or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934; and
        (2)    The information  contained in the Report fairly presents,  in all
               material  respects,   the  financial  condition  and  results  of
               operations of the Company.

      /s/ Richard P. Smith
      -------------------------------------
      Richard P. Smith
      President and Chief Executive Officer

A signed  original of this  written  statement  required by Section 906 has been
provided  to TriCo  Bancshares  and will be  retained  by TriCo  Bancshares  and
furnished to the Securities and Exchange Commission or its staff upon request.



Exhibit 32.2

Section 1350 Certification of CFO

In connection with the Annual Report of TriCo Bancshares (the "Company") on Form
10-K for the year  ended  December  31,  2008 as filed with the  Securities  and
Exchange  Commission  on the date hereof (the  "Report"),  I, Thomas J. Reddish,
Executive Vice President and Chief  Financial  Officer of the Company,  certify,
pursuant to 18 U.S.C.  Section 1350,  as adopted  pursuant to Section 906 of the
Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, that:

        (1)    The Report fully complies with the  requirements of section 13(a)
               or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934; and
        (2)    The information  contained in the Report fairly presents,  in all
               material  respects,   the  financial  condition  and  results  of
               operations of the Company.


      /s/ Thomas J. Reddish
      ------------------------------------
      Thomas J. Reddish
      Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

A signed  original of this  written  statement  required by Section 906 has been
provided  to TriCo  Bancshares  and will be  retained  by TriCo  Bancshares  and
furnished to the Securities and Exchange Commission or its staff upon request.

                                       88