EAGLE BANCORP INC
SB-2, 1997-12-12
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     As filed with Securities and Exchange Commission on December 12, 1997.
                                        Registration Statement No. 333-________.
================================================================================



                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                             WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549
                             -----------------------

                                    Form SB-2
                             Registration Statement
                                      Under
                           The Securities Act of 1933
                             ----------------------


                               Eagle Bancorp, Inc.
                 (Name of Small Business Issuer in its Charter)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                                               <C>                                   <C>    

                 Maryland                                    6021                              52-2061461
(State or Other Jurisdiction of Incorporation    (Primary Standard Industrial          (IRS Employer I.D. Number)
             or Organization)                     Classification Code Number)
</TABLE>

       8101 Glenbrook Road, c/o Ronald D. Paul, Bethesda, Maryland 20814
                                 (301) 986-9288
          (Address, Including Zip Code, and Telephone Number, Including
               Area Code, of Registrants' Principal Executive Offices)

                 Ronald D. Paul, President, Eagle Bancorp, Inc.
          8101 Glenbrook Road, Bethesda, Maryland 20814 (301) 986-9288
            (Name, Address, Including Zip Code, and Telephone Number,
                   Including Area Code, of Agent for Service)

                                   Copies To:

                             David H. Baris, Esquire
                             Noel M. Gruber, Esquire
                         Kennedy, Baris & Lundy, L.L.P.
             4719 Hampden Lane, Suite 300, Bethesda, Maryland 20814


Approximate  date of proposed sale to the public:  As soon as practicable  after
the effective date of this Registration Statement.
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                         CALCULATION OF REGISTRATION FEE
====================================================================================================================================
Title of Each Class of                                   Proposed Maximum           Proposed Maximum          Amount of
 Securities to be Registered   Amount to be Registered  Offering Price Per Unit   Aggregate Offering Price   Registration Fee
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                              <C>                        <C>                      <C>                      <C>      
Common Stock, $.01 par value     $13,800,000                $10.00                   $13,800,000              $4,071.00
====================================================================================================================================
</TABLE>

The Registrant hereby amends this  registration  statement on such date or dates
as may be necessary to delay its effective date until the Registrant  shall file
a further amendment which specifically  states that this registration  statement
shall  thereafter  become  effective  in  accordance  with  Section  8(a) of the
Securities  Act of  1933  or  until  the  registration  statement  shall  become
effective on such date as the Commission,  acting pursuant to said Section 8(a),
may determine.
================================================================================


<PAGE>



PROSPECTUS

                SUBJECT TO COMPLETION - DATED DECEMBER 12, 1997



                           [EAGLE BANCORP, INC. LOGO]


                          1,200,000 SHARES COMMON STOCK
                                ($.01 PAR VALUE)
                                $10.00 PER SHARE

                     MINIMUM PURCHASE - 100 SHARES ($1,000)

          EAGLE BANCORP,  INC., a proposed bank holding company  organized under
the laws of the State of  Maryland  (the  "Company"),  is hereby  offering  (the
"Offering") up to 1,200,000 shares (the "Shares") of its common stock,  $.01 par
value (the "Common  Stock"),  at a price of $10.00 per Share (the  "Subscription
Price"). The Company also reserves the right to sell up to an additional 180,000
shares of Common Stock at the  Subscription  Price, in the event that the volume
of  subscriptions  exceeds the number of shares  offered (the  "Oversubscription
Allotment").

          The  Offering  is being  made  directly  by the  Company  through  its
Directors  and  Officers,  and through  Koonce  Securities,  Inc.,  a registered
broker-dealer,  on a  minimum-maximum  basis.  No  Shares  will be  sold  unless
acceptable  subscriptions  for at  least  800,000  Shares  are  received  by the
Company.  The minimum  number of Shares for which any investor may  subscribe is
100, for a minimum investment of $1,000,  subject to the right of the Company to
permit smaller
                                                   (continued on following page)
                               ------------------

THE  SECURITIES  OFFERED  HEREBY HAVE NOT BEEN  APPROVED OR  DISAPPROVED  BY THE
SECURITIES  AND  EXCHANGE  COMMISSION,  THE  MARYLAND  DEPARTMENT  OF  FINANCIAL
REGULATION OR ANY OTHER FEDERAL OR STATE  SECURITIES OR BANK REGULATORY  AGENCY,
NOR HAVE ANY OF THE  FOREGOING  PASSED  UPON THE  ACCURACY  OR  ADEQUACY OF THIS
PROSPECTUS. ANY REPRESENTATION TO THE CONTRARY IS A CRIMINAL OFFENSE.

THE SECURITIES  OFFERED HEREBY ARE NOT DEPOSIT ACCOUNTS OR OTHER  OBLIGATIONS OF
THE COMPANY'S PROPOSED BANKING SUBSIDIARY, AND ARE NOT, AND WILL NOT BE, INSURED
BY THE FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION OR ANY OTHER GOVERNMENT AGENCY.
                                -----------------

          SEE "RISK FACTORS" AT PAGE 6 FOR A DISCUSSION OF CERTAIN  MATTERS THAT
SHOULD BE  CAREFULLY  CONSIDERED  BY  PROSPECTIVE  INVESTORS IN THE COMMON STOCK
OFFERED HEREBY.
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

====================================================================================================================================
                                                                 UNDERWRITING DISCOUNTS AND             PROCEEDS TO ISSUER(2)
                                      PRICE TO PUBLIC                  COMMISSIONS(1)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                   <C>                                    <C>                           <C>  
Per Share Minimum                         $10.00                             $0                                $10.00
Per Share Maximum                         $10.00                             $0                                $10.00
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total Minimum                           $8,000,000                           $0                              $8,000,000
         
Total Maximum                         $12,000,000(3)                         $0                            $12,000,000(3)
====================================================================================================================================
</TABLE>

(1)       The Shares are being  offered by the  Directors  and  Officers  of the
          Company,  and  through  a  registered  broker-dealer.   Directors  and
          Officers  will not receive any  special  compensation  for selling the
          Shares,  but  may be  reimbursed  for  reasonable  expenses,  if  any,
          incurred by them in connection with selling Shares, which expenses are
          currently  anticipated  not to exceed  $10,000.  All  proceeds  of the
          Offering will be placed in an escrow account with Capital Bank,  N.A.,
          Rockville,  Maryland,  pending receipt of  subscriptions  for not less
          than  the  minimum  number  of  Shares.  (See  "THE   OFFERING--Escrow
          Account").  If for any reason the Bank does not receive its charter to
          open for business,  or the minimum number of Shares are not subscribed
          for by  the  Termination  Date,  including  extensions,  if  any,  all
          subscription  funds will be promptly  refunded to subscribers  without
          interest.   (See  "THE  OFFERING  --   Acceptance   and  Refunding  of
          Subscriptions").

(2)       Before  deducting  expenses of this  Offering  which are  estimated at
          $110,000  ($0.14 per share if the minimum number of Shares are sold or
          $0.09 per share if the maximum  number of Shares are sold),  including
          legal and accounting fees and printing and other expenses.

(3)       Does not reflect Shares subject to the Oversubscription  Allotment. If
          all Shares  subject to the  Oversubscription  Allotment are sold,  the
          aggregate price to public,  proceeds to issuer, and estimated expenses
          per share,  based  upon the  assumptions  in  Footnote  (2),  would be
          $13,800,000, $13,800,000 and $0.08 per share, respectively.

                             KOONCE SECURITIES, INC.

                 THE DATE OF THIS PROSPECTUS IS _________, 1997


<PAGE>



(continued from preceding page)

subscriptions  in its  discretion.  The  maximum  number of Shares for which any
investor  may  subscribe is five percent (5%) of the total number of Shares sold
in the Offering,  or a maximum  investment of $600,000 if all of the Shares, not
including Shares subject to the Oversubscription  Allotment,  offered hereby are
sold, or $400,000 if the minimum number of Shares are sold, subject to the right
of the Company to permit larger subscriptions in order to ensure the sale of the
minimum number of shares offered hereby, or otherwise in its discretion. Subject
to the foregoing and the Company's right to reject any  subscription in whole or
in part, all  subscriptions,  once delivered to the Company,  are irrevocable by
the subscriber.

          Prospective  purchasers  should note that: (1) neither the Company nor
its proposed subsidiary,  EagleBank,  (in organization) (the "Bank") has engaged
in  business  operations,  and the Bank has not yet been  authorized  to conduct
banking activities;  (2) 253,000 Shares have been reserved for sale to Directors
and  Officers of the  Company  and the Bank if the minimum  number of Shares are
sold  (313,000  if  the  maximum  number  of  Shares  are  sold);  and  (3)  the
Subscription Price has been determined  arbitrarily by the Board of Directors of
the Company and bears no  relationship  to assets,  earnings,  book value or any
other established measure of value. At present there is no public market for the
Shares,  and there is no assurance that an active trading market will develop as
a result of this Offering. (See "RISK FACTORS").

          The Offering will expire on ________,  1998, unless terminated earlier
or extended by the Company in its sole discretion.  The Offering may be extended
for  periods  of up to  thirty  (30)  days  without  notice;  however,  under no
circumstances  will the offering be extended  beyond  _______,  1998.  (See "THE
OFFERING --  General").  Subscribers  will be unable to obtain a refund of their
funds during the Offering  period and, will not be entitled to receive  interest
on funds held in escrow.  (See "THE  OFFERING --  Acceptance  and  Refunding  of
Subscriptions").

                                -----------------




<PAGE>



To be inserted in landscape text along the left edge of cover page

Information   contained  herein  is  subject  to  completion  or  amendment.   A
registration  statement  relating  to these  securities  has been filed with the
Securities and Exchange  Commission.  These  securities may not be sold, nor may
offers to buy be accepted prior to the time the registration  statement  becomes
effective.  This  Prospectus  shall  not  constitute  an  offer  to  sell or the
solicitation of an offer to buy, nor shall there be any sale of these securities
in any state in which such offer,  solicitation  or sale would be unlawful prior
to registration or qualification under the securities laws of any such state.




<PAGE>



                              AVAILABLE INFORMATION

          The  Company is a newly  organized  company and to date has not issued
any capital  stock or engaged in any  business  operations.  As such,  it is not
currently subject to the reporting  requirements of the Securities  Exchange Act
of 1934, as amended,  although it will become subject to the periodic  reporting
requirements  following the completion of this  offering,  until such time as it
has fewer than three hundred  shareholders  of record.  The Company will furnish
stockholders with annual reports containing audited financial statements. It may
also send other reports to keep stockholders  currently informed  concerning its
affairs.

          The Company has filed a  Registration  Statement on Form SB-2 with the
Securities and Exchange Commission (the "Commission"),  of which this Prospectus
forms a part. This Prospectus does not contain all of the information  contained
in the Registration  Statement and the exhibits thereto,  certain parts of which
have been omitted in accordance  with rules of the  Commission.  Any  statements
contained  herein  concerning the provisions of any document filed as an exhibit
to the  Registration  Statement or otherwise  filed with the  Commission are not
necessarily  complete,  and, in each instance,  reference is made to the copy of
the document so filed for a more complete  description  of the matter  involved,
and each such  statement is qualified  in its  entirety by such  reference.  The
Registration  Statement  and the exhibits  thereto are on file with,  and may be
examined without charge,  at the following  public  reference  facilities of the
Commission: 450 Fifth Street, NW, Room 1024, Washington, DC 20549; 7 World Trade
Center, Suite 1300, New York, New York, 10048; and the Citicorp Center, 500 West
Madison  Street,  Suite  1400,  Chicago,  Illinois  60661-2511.  Copies  of such
material may be obtained, at prescribed rates, from the Public Reference Section
of the Commission 450 Fifth Street,  NW, Room 1024,  Washington,  DC 20549.  The
Commission maintains an Internet web site that contains  information,  including
registration statements, of issuers who file electronically with the Commission.
The address of that web site is http://www.sec.gov.


          NO PERSON HAS BEEN  AUTHORIZED TO GIVE ANY  INFORMATION OR TO MAKE ANY
REPRESENTATIONS OTHER THAN THOSE CONTAINED IN THIS PROSPECTUS,  AND, IF GIVEN OR
MADE,  SUCH  INFORMATION AND  REPRESENTATIONS  MUST NOT BE RELIED UPON AS HAVING
BEEN AUTHORIZED BY THE COMPANY.  NEITHER THE DELIVERY OF THIS PROSPECTUS NOR ANY
SALE MADE HEREUNDER  SHALL UNDER ANY  CIRCUMSTANCES  CREATE AN IMPLICATION  THAT
THERE HAS BEEN NO CHANGE IN THE  AFFAIRS  OF THE  COMPANY  OR THE BANK SINCE THE
DATE HEREOF.  THIS  PROSPECTUS  DOES NOT CONSTITUTE AN OFFER OR  SOLICITATION BY
ANYONE IN ANY JURISDICTION IN WHICH SUCH OFFER OR SOLICITATION IS NOT AUTHORIZED
OR IN WHICH THE PERSON MAKING SUCH OFFER OR  SOLICITATION IS NOT QUALIFIED TO DO
SO OR TO ANYONE TO WHOM IT IS UNLAWFUL TO MAKE SUCH OFFER OR SOLICITATION.





                                      - 2 -

<PAGE>



                               PROSPECTUS SUMMARY

          The following information is qualified in its entirety by reference to
the  more  detailed   information   contained   elsewhere  in  this  Prospectus.
Prospective  purchasers  are  urged to  carefully  read the  entire  Prospectus,
including the  information  under "RISK  FACTORS",  before making any investment
decision.

THE COMPANY AND THE BANK

          Eagle Bancorp, Inc. (the "Company") was incorporated under the laws of
the State of Maryland on October 28,  1997,  to be a bank  holding  company and,
subject to regulatory  approvals,  will initially use $7,000,000 of the proceeds
of this Offering to purchase all of the  then-issued  shares of the common stock
of  EagleBank,   a  Maryland  chartered   commercial  bank  in  the  process  of
organization  (the"Bank").  If more  than  $8,000,000  is  raised  through  this
Offering,  the Company may use all or a portion of the  additional  proceeds for
the  purpose of  purchasing  additional  shares of the Bank's  Common  Stock (or
otherwise  contribute all or a portion of such additional proceeds to the Bank),
or may retain the  additional  proceeds  in the Company to allow it to engage in
other  business   activities   permitted  for  bank  holding   companies.   (See
"SUPERVISION  AND  REGULATION  -- The  Company").  Whether  or not  the  Company
contributes  additional  proceeds of the Offering to the Bank will depend on the
total amount raised.

          Neither the Company nor the Bank has commenced  operations and neither
will do so unless this Offering is completed and the requisite  approvals of the
Maryland Department of Financial  Regulation,  Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System and Federal Deposit Insurance  Corporation are obtained.  Neither
the Company  nor the Bank has issued any stock and  neither  will do so until at
least 800,000 Shares are subscribed for pursuant to this Offering. The assets of
the  Company as of  November  30,  1997,  as shown on its  balance  sheet,  were
$53,341, consisting of cash and equipment, and the Company's total stockholders'
deficit as of that date was $(74,236).  Advances from  organizers  have been the
source of funding for the Company. These non-recourse advances, in the aggregate
amount of $80,000 as of November 30, 1997, together with any additional advances
by  organizers,  are to be repaid from the proceeds of this  Offering,  together
with interest at the prime rate, adjusted monthly.

          The Bank has not yet engaged in any business  operations and is in the
process of  obtaining  the  approvals  necessary  to  commence  operations  as a
commercial  bank.  It is  anticipated  that the Bank,  which will have a primary
market area in Montgomery County,  Maryland,  will open in the second quarter of
1998,  although no assurances can be given as to the date actual operations will
begin.  Temporary  offices  of the  Company  and the  Bank are  located  at 8101
Glenbrook Road, c/o Ronald D. Paul,  Bethesda,  Maryland 20814 and its telephone
number is (301) 986-9288. (See "THE COMPANY AND THE BANK").

          The Company and the Bank are being organized by a group of individuals
active  in  Montgomery  County  and  surrounding  area  business,  professional,
banking,  financial  and  charitable  activities.  Many  of the  organizers  and
proposed  Directors  and  Officers of the Company and the Bank have  significant
prior  experience  and contacts  from service with other  successful  Montgomery
County area community banks. (See "MANAGEMENT").  It is the present intention of
the  Company  to seek to  establish  branch  offices  of the Bank as  rapidly as
possible in order to more effectively service customer relationships anticipated
by the Company, and better compete in a highly competitive environment including
the  establishment  of two branch  offices within two months of the Bank opening
for business.  There can be no assurance that the Bank will be able to establish
any  additional  branches,  that  any  of  the  anticipated  relationships  will
materialize, or that the Bank will be able to compete successfully.



                                      - 3 -

<PAGE>



                                  THE OFFERING

Shares Offered Hereby                Up to  1,200,000  shares of  Common  Stock.
                                     Acceptable  subscriptions  for a minimum of
                                     800,000 shares must be received  before any
                                     shares will be sold in this  Offering.  The
                                     Company reserves the right to sell up to an
                                     additional  180,000  shares of Common Stock
                                     in   the   event   that   the   volume   of
                                     subscriptions  exceeds the number of shares
                                     offered (the "Oversubscription Allotment").

Subscription Price                   $10.00 per Share


Termination Date                     _______________,   1998,   unless   earlier
                                     terminated  or extended by the Company to a
                                     date not later than _____________, 1998.

Minimum Subscription                 100 Shares  ($1,000),  subject to the right
                                     of   the   Company   to   permit    smaller
                                     subscriptions in its discretion.

Maximum Subscription                 Five  percent  (5%) of the total  number of
                                     Shares sold in the Offering, subject to the
                                     right  of  the  Company  to  permit  larger
                                     purchases  in order to  ensure  the sale of
                                     the minimum  number of Shares to be sold in
                                     the    Offering   or   otherwise   in   its
                                     discretion.    The    filing   of   certain
                                     information or  applications  with the bank
                                     regulatory  agencies may be a  prerequisite
                                     to the  purchase of five percent or more of
                                     the Common Stock.  The Company reserves the
                                     right to reduce,  or reject, in whole or in
                                     part, any subscription  which would require
                                     prior regulatory application or approval if
                                     such   is  not   obtained   prior   to  the
                                     Termination  Date.  (See "THE  OFFERING  --
                                     Regulatory Limitations")

Gross Proceeds of the Offering       $8,000,000 if the minimum  number of shares
                                     are  subscribed  for.  $12,000,000  if  the
                                     maximum  number  of shares  are  subscribed
                                     for.  $13,800,000  if all shares subject to
                                     the  Oversubscription  Allowance subscribed
                                     for.

Estimated  Net  Proceeds 
of the  Offering                     $8,000,000 if the minimum  number of shares
                                     are  subscribed  for;  $12,000,000  if  the
                                     maximum  number  of shares  are  subscribed
                                     for;  $13,800,000  if all shares subject to
                                     the    Oversubscription    Allotment    are
                                     subscribed   for,   in  each  case   before
                                     deduction   of  expenses  of  the  Offering
                                     estimated at $110,000.

                                      - 4 -
<PAGE>

Use of Proceeds                      The Company  will use the first  $7,000,000
                                     of the  net  proceeds  of the  Offering  to
                                     purchase all of the  then-issued  shares of
                                     common  stock of the Bank.  Net proceeds in
                                     excess of  $8,000,000  will,  subject  to a
                                     determination  by the Board of Directors of
                                     the  Company to  contribute  all or part of
                                     such  excess   proceeds  to  the  Bank,  be
                                     invested  in  short  term  U.S.  government
                                     securities, or other investments authorized
                                     by  the   Company,   pending  use  of  such
                                     proceeds   as  working   capital   for  the
                                     Company.   The   Company   may   engage  in
                                     non-banking activities permissible for bank
                                     holding   companies,   including   but  not
                                     limited to  venture  capital  and  mortgage
                                     banking activities.

                                     The Bank will  utilize  the funds  received
                                     from  the  Company  to  furnish  and  equip
                                     facilities for the Bank, to provide working
                                     capital, and for general corporate purposes
                                     of the Bank. (See "USE OF PROCEEDS").

RISK FACTORS

          Investment  in the  Shares  offered  hereby  involves  certain  risks,
including  but not limited to the  possibility  that there will not be a trading
market, active or otherwise, for the Shares, the lack of an operating history of
the  Company  and the  Bank  and the fact  that  the  Bank  will be  faced  with
competition from other financial  institutions that have  substantially  greater
financial resources than will the Bank.  Investors should carefully consider the
information contained herein under "RISK FACTORS."


                                      - 5 -

<PAGE>


                                  RISK FACTORS

          An investment in the securities  offered by this  Prospectus  involves
various risks.  Prospective  purchasers should consider the following,  together
with the  other  information  contained  herein,  before  making a  decision  to
purchase any Shares offered hereby.

          Limited Trading Market.  While the Shares being offered hereby will be
freely  transferable by most shareholders  immediately upon issuance,  it is not
anticipated that there will be an active market for trading the Shares following
this  Offering,  and no  assurance  can be given  that an active or  established
trading market will develop in the foreseeable future. Directors and Officers of
the  Company  and the Bank  have  indicated  their  intentions  to  purchase  an
aggregate of 253,000 Shares, subject to increase in the event that more than the
minimum number of Shares are sold. While the Company  currently  intends to list
the Shares on The Nasdaq Stock Market National Market System  ("Nasdaq/NMS")  or
another securities exchange as soon as it meets the requirements therefore,  the
Common Stock will not initially be so listed and there can be no assurance  that
trading in the over-the-counter  market or through brokers or market makers will
develop.  Additionally,  there can be no assurance that the Company will qualify
for, or if qualified for will seek,  listing on  Nasdaq/NMS or other  securities
exchange.  As a result,  an  investment  in the  Shares  offered  hereby  may be
relatively illiquid. (See "THE OFFERING -- Limited Market for Shares")

          Lack of Operating History and Profitability.  The Company and the Bank
are in the process of organization and neither has any prior operating  history.
Since the Company will function as a holding  company,  its  profitability  will
primarily  depend on the results of operations of its principal asset, the Bank.
Although the  organizing  directors  and  executive  officers  have  significant
experience  and  contacts  in the market in which the Bank will  operate,  it is
expected that the Bank will incur  operating  losses during its initial years of
operation,  may not achieve significant  profitability,  if at all, for at least
two years, and no assurance can be given as to its long-term profitability.  The
establishment  of branch  offices,  and the attendant  costs,  may further delay
profitability if such branches do not grow as presently  anticipated.  There can
be no assurance  that the Bank will receive  approval to establish its first two
branches as planned. (See "BUSINESS OF THE COMPANY").

          Subscription  Price.  The  subscription  price of the  Shares  offered
hereby has been arbitrarily determined by the Board of Directors of the Company,
and no  independent  investment  banking  firm was  retained  to  assist in such
determination.  The $10.00 per Share price bears no  relationship to the assets,
earnings, book value or other established measure of value of the Company or the
Bank; rather, in fixing the price the Board considered,  among other things, the
subscription  prices of securities  offered by other newly  organized  financial
institutions and bank holding companies.

          Limitations on Dividends. The Bank will be the wholly owned subsidiary
of the Company and,  initially,  its principal revenue producing  operation.  No
assurance  can be given that the Bank's  earnings,  if any, will ever permit the
payment of any  dividends to the Company,  and,  similarly,  no assurance can be
given that the  Company's  earnings,  if any,  will ever  permit the  payment of
dividends to stockholders.  Approvals of the Department of Financial  Regulation
or the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System may be required prior to
payment of dividends  by the Bank to the Company  under  certain  circumstances.
(See "DESCRIPTION OF THE CAPITAL STOCK Limitations on Payment of Dividends")

          Competition.   In  the  Greater  Washington,   DC  metropolitan  area,
generally, and in the Bank's primary service area in Montgomery County, Maryland
in particular,  competition is  exceptionally  keen in the business and consumer
banking markets both from large and community  commercial banking  institutions.
The Bank will also compete with savings and loan  associations,  credit  unions,
mortgage  companies,  brokerage and investment  firms,  insurance  companies and
others  providing  financial  services.  Among the advantages that many of these
institutions  have  over the Bank  are  their  abilities  to  finance  extensive
advertising  campaigns,  maintain  large branch  networks and to directly  offer
certain services,  such as international banking and trust services,  which will
not be offered directly by the

                                      - 6 -

<PAGE>

Bank. Further, the greater  capitalization of the larger institutions allows for
substantially higher lending limits than the Bank. (See "BUSINESS OF THE COMPANY
- - Competition").

          Non-Underwritten  Offering.  The Common  Stock is being  sold  through
Koonce Securities,  Inc., Rockville,  Maryland, a registered  broker-dealer,  or
through another  registered  broker-dealer  in any  jurisdiction in which Koonce
Securities,  Inc. is not  registered,  and through the efforts of the organizing
directors  and  officers of the  Company.  No  broker-dealer  which  assists the
Company in the Offering  will have any  obligation  to purchase any shares being
offered  hereby.  Because  the  Offering  is not  underwritten,  there can be no
assurance  that the minimum number of Shares will be sold. If the minimum number
of Shares is not  subscribed  for,  subscriber  funds will be returned,  without
deduction,  but  subscribers  will have lost the use of their  funds  during the
pendency of the Offering.

          Shares  Available  for Sale.  The  articles  of  incorporation  of the
Company authorize an aggregate of 5,000,000 shares of common stock, 1,200,000 of
which  are  offered   hereby   (1,380,000   including   Shares  subject  to  the
Oversubscription  Allotment),  and 1,000,000  shares of  undesignated  preferred
stock,  the terms of which may be  determined  by the Board of  Directors at the
time of  issuance.  The Board of  Directors is  authorized  to issue  additional
shares of Common Stock, or shares of preferred stock having such rights,  powers
and privileges as it may fix, at such times and for such consideration as it may
determine.  The  existence of  authorized  shares of preferred  stock and common
stock could have the effect of rendering more difficult or discouraging  hostile
takeover attempts,  or of facilitating a negotiated  acquisition of the Company,
and could  thereby  affect the market  for and price of the  Common  Stock.  Any
future  offering  of capital  stock  could have a dilutive  effect on holders of
Common Stock. (See "DESCRIPTION OF CAPITAL STOCK").

          Reliance  On  Management.  As  newly  organized  institutions  without
existing operations, facilities or business lines, the Company and the Bank will
rely upon the  executive  officers and  directors of the Company and the Bank to
locate,  establish  and outfit  appropriate  quarters for the Bank,  hire staff,
develop and implement marketing and business development strategies and evaluate
lines of businesses in addition to the Bank's core commercial banking functions.
There can be no  assurance  the Board of  Directors of the Company and the Bank,
who, subject to the requirements of safe and sound banking practices,  will have
substantial  discretion  in these  matters,  will be  successful in this regard.
Subject to the anticipated  requirement  that at least $7,000,000 be contributed
to the  capital  of the Bank,  and the  requirements  of safe and sound  banking
practices,  the  Board  of  Directors  of the  Company  and the Bank  will  have
substantial discretion of the use of Offering proceeds.

          Limitation of Director Liability. The articles of incorporation of the
Company provide that to the full extent permitted by Maryland law, an officer or
director  of the Company  will not be liable to the Company or its  shareholders
for monetary damages. (See "MANAGEMENT").  This could result in monetary loss to
the Company and its  shareholders  as a result of the default of its officers or
directors  without  the  ability to obtain  compensation  for that loss from the
officers or directors.

          Monetary Policy and Economic Conditions.  The operating income and net
income of the Bank will depend to a great extent on "rate  differentials," i.e.,
the  difference  between  the  interest  yields the Bank  receives on its loans,
securities and other  interest  bearing assets and the interest rates it pays on
its  interest  bearing  deposits and other  liabilities.  These rates are highly
sensitive  to many factors  which are beyond the control of the Bank,  including
general  economic  conditions  and the  policies  of  various  governmental  and
regulatory authorities,  including the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System. (See "SUPERVISION AND REGULATION -- The Bank").

          Government  Regulation.  The  Company  and the Bank will be subject to
extensive  governmental  regulation,  control and  examination  by the  Maryland
Department  of  Financial  Regulation,  the Board of  Governors  of the  Federal
Reserve System and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. The regulations of
these various  agencies  which will govern most aspects of the Company's and the
Bank's business, including investments, loans, borrowings, dividends, setting of
required  reserves,  and  location  and  number  of  branches,  are  promulgated
principally for the

                                      - 7 -

<PAGE>


protection  of  depositors  and the deposit  insurance  system,  and not for the
protection of the investment of the Company's  shareholders.  (See  "SUPERVISION
AND REGULATION").

          Allocation  of Shares.  The  Directors and Officers of the Company and
the Bank have been given  priority to  purchase  at least  253,000 of the Shares
offered hereby and are expected to do so. Directors of the Company and the Bank,
or their affiliates may, but are not obligated to, purchase additional Shares in
the Offering. In determining which other subscriptions to accept, in whole or in
part, the Company may consider the order in which subscriptions are received,  a
subscriber's  potential to do business with, or to direct business to, the Bank,
and the Company's desire to have a broad  distribution of stock ownership.  (See
"THE OFFERING -- General").

          Repayment of Organizational Expenses; Delay in Opening.  Organizers of
the Company have,  as of November 30, 1997,  advanced an aggregate of $80,000 to
the  Company  to  cover  organization  costs,  pre-operating  expenses  and  the
acquisition  of certain fixed assets of the Company and the Bank.  One organizer
has  obtained  a line of credit in the  amount of  $350,000  for the  purpose of
funding  additional  organizational  expenses of the  Company  and Bank  through
additional organizer advances.  The Company's ability to repay such advances, or
loans  incurred  to  repay  such  advances,  depends  upon the  success  of this
Offering.  (See "EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION AND CERTAIN TRANSACTIONS WITH MANAGEMENT
- -- Certain  Transactions").  Delay in the commencement of operations by the Bank
may result in increased  aggregate  organizational  expense,  reducing the funds
potentially available for the conduct of the Company's business.

          Voting Control of the Bank. The Board of Directors of the Company will
elect the Directors of the Bank, and the stockholders of the Company will not be
entitled to directly elect the Directors of the Bank.

                            THE COMPANY AND THE BANK

          The Company was  incorporated  under the laws of the State of Maryland
on October 28, 1997, to operate as a bank holding  company.  An application will
be filed on behalf of the  Company  with the Board of  Governors  of the Federal
Reserve System (the "Federal  Reserve  Board") for prior approval of the Federal
Reserve  Board to become a bank  holding  company  pursuant to the Bank  Holding
Company  Act of 1956,  and, in  connection  therewith,  to  purchase  all of the
capital stock to be issued by the Bank.

          An  application  to  organize  the Bank was  filed  with the  Maryland
Department  of  Financial  Regulation  on  December  5,  1997.  The  application
contemplates sale of all of the shares of the Bank's common stock to the Company
for an aggregate  price of $7,000,000.  In the event more than $8,000,000 in net
proceeds is raised in this Offering,  the Company may purchase additional shares
of common stock of the Bank, or otherwise contribute such additional proceeds to
the Bank,  or may  retain  all or a portion of the  additional  proceeds  in the
Company for the purpose of allowing the Company to engage in business activities
permitted for bank holding  companies.  (See  "SUPERVISION AND REGULATION -- The
Company").

          An application for insurance of the Bank's deposits was filed with the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation ("FDIC") on December 5, 1997.The Company's
application  to become a bank  holding  company and the Bank's  application  for
membership in the Federal  Reserve  System will be submitted in final form after
preliminary approval of the Bank's Charter.

          The Bank  anticipates that it will open in the second quarter of 1998,
or as soon  thereafter as  practicable.  Meeting such  targeted  opening date is
dependent  upon a number of factors which may be beyond the control of the Bank,
including  the timely  completion  of this  offering,  approval by the state and
federal  banking  agencies,  final  development  of the Bank's  facility and the
hiring of employees.  Any delay in the commencement of operations could increase
the estimated pre-opening expenses of the Bank.

                                      - 8 -

<PAGE>

          Neither the Company nor the Bank has commenced  operations and neither
will do so unless this offering is successfully completed and the Bank meets the
conditions of the Department of Financial  Regulation to receive its certificate
of authority to commence the business of banking (the "Charter"), of the FDIC to
receive deposit  insurance,  and of the Federal Reserve Board to become a member
bank, and the Company obtains  approval from the Federal Reserve Board to become
a bank holding company.

                                  THE OFFERING

GENERAL

          The Company is hereby  offering for sale up to  1,200,000  shares (the
"Shares") of its common stock,  $.01 par value (the "Common Stock"),  at a price
of $10.00 per Share (the  "Subscription  Price").  The Company also reserves the
right to sell up to an  additional  180,000  shares of Common Stock in the event
that the  volume of  subscriptions  exceeds  the number of shares  offered  (the
"Oversubscription   Allotment").  No  Shares  will  be  sold  unless  acceptable
subscriptions for a minimum of 800,000 Shares are received by the Company. It is
expected  that  Directors and Officers of the Company and the Bank will purchase
approximately 32.9% of the Shares offered hereby if the minimum number of Shares
are sold, or 26.9% if the maximum  number of Shares are sold.  Subscriptions  to
purchase Shares must be received by the Company no later than 5:00 p.m., eastern
time, on _________,  1998, unless the Offering is terminated earlier or extended
by the Company.  The Company reserves the right to terminate the Offering at any
time prior to _____, 1998, or to extend the expiration date for periods of up to
thirty  (30)  days  each,  without  notice  to  subscribers;  however,  under no
circumstances  will the Offering be extended  beyond  ______________,  1998. The
date this Offering terminates, whether on ___________, 1998, or before or after,
shall be referred to herein as the "Termination Date".

          Investors  must  subscribe for the purchase of a minimum of 100 Shares
(for a minimum  investment of $1,000),  subject to the Company's right to permit
smaller subscriptions in its discretion. The maximum number of shares any person
will be permitted to purchase is five percent (5%) of the total number of Shares
sold in the Offering, except in the event such purchases are necessary to ensure
the minimum number of Shares are  subscribed and paid for in this Offering.  The
Company  reserves  the right,  however,  to permit such larger  purchases in its
discretion. (See "THE OFFERING - Regulatory Limitation")

          THE COMPANY RESERVES THE RIGHT TO ACCEPT OR REJECT ANY SUBSCRIPTION IN
WHOLE OR IN PART. IN DETERMINING WHETHER TO ACCEPT ANY SUBSCRIPTION, IN WHOLE OR
IN PART,  THE  DIRECTORS  MAY, IN THEIR SOLE  DISCRETION,  TAKE INTO ACCOUNT THE
ORDER IN WHICH  SUBSCRIPTIONS  ARE  RECEIVED,  A  SUBSCRIBER'S  POTENTIAL  TO DO
BUSINESS WITH, OR TO DIRECT  CUSTOMERS TO, THE BANK AND THE COMPANY'S  DESIRE TO
HAVE A BROAD  DISTRIBUTION  OF STOCK  OWNERSHIP,  AS WELL AS LEGAL OR REGULATORY
RESTRICTIONS.  NOTWITHSTANDING THE COMPANY'S UNFETTERED RIGHT OF REJECTION, ONCE
RECEIVED BY THE COMPANY, ALL SUBSCRIPTIONS ARE IRREVOCABLE BY THE SUBSCRIBER.

          No  underwriting  discounts or commissions  will be paid in connection
with the sale of the Shares  offered  hereby.  The Offering will be made through
Koonce  Securities,   Inc,   Rockville,   Maryland   ("Koonce"),   a  registered
broker-dealer,  or another  broker-dealer in any jurisdiction in which Koonce is
not  registered  and through the efforts of the  Officers  and  Directors of the
Company,  who will solicit  subscriptions  from prospective  stockholders.  Such
Officers  and  Directors  will not  receive any  special  compensation  for such
services,  but will be reimbursed for reasonable  expenses,  if any, incurred by
them in connection therewith.

          Executed  subscription  documents (which will be promptly forwarded to
the Company) and  subscription  proceeds  (which will be forwarded to the escrow
agent by noon of the business day following receipt) will be received by Koonce.
No broker-dealer who assists the Company in the Offering, including Koonce, will
independently  assess the  information in this Prospectus or determine the value
of the Common Stock or the

                                      - 9 -

<PAGE>


reasonableness  of the Subscription  Price.  Koonce will receive  $10,000,  plus
reimbursement of its out-of-pocket expenses, for its services in connection with
the Offering.

METHOD OF SUBSCRIPTION

          Persons  who wish to  participate  in the  Offering  and invest in the
Company  may  do  so  by  completing  and  signing  the  Subscription  Agreement
accompanying this Prospectus and delivering the completed Subscription Agreement
to Koonce prior to the  Termination  Date,  together with payment in full of the
Subscription Price of all Shares subscribed for. Such payment in full must be by
(a) check or bank draft drawn upon a U.S.  bank, or (b) postal,  telegraphic  or
express money order,  in either case,  payable to "Capital  Bank,  N.A.,  Escrow
Agent for Eagle Bancorp,  Inc.". The  Subscription  Price will be deemed to have
been received only upon (i) clearance of any uncertified  check, or (ii) receipt
of any  certified  check or bank draft drawn upon a U.S.  bank or of any postal,
telegraphic  or express  money  order.  A postage  paid,  addressed  envelope is
included  for the return of  Subscription  Agreement.  If paying by  uncertified
personal  check,  please note that the funds paid thereby may take at least five
business days to clear.  Accordingly,  persons who wish to pay the  Subscription
Price  by  means  of  uncertified  personal  check  are  urged  to make  payment
sufficiently in advance of the  Termination  Date to ensure that such payment is
received  and  clears  by such  date.  All  funds  received  in  payment  of the
Subscription Price shall be deposited at Capital Bank, N.A., Rockville, Maryland
("Capital Bank") in the Eagle Bancorp,  Inc. Escrow Account and, pending closing
of the Offering, shall be invested at the direction of the Company in short-term
obligations of the United States.

          The  address  to which  Subscription  Agreements  and  payment  of the
Subscription Price should be delivered is:

                  Koonce Securities, Inc. (Eagle Bancorp, Inc.)
                             6550 Rock Spring Drive
                            Bethesda, Maryland 20817
                 Telephone No.: (800) 368-2806 or (301) 897-9700

          If  the  aggregate   Subscription   Price  paid  by  a  subscriber  is
insufficient  to purchase  the number of Shares that such person  indicates  are
being  subscribed  for, or if a subscriber does not specify the number of Shares
to be  purchased,  then such  subscriber  will be deemed to have  subscribed  to
purchase Shares to the full extent of the payment tendered  (subject only to the
reduction to the extent  necessary to comply with any  regulatory  limitation or
conditions  imposed by the  Company in  connection  with the  Offering).  If the
Subscription Price paid by a subscriber exceeds the amount necessary to purchase
the number of Shares for which such  subscriber  has  indicated  an intention to
subscribe,  then such  subscriber  will be deemed to have subscribed to purchase
Shares to the full  extent  of the  excess  payment  tendered  (subject  only to
reduction to the extent  necessary to comply with any  regulatory  limitation or
conditions   imposed  by  the  Company  in   connection   with  the   Offering).
Notwithstanding  the  foregoing,  the Company  reserves the right to reject,  in
whole or in part,  any  subscription.  In  determining  whether  to  accept  any
subscription,  in whole or in part, the Directors may, in their sole discretion,
take into account the order in which subscriptions are received,  a subscriber's
potential  to do  business  with,  or to direct  customers  to, the Bank and the
Company's  desire to have a broad  distribution of stock  ownership,  as well as
legal or regulatory restrictions.

          THE FULL  SUBSCRIPTION  PRICE FOR THE  SHARES  SUBSCRIBED  FOR MUST BE
INCLUDED WITH THE APPLICATION.  FAILURE TO INCLUDE THE FULL  SUBSCRIPTION  PRICE
WITH THE APPLICATION MAY CAUSE THE COMPANY TO REJECT THE APPLICATION.

          The method of delivery of  Subscription  Agreements and payment of the
Subscription Price will be at the election and risk of persons  participating in
the Offering,  but if sent by mail,  it is  recommended  that such  Subscription
Agreements and payments be sent by registered  mail,  return receipt  requested,
and that a  sufficient  number  of days be  allowed  to ensure  delivery  to the
Company and clearance of payment prior to the Termination Date.

                                     - 10 -

<PAGE>


          All  questions   concerning  the   timeliness,   validity,   form  and
eligibility  of  Subscription  Agreements  received  will be  determined  by the
Company, whose determinations will be final and binding. The Company in its sole
discretion  may  waive any  defect or  irregularity,  or  permit  any  defect or
irregularity to be corrected within such time as it may determine, or reject the
purported subscription.  Subscription Agreements will not be deemed to have been
received or accepted until all  irregularities  have been waived or cured within
such time as the Company determines in its sole discretion.  Neither the Company
nor any  broker-dealer  utilized by the  Company  will be under any duty to give
notification  of any defect or irregularity in connection with the submission of
Subscription  Agreements  or  incur  any  liability  for  failure  to give  such
notification.

          Subscriptions  for Common  Stock which are  received by the Company or
its broker-dealer may not be revoked by subscribers.

ESCROW ACCOUNT

          In  connection  with the sale of the Shares by the Company,  an escrow
account  has  been  established  at  Capital  Bank,  N.A.,  One  Church  Street,
Rockville, Maryland 20850. All funds submitted with Subscription Agreements will
be forwarded to Capital Bank, for deposit in said escrow  account.  Subscription
funds may be invested  temporarily  in short-term  government  obligations.  The
funds  in the  escrow  account  will be held by  Capital  Bank  and  will not be
released until the acceptance by the Company of subscriptions  for not less than
the minimum number of Shares offered hereby.

          In the event that the  Offering is not  completed  because the minimum
number of Shares  are not  subscribed  for,  all  regulatory  approvals  are not
received,  or otherwise,  all subscription  funds will be returned to investors,
without interest or deduction.

ACCEPTANCE AND REFUNDING OF SUBSCRIPTIONS

          Subscription  Agreements are not binding on the Company until accepted
by the Company,  which reserves the right to reject, in whole or in part, in its
sole   discretion,   any   Subscription   Agreement   or,  if  the  Offering  is
oversubscribed,  to allot a lesser  number of Shares than the number for which a
person  has  subscribed.  In  determining  the number of Shares to allot to each
subscriber in the event the Offering is oversubscribed,  the Directors, in their
sole  discretion,  may take into  account the order in which  subscriptions  are
received,  a subscriber's  potential to do business with, or to direct customers
to, the Bank,  and the Company's  desire to have a broad  distribution  of stock
ownership, as well as legal or regulatory restrictions.  The Company will decide
which Subscription  Agreements to accept within three days after the Termination
Date, including extensions, if any.

          In the event the Company rejects all or a portion of any subscription,
the  escrow  agent  will  promptly  refund to the  subscriber  by check  sent by
first-class  mail all, or the appropriate  portion of, the amount submitted with
the Subscription Agreement, without interest or deduction. If for any reason the
Bank does not receive its Charter to open for business, or the minimum number of
Shares are not subscribed for by the Termination Date, including extensions,  if
any, all  subscription  funds will be promptly  refunded to subscribers  without
interest or deduction.

          In the event this  Offering is  completed  and the Bank  receives  its
Charter  to open for  business,  all  interest  earned  on funds  held in escrow
representing  accepted  subscriptions  will be retained by the Company.  In such
case,  subscribers  will forego interest they otherwise could have earned on the
funds for the period  during which their funds are held in escrow.  Once made, a
subscription is irrevocable by the subscriber during the period of the Offering,
including extensions, if any.

          After all refunds have been made, the escrow agent,  the Company,  the
Bank and their respective Directors,  Officers,  and agents will have no further
liabilities to subscribers. Certificates representing Shares duly subscribed and
paid for will be issued by the  Company  immediately  prior to the time the Bank
opens for business.


                                     - 11 -

<PAGE>

LIMITED MARKET FOR SHARES

          Except  for  Shares  held  by  the  Company's  Directors  and  certain
Officers,  the Shares will be freely transferable  immediately upon issuance and
will not be subject to any  transfer  restrictions.  Although  the Shares may be
bought or sold in the  over-the-counter  market through  securities  brokers and
dealers, it is not anticipated that an active trading market will develop in the
foreseeable future.  There can be no assurance that an  over-the-counter  market
will develop for the Common Stock.  It is not  anticipated  that the Shares will
initially be listed on any stock  exchange or be  designated  for trading on the
Nasdaq system,  although the Company currently intends to list the Shares on the
Nasdaq/NMS or another  exchange as soon as it meets the  requirements  therefor.
There can be no  assurance  however,  that the Company  will  qualify for, or if
qualified  for will  seek,  listing  on the  Nasdaq/NMS  or  another  securities
exchange.

REGULATORY LIMITATION

          The  purchase of five  percent (5%) or more of the Common Stock of the
Company may require the subscriber to provide  certain  information  to, or seek
the prior approval of, state and federal bank  regulators.  The Company will not
be  required to issue  shares of Common  Stock  pursuant to the  Offering to any
person  who, in the opinion of the  Company,  would be required to obtain  prior
clearance or approval from any state or federal bank regulatory authority to own
or control such shares if, at the  Termination  Date, such clearance or approval
has not been  obtained  or any  required  waiting  period has not  expired.  The
Company  reserves  the  right to  reduce  or  reject,  in whole or in part,  any
subscription  which would require prior  regulatory  application  or approval if
such has not been obtained prior to the Termination Date.

                                 USE OF PROCEEDS

          The proceeds to the Company from the sale of the Shares offered hereby
will be $8,000,000 if the minimum number of Shares are sold,  $12,000,000 if the
maximum number of Shares offered hereby are sold, and  $13,800,000 if all Shares
subject  to the  Oversubscription  Allotment  are  sold,  in  each  case  before
deducting expenses of the Offering, which are estimated at $110,000.

          The Company will  initially use  $7,000,000 of the net proceeds of the
Offering  to  purchase  all  of  the  then-issued  common  stock  of  the  Bank.
Additionally,  the Company  will pay all of the  organizational  expenses of the
Company  and the Bank  from the  proceeds  of the  Offering,  including  through
repayment  of funds  advanced  to the  Company by the  organizers.  If more than
$8,000,000 of net proceeds is raised in the Offering, the Company may use all or
a portion of the  additional  proceeds for purchase of more shares of the Bank's
Common Stock (or otherwise  contribute such funds to the Bank) or may retain all
or a portion of the  additional  proceeds in the  Company for general  corporate
purposes,  including  permitting  the Company to engage in  business  activities
permitted for bank holding companies,  and to meet future accounting,  legal and
regulatory  expenses  (See  "SUPERVISION  AND  REGULATION").  There  can  be  no
assurance  that the Company will not be required to contribute to the capital of
the Bank  more than the  amount  currently  anticipated  as a  condition  to the
approval of the Bank's charter or the establishment of its planned branches.

          The Bank will apply the  proceeds of the sale of its capital  stock to
the Company to furnish and equip the Bank's  premises and the Company's  offices
(at an estimated cost of $833,000), to provide working capital for expansion, to
fund  lending  activities  and for general  corporate  purposes  (including  the
investment of all or a portion of the working capital funds in  interest-bearing
certificates  of  deposit  or other  deposits  with  the Bank or other  types of
securities, such as government bonds).

          Set forth below is a tabular  presentation  reflecting the anticipated
allocation  of the net  proceeds  of the  Offering,  after  deducting  estimated
expenses of the Offering of  $110,000.  The  presentation  assumes the sale of a
maximum of  1,200,000  Shares,  that no Shares  subject to the  Oversubscription
Allotment are sold,  the payment of all  pre-opening  and  organizational  costs
(other than Bank premises and equipment expense) by the Company, and

                                     - 12 -

<PAGE>


in the case of the maximum number of Shares being sold, the  contribution of all
proceeds  in  excess  of  $8,000,000  to the  Bank.  Pre-opening  expenses  will
initially have been funded by organizer advances,  which will be repaid from the
proceeds of this Offering.  The  presentation  assumes the direct payment of all
such expenses (other than Bank premises and equipment expense) by the Company.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                            Minimum                                       Maximum(1)

                                                  Amount        % of Proceeds(1)                  Amount         % of Proceeds(1)
                                            ---------------------------------------        -----------------------------------------

THE COMPANY:

<S>                                              <C>                         <C>                  <C>                         <C> 
  Net Proceeds                                   $  7,890,000                100%                 $ 11,890,000                100%

  Purchase of Stock of Bank/
    Capital Contributions                           7,000,000              88.72%                   10,890,000              91.59%

  Salary(2)                                           230,000               2.92%                      230,000               1.93%

  Other pre-opening expense(3)                         70,000               0.89%                       70,000               0.59%

  Interest on organizer advances(4)                    23,233               0.29%                       23,233               0.20%

  Working Capital                                     566,767               7.18%                      676,767               5.69%

THE BANK

  Proceeds of Capital Contributions
    By Company                                      7,000,000              88.72%                   10,890,000              91.59%

  Premises and equipment expense(5)                   833,000              10.56%                      833,000               7.01%

  Working Capital                                   6,167,000              78.16%                   10,057,000              84.58%
</TABLE>


(1)  Represents,  in case of the  Bank,  percentage  of total  net  proceeds  of
     Offering.
(2)  Represents pre-opening salary and benefits for President and Executive Vice
     President of Bank.
(3)  Includes  application  costs and legal expense not related to the Offering,
     and office expense for pre-opening period.
(4)  Represents  interest at rate of 8.5% on  aggregate of $410,000 in organizer
     advances for a period of eight months.
(5)  Represents  costs  incurred  in  outfitting  main  offices  of Bank and two
     branches.

                             BUSINESS OF THE COMPANY

          The Company's application to become a bank holding company is expected
to be filed with the  Federal  Reserve  Board in the near  future.  The  Company
expects to receive approval from the Federal Reserve Board following preliminary
approval of the Charter by the Department of Financial  Regulation,  although no
assurances  can be given as to when, or if, such approval will be received,  and
if received, whether it will be received without conditions.

          The  principal  asset of the Company will be its  investment in all of
the issued and outstanding  capital stock of the Bank.  Future operations of the
Company have not been  decided  upon at this time but will be closely  evaluated
and may be predicated on the availability of additional  business  opportunities
and/or  acquisitions to be financed by Bank dividends,  borrowings,  the sale of
additional  Common Stock or preferred  stock of the Company,  or any combination
thereof.

          With the prior  approval of the Federal  Reserve Board, a bank holding
company may engage in non-banking  activities closely related to the business of
banking. With such approval the Company could engage in the making and servicing
of loans,  which would be made by companies engaged in consumer finance,  credit
card issuance,  making of mortgages,  and  commercial  financing.  Further,  the
Federal  Reserve  Board allows bank  holding  companies  to give  investment  or
financial advice,  lease personal or real property,  provide data processing and
courier services,  invest in Small Business Investment Companies,  among others.
If a  favorable  opportunity  is  presented,  the Company  could  engage in such
activities,  or other activities which the Federal Reserve Board currently or in
the future may consider  closely related to banking,  with the prior approval of
the Federal Reserve Board.

                                     - 13 -

<PAGE>


          Although the Company has not determined the nature of any  non-banking
activities it may engage in, and has no agreements or understandings pursuant to
which  it  would  engage  in  any  such  non-banking  activities,   the  Company
anticipates  that it will explore the feasibility of engaging in venture capital
finance and mortgage banking activities, either directly or through subsidiaries
established  for the purpose.  There can be no  assurance  that the Company will
conduct  such  activities,  or if it  does,  that any  such  activities  will be
profitable or successful for the Company.

          Market  Experience.  While the Company  and the Bank are newly  formed
enterprises  without  existing   operations,   the  Company  believes  that  the
composition of its and the Bank's boards of directors will give them substantial
ability to successfully  establish the Bank's business and compete in the highly
competitive  and heavily banked  Montgomery  County market.  Until  departing to
become part of the  organizing  group,  a majority of the Bank's  directors were
members  of the  Board  of  Directors  of one or more  commercial  banks  in the
Washington,  D.C.  metropolitan area. The proposed President and Chief Executive
Officer and Executive Vice President - Chief Operating  Officer of the Bank each
has  over 25  years of  banking  and  finance  related  experience.  Each of the
organizers is a successful  member of the business  community in the  Montgomery
County,  Maryland and surrounding market areas, and has significant business and
personal relationships within that area. (See "MANAGEMENT").

                     PRO FORMA CAPITALIZATION OF THE COMPANY

          The   following   table   sets   forth  the  pro  forma   consolidated
capitalization  of the Company at November 30, 1997,  after giving effect to the
receipt of the estimated  net proceeds of (i) the sale of the minimum  number of
Shares  required to be sold in the Offering;  (ii) the sale of all of the Shares
offered hereby, other than Shares subject to the Oversubscription Allotment; and
(iii) pre-opening  expenses (other than premises and equipment  expenses for the
Bank,  but including  expenses of the Offering) of $433,000,  and based upon the
assumptions set forth herein.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                                            November 30, 1997
                                                       -----------------------------------------------------------

                                                             Pro Forma 1                     Pro Forma 2(2)
                                                       -----------------------         ---------------------------
<S>                    <C>                                     <C>                                 <C>        
Stockholders' equity:

  Common  Stock,  $.01  par  value;   shares   
   authorized,   5,000,000;   shares
   outstanding, 800,000 pro forma 1;
   1,200,000 pro forma 2                                       $     8,000                         $    12,000

  Preferred  Stock,  $.01  par  value;  shares  
   authorized,   1,000,000;  shares
   outstanding, 0 pro forma 1; 0 pro
   forma 2                                                               0                                   0

  Capital surplus                                                7,559,000                          11,555,000
                                                       -----------------------         ---------------------------

Total stockholders' equity                                      $7,567,000                         $11,567,000
                                                       =======================         ===========================

Book value per share of common stock                            $     9.46                         $      9.63
                                                       =======================         ===========================
</TABLE>

(1)       Book value per share of common  stock is  determined  by dividing  the
          Company's pro forma total  consolidated  equities at November 30, 1997
          by 800,000 and 1,200,000 shares issued and outstanding, respectively.

(2)       If all Shares subject to the Oversubscription Allotment were sold, the
          total  stockholders'  equity and book value per share of common  stock
          would be $13,367,000 and $9.69, respectively.



                                     - 14 -

<PAGE>



                              BUSINESS OF THE BANK

          As of the date of this Prospectus, the Bank has not been authorized to
conduct  banking  business  and has not  engaged  in banking  business  or other
operational activities. The issuance of a Charter by the Department of Financial
Regulation  and approval of deposit  insurance  by FDIC will be  dependent  upon
compliance  with certain  conditions and  procedures,  including the sale of the
Bank's stock to the Company, the completion of the Bank's premises, the purchase
of  certain  fidelity  and  other  insurance,  the  hiring  of its staff and the
adoption of certain operating  procedures and policies.  Upon completion of this
Offering and issuance of the Charter by the Department of Financial  Regulation,
and subject to receipt of all required regulatory approvals,  the Bank will open
for business  with its main office in Bethesda,  Maryland and will engage in the
business of  commercial  banking.  It is currently  intended  that the Bank will
establish two  branches,  in Rockville,  Maryland and Silver  Spring,  Maryland,
within  two  months  of  opening.  The Bank will  accept  checking  and  savings
deposits, offer a full range of commercial, consumer/installment and real estate
loans and provide customary banking services.

          The Bank will seek to operate as a community  bank  alternative to the
superregional financial institutions which dominate its primary market area. The
cornerstone of the Bank's philosophy will be to provide  superior,  personalized
service to its customers.  The Bank will seek to focus on relationship  banking,
providing  each customer with a number of services,  familiarizing  itself with,
and addressing itself to, customer needs in a proactive, personalized fashion.

PRIMARY SERVICE AREA AND PROPOSED SERVICES

Bank Location and Market Area

          The Bank's  proposed main office and the  headquarters  of the Company
and the Bank will be located in Bethesda,  Maryland. While an available location
has been  identified  for the main office,  no lease has been entered into as of
the date hereof.  It is currently  anticipated that two branches,  in Rockville,
Maryland and Silver Spring,  Maryland,  will be established within two months of
the opening of the Bank. As of this date, no leases have been entered into.

          The primary service area of the Bank is Montgomery  County,  Maryland,
with a secondary market area in the Washington D.C. RMA, particularly Washington
D.C., Prince George's County in Maryland,  and Arlington and Fairfax Counties in
Virginia. The Washington,  D.C. area attracts a substantial federal workforce as
well as supporting a variety of support industries such as attorneys, lobbyists,
government  contractors,  real  estate  developers  and  investors,   non-profit
organizations, tourism and consultants.

          Household  income for  Montgomery  County in 1996 was  established  at
$106,950  compared to a national  average for similar  counties of $67,090.  Per
capita income of $38,400 similarly exceeded the national average of $24,730.

          Montgomery   County,   with  a  total  population  of  about  840,000,
represents the second largest suburban employment center in the Washington, D.C.
area, with  approximately  470,000 jobs in 1996, and an unemployment  rate below
the national average.  While government employment provides a significant number
of jobs,  over 80% of the jobs in the county involve private  employers.  Almost
half of the county's  employment  is located in the Bethesda,  Rockville,  North
Bethesda  area in which the Bank will be  located.  Much of the job  growth  and
development is located in that area and in the nearby I-270 technology corridor.

Description of Services

          The Bank will offer full commercial  banking  services to its business
and  professional  clients as well as  complete  consumer  banking  services  to
individuals  living and/or  working in the service area. The Bank will primarily
emphasize providing commercial banking services to sole  proprietorships,  small
and medium-sized

                                     - 15 -

<PAGE>


businesses,   partnerships,    corporations,    non-profit   organizations   and
associations,  and investors  living and working in and near the Bank's  primary
service  area.  A full  range of retail  banking  services  will be  offered  to
accommodate  the  individual  needs of both  corporate  customers as well as the
community the Bank will serve.

          The Bank will seek to develop a loan portfolio consisting primarily of
business loans with variable rates and/or short  maturities  where the cash flow
of the  borrower  is the  principal  source  of debt  service  with a  secondary
emphasis on  collateral.  Real estate  loans will  generally  be for  commercial
purposes and will be  structured  using  variable  rates and/or fixed rates with
short  (three  to five  year)  maturities.  Consumer  loans  will be made on the
traditional installment basis for a variety of purposes.

          All new business customers will be screened to determine,  in advance,
their credit qualifications and history. Employing this practice will permit the
bank to respond quickly to credit requests as they arise.

          In  general,  the  Bank  anticipates  offering  the  following  credit
          services:

          1)   Commercial loans for business purposes including working capital,
               equipment purchases, real estate, lines of credit, and government
               contract  financing.  Asset based lending and accounts receivable
               financing will also be available on a selective basis.

          2)   Real estate loans,  including  construction  loan financing,  for
               business and investment purposes.

          3)   Traditional general purpose consumer  installment loans including
               automobile and personal loans.  In addition,  the Bank will offer
               personal lines of credit.

          4)   Credit card services, to be offered through an outside vendor.

          The direct lending activities in which the Bank expects to engage each
carries  the  risk  that  the  borrowers  will be  unable  to  perform  on their
obligations.  As such,  interest rate policies of the Federal  Reserve Board and
general  economic  conditions,  nationally and in the Bank's primary market area
will have a  significant  impact on the  Bank's  and the  Company's  results  of
operations.  To the extent that economic  conditions  deteriorate,  business and
individual  borrowers may be less able to meet their  obligations to the Bank in
full, in a timely manner, resulting in decreased earnings or losses to the Bank.
To the extent the Bank makes fixed rate  loans,  general  increases  in interest
rates will tend to reduce the Bank's spread as the interest  rates the Bank must
pay for deposits increase while interest income is flat. Economic conditions and
interest  rates may also  adversely  affect  the value of  property  pledged  as
security for loans.

          Deposit services will include business and personal checking accounts,
NOW accounts,  and a tiered  savings/Money  Market Account basing the payment of
interest on balances on deposit.  Certificates of Deposits will be offered using
a tiered rate  structure  and various  maturities.  The  acceptance  of brokered
deposits is not a part of the current  strategy.  A complete IRA program will be
available.

          Other  services for  business  accounts  will include cash  management
services such as PC banking sweep accounts, repurchase agreements, lock box, and
account  reconciliation,  credit  card  depository,  safety  deposit  boxes  and
Automated Clearing House origination. In addition, a daily messenger service and
a microcomputer link to the Bank will be developed subject to sufficient demand.
After hours depositories and ATM service will be available.

SOURCE OF BUSINESS

          Management believes that the market segments targeted, small to medium
sized  businesses and the consumer base of the Bank's market area, are demanding
the  convenience  and  personal  service that a smaller,  independent  financial
institution  can offer.  It will be those  themes of  convenience  and  personal
service that will form the basis for the Bank's business development strategies.
The Bank first plans to provide services from a strategically located

                                                        - 15 -

<PAGE>


main office in Bethesda,  Maryland, followed by branches in adjacent areas which
it believes will complement the needs of the Bank's customers,  and will provide
prospects for additional  growth and expansion.  Subject to obtaining  necessary
regulatory approvals, capital adequacy, the identification of appropriate sites,
then current business demand and other factors,  the Company presently plans for
the Bank to  establish  two branch  offices  within  two  months of opening  for
business.  There can be no assurance  that the Bank will establish such branches
or that they will be profitable.

          The Bank  expects  to  capitalize  upon  the  extensive  business  and
personal contacts and  relationships of its Directors and Executive  Officers to
establish the Bank's  initial  customer  base. To introduce new customers to the
Bank, early reliance will be on Directors' referrals, officer-originated calling
programs and customer and shareholder referrals.

          Management  intends  to  build  a  staff  of  competent,  professional
associates to provide the Bank's  customers  with bankers  sensitive to customer
needs and experienced in providing a level of personal and professional  service
expected by the business community.

ASSET MANAGEMENT

          Consistent  with the  objective  of the Bank to serve the needs of the
business  community,  assets will be  concentrated  in commercial and commercial
real estate loans.  To be consistent  with the  requirements  of prudent banking
practices,  adequate assets will be invested in high grade securities to provide
liquidity  and  safety.  Loans  will be  targeted  at 80% or  less  of  deposits
(excluding repurchase agreements),  and structured generally with variable rates
and/or fixed rates with short maturities.  Investment  securities will primarily
be  United  States   treasury   securities  and  United  States   government  or
"quasi-government"  agencies, and tax exempt municipal securities with a minimum
rating of A from an established rating agency.

          The risk of nonpayment  (or deferred  payment) of loans is inherent in
commercial  banking.  The  Bank's  marketing  focus  on  small  to  medium-sized
businesses  may result in the  assumption  by the Bank of certain  lending risks
that are different from those attendant to loans to larger companies. Management
of the Bank will carefully  evaluate all loan  applications  and will attempt to
minimize its credit risk exposure by use of thorough loan application,  approval
and  monitoring  procedures;  however,  there  can  be no  assurance  that  such
procedures can significantly reduce such lending risks.

COMPETITION

          Deregulation   of   financial   institutions   and   holding   company
acquisitions of banks across state lines has resulted in widespread, fundamental
changes  in the  financial  services  industry.  This  transformation,  although
occurring  nationwide,  is particularly intense in the greater Washington,  D.C.
metropolitan  area because of the changes in the area's  economic base in recent
years and changing state laws authorizing interstate mergers and acquisitions of
banks, and the interstate establishment or acquisition of branches.

          In Montgomery County, Maryland, competition is exceptionally keen from
large banking institutions  headquartered outside of Maryland. In addition,  the
Bank will compete with other  community  banks,  savings and loan  associations,
credit  unions,  mortgage  companies,  finance  companies  and others  providing
financial  services.  Among the advantages that many of these  institutions have
over the Bank are their abilities to finance  extensive  advertising  campaigns,
maintain extensive branch networks and technology  investments,  and to directly
offer certain services, such as international banking and trust services,  which
will not be offered directly by the Bank. Further, the greater capitalization of
the larger institutions allows for substantially  higher lending limits than the
Bank. Certain of these competitors have other advantages,  such as tax exemption
in the case of credit  unions,  and lesser  regulation  in the case of  mortgage
companies and finance companies.

EMPLOYEES

                                     - 17 -

<PAGE>


          Management   anticipates   that  the  Bank   will   initially   employ
approximately  twenty four  persons on a full time basis,  four of which will be
senior officers of the Bank, and one person on a part time basis. Except for the
Chairman of the Board of Directors and the  President of the Company,  it is not
anticipated  that the  Company  (as  distinguished  from the Bank) will have any
employees or officers during the first year of operations.

PREMISES

          The Bank has not yet  selected a  location  for its main  office,  but
intends  to  lease  space  in  Bethesda,  Maryland,  on or in the  vicinity  of,
Wisconsin Avenue.

                           SUPERVISION AND REGULATION

THE COMPANY

          The Company will be a bank holding company  registered  under the Bank
Holding  Company  Act of 1956,  as  amended,  (the "Act") and will be subject to
supervision by the Federal Reserve Board. As a bank holding company, the Company
will be  required to file with the Federal  Reserve  Board an annual  report and
such other  additional  information  as the  Federal  Reserve  Board may require
pursuant to the Act. The Federal Reserve Board may also make examinations of the
Company and each of its subsidiaries.

          The Act  requires  approval of the Federal  Reserve  Board for,  among
other things,  the  acquisition by a proposed bank holding company of control of
more than five  percent  (5%) of the voting  shares,  or  substantially  all the
assets,  of any bank or the merger or  consolidation  by a bank holding  company
with  another  bank  holding  company.   The  Act  also  generally  permits  the
acquisition by a bank holding company of control or substantially all the assets
of any bank  located in a state  other  than the home state of the bank  holding
company,  except where the bank has not been in existence for the minimum period
of time  required  by state law,  but if the bank is at least 5 years  old,  the
Federal Reserve Board may approve the acquisition.

          With certain limited exceptions,  a bank holding company is prohibited
from  acquiring  control of any voting shares of any company which is not a bank
or bank holding company and from engaging directly or indirectly in any activity
other than banking or managing or controlling banks or furnishing services to or
performing service for its authorized subsidiaries.  A bank holding company may,
however,  engage in or  acquire  an  interest  in, a  company  that  engages  in
activities which the Federal Reserve Board has determined by order or regulation
to be so closely  related to banking or managing or  controlling  banks as to be
properly incident thereto.  In making such a determination,  the Federal Reserve
Board is required to consider  whether the  performance  of such  activities can
reasonably be expected to produce  benefits to the public,  such as convenience,
increased  competition or gains in efficiency,  which outweigh  possible adverse
effects,  such  as  undue  concentration  of  resources,   decreased  or  unfair
competition,  conflicts of interest or unsound  banking  practices.  The Federal
Reserve Board is also empowered to differentiate between activities commenced de
novo and  activities  commenced by the  acquisition,  in whole or in part,  of a
going  concern.  Some of the  activities  that the  Federal  Reserve  Board  has
determined  by  regulation to be closely  related to banking  include  making or
servicing  loans,  performing  certain  data  processing  services,  acting as a
fiduciary  or  investment  or  financial  advisor,  and  making  investments  in
corporations or projects designed primarily to promote community welfare.

          Subsidiary  banks of a bank  holding  company  are  subject to certain
restrictions  imposed by the Federal  Reserve Act on any extensions of credit to
the bank holding company or any of its subsidiaries, or investments in the stock
or other  securities  thereof,  and on the taking of such stock or securities as
collateral  for  loans to any  borrower.  Further,  a  holding  company  and any
subsidiary bank are prohibited  from engaging in certain tie-in  arrangements in
connection  with the  extension  of  credit.  A  subsidiary  bank may not extend
credit,  lease or sell  property,  or furnish any  services,  or fix or vary the
consideration  for any of the foregoing on the condition  that: (i) the customer
obtain or provide some additional  credit,  property or services from or to such
bank other than a loan,  discount,  deposit or trust service;  (ii) the customer
obtain or provide some additional credit, property or service from

                                     - 18 -

<PAGE>

or to the Company or any other subsidiary of the Company;  or (iii) the customer
not obtain some other credit,  property or service from competitors,  except for
reasonable requirements to assure the soundness of credit extended.

THE BANK

          The Bank, as a Maryland chartered commercial bank which is a member of
the Federal  Reserve  System (a "state member bank") and whose  accounts will be
insured by the Bank Insurance Fund of the FDIC up to the maximum legal limits of
the FDIC, will be subject to regulation,  supervision and regular examination by
the Department of Financial  Institutions  and the Federal  Reserve  Board.  The
regulations  of  these  various  agencies  govern  most  aspects  of the  Bank's
business,  including  required  reserves against deposits,  loans,  investments,
mergers and acquisitions, borrowing, dividends and location and number of branch
offices.  The laws  and  regulations  governing  the Bank  generally  have  been
promulgated to protect  depositors and the deposit  insurance funds, and not for
the purpose of protecting stockholders.

          Competition among commercial banks, savings and loan associations, and
credit unions has increased  following  enactment of  legislation  which greatly
expanded the ability of banks and bank holding companies to engage in interstate
banking or acquisition activities. As a result of federal and state legislation,
banks in the  Washington  D.C./Maryland/Virginia  area can,  subject  to limited
restrictions,  acquire or merge with a bank in another of the jurisdictions, and
can branch de novo in any of the  jurisdictions.  Additionally,  legislation has
been proposed which may result in non-banking  companies being authorized to own
banks, which could result in companies with resources substantially in excess of
the Company's entering into competition with the Company and the Bank.

          Banking is a business which depends on interest rate differentials. In
general, the differences between the interest paid by a bank on its deposits and
its other  borrowings  and the interest  received by a bank on loans extended to
its customers and  securities  held in its investment  portfolio  constitute the
major portion of the bank's earnings.  Thus, the earnings and growth of the Bank
will be 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 Federal Reserve Board,  which regulates the
supply of money through  various means  including open market dealings in United
States government securities.  The nature and timing of changes in such policies
and their impact on the Bank cannot be predicted.

          Branching and Interstate  Banking.  The federal  banking  agencies are
authorized to approve  interstate  bank merger  transactions  without  regard to
whether such transaction is prohibited by the law of any state,  unless the home
state of one of the banks has opted out of the interstate bank merger provisions
of the  Riegle-Neal  Interstate  Banking and  Branching  Efficiency  Act of 1994
(the"Riegle-Neal  Act") by  adopting  a law after the date of  enactment  of the
Riegle-Neal  Act  and  prior  to June  1,  1997  which  applies  equally  to all
out-of-state  banks  and  expressly  prohibits  merger  transactions   involving
out-of-state  banks.  Interstate  acquisitions of branches are permitted only if
the law of the state in which the branch is located  permits such  acquisitions.
Such  interstate  bank mergers and branch  acquisitions  are also subject to the
nationwide and statewide insured deposit concentration  limitations described in
the Riegle-Neal Act.

          The Riegle-Neal Act authorizes the federal banking agencies to approve
interstate  branching  de novo by  national  and  state  banks in  states  which
specifically  allow for such branching.  The District of Columbia,  Maryland and
Virginia have all enacted laws which permit interstate acquisitions of banks and
bank branches and permit out-of-state banks to establish de novo branches.

          Capital  Adequacy  Guidelines.  The Federal Reserve Board and the FDIC
have  adopted  risk based  capital  adequacy  guidelines  pursuant to which they
assess the  adequacy  of capital in  examining  and  supervising  banks and bank
holding  companies and in analyzing  bank  regulatory  applications.  Risk-based
capital  requirements  determine  the  adequacy  of  capital  based  on the risk
inherent in various classes of assets and off-balance sheet items.


                                     - 19 -

<PAGE>


          State  member  banks are  expected  to meet a  minimum  ratio of total
qualifying  capital (the sum of core capital (Tier 1) and supplementary  capital
(Tier  2)) to risk  weighted  assets of 8%. At least  half of this  amount  (4%)
should be in the form of core capital.  These requirements apply to the Bank and
will apply to the Company (a bank holding  company)  once its total assets equal
$150,000,000  or more, it engages in certain highly  leveraged  activities or it
has publicly held debt securities.

          Tier 1 Capital generally  consists of the sum of common  stockholders'
equity  and  perpetual  preferred  stock  (subject  in the case of the latter to
limitations on the kind and amount of such stock which may be included as Tier 1
Capital),  less goodwill,  without adjustment for changes in the market value of
securities classified as "available for sale" in accordance with FAS 115. Tier 2
Capital  consists  of  the  following:  hybrid  capital  instruments;  perpetual
preferred  stock  which  is not  otherwise  eligible  to be  included  as Tier 1
Capital;  term  subordinated  debt and  intermediate-term  preferred stock; and,
subject to limitations,  general allowances for loan losses. Assets are adjusted
under  the   risk-based   guidelines  to  take  into  account   different   risk
characteristics,  with the  categories  ranging from 0% (requiring no risk-based
capital)  for  assets  such as cash,  to 100% for the bulk of  assets  which are
typically  held  by a  bank  holding  company,  including  certain  multi-family
residential  and  commercial  real estate loans,  commercial  business loans and
consumer  loans.  Residential  first  mortgage  loans  on  one  to  four  family
residential  real  estate and certain  seasoned  multi-family  residential  real
estate loans, which are not 90 days or more past-due or non-performing and which
have been made in accordance with prudent underwriting  standards are assigned a
50%  level  in  the  risk-  weighing  system,  as are  certain  privately-issued
mortgage-backed  securities  representing  indirect  ownership  of  such  loans.
Off-balance  sheet items also are  adjusted to take into  account  certain  risk
characteristics.

          In  addition  to the  risk-based  capital  requirements,  the  Federal
Reserve  Board has  established  a minimum 3.0%  Leverage  Capital Ratio (Tier 1
Capital to total adjusted assets)  requirement for the most highly-rated  banks,
with an  additional  cushion  of at least 100 to 200 basis  points for all other
banks,  which effectively  increases the minimum Leverage Capital Ratio for such
other banks to 4.0% - 5.0% or more. The  highest-rated  banks are those that are
not  anticipating or experiencing  significant  growth and have well diversified
risk,  including no undue interest rate risk exposure,  excellent asset quality,
high  liquidity,  good  earnings and, in general,  those which are  considered a
strong  banking  organization.  A bank  having  less than the  minimum  Leverage
Capital Ratio requirement shall, within 60 days of the date as of which it fails
to comply with such  requirement,  submit a reasonable plan describing the means
and timing by which the bank shall  achieve its minimum  Leverage  Capital Ratio
requirement.  A bank which fails to file such plan is deemed to be  operating in
an unsafe and unsound manner,  and could subject the bank to a  cease-and-desist
order. Any insured depository  institution with a Leverage Capital Ratio that is
less  than  2.0% is deemed to be  operating  in an unsafe or  unsound  condition
pursuant to Section 8(a) of the FDIA and is subject to potential  termination of
deposit  insurance.  However,  such an  institution  will not be  subject  to an
enforcement  proceeding  solely on  account  of its  capital  ratios,  if it has
entered  into and is in  compliance  with a written  agreement  to increase  its
Leverage Capital Ratio and to take such other action as may be necessary for the
institution to be operated in a safe and sound manner.  The capital  regulations
also provide, among other things, for the issuance of a capital directive, which
is a final order issued to a bank that fails to maintain  minimum  capital or to
restore its capital to the minimum capital  requirement  within a specified time
period.   Such   directive  is  enforceable  in  the  same  manner  as  a  final
cease-and-desist order.

          Prompt  Corrective  Action.  Under  Section 38 of the Federal  Deposit
Insurance Act (the "FDIA"),  as added by the FDICIA, each federal banking agency
is required to implement a system of prompt  corrective  action for institutions
which it regulates. The federal banking agencies have promulgated  substantially
similar  regulations  to  implement  the  system  of  prompt  corrective  action
established by Section 38 of the FDIA.  Under the  regulations,  a bank shall be
deemed to be: (i) "well  capitalized" if it has a Total Risk Based Capital Ratio
of 10.0% or more, a Tier 1 Risk Based  Capital Ratio of 6.0% or more, a Leverage
Capital Ratio of 5.0% or more and is not subject to any written capital order or
directive;  (ii)  "adequately  capitalized" if it has a Total Risk Based Capital
Ratio of 8.0% or more, a Tier 1 Risk Based  Capital  Ratio of 4.0% or more and a
Tier 1 Leverage Capital Ratio of 4.0% or more (3.0% under certain circumstances)
and does not meet the definition of "well capitalized;" (iii) "undercapitalized"
if it has a Total Risk Based Capital Ratio that is less than 8.0%, a Tier 1 Risk
based Capital Ratio that is less than

                                     - 20 -

<PAGE>


4.0% or a Leverage  Capital  Ratio that is less than 4.0%  (3.0%  under  certain
circumstances);  (iv)  "significantly  undercapitalized"  if it has a Total Risk
Based  Capital  Ratio that is less than 6.0%, a Tier 1 Risk Based  Capital Ratio
that is less than 3.0% or a Leverage  Capital Ratio that is less than 3.0%;  and
(v) "critically  undercapitalized" if it has a ratio of tangible equity to total
assets that is equal to or less than 2.0%.

          An institution  generally must file a written capital restoration plan
which meets specified  requirements  with an appropriate  federal banking agency
within 45 days of the date the institution  receives notice or is deemed to have
notice that it is undercapitalized, significantly undercapitalized or critically
undercapitalized.  A federal  banking agency must provide the  institution  with
written  notice of  approval  or  disapproval  within 60 days after  receiving a
capital restoration plan, subject to extensions by the applicable agency.

          An institution which is required to submit a capital  restoration plan
must  concurrently  submit a performance  guaranty by each company that controls
the  institution.  Such guaranty shall be limited to the lesser of (i) an amount
equal to 5.0% of the institution's  total assets at the time the institution was
notified  or  deemed to have  notice  that it was  undercapitalized  or (ii) the
amount  necessary at such time to restore the relevant  capital  measures of the
institution  to the levels  required for the  institution  to be  classified  as
adequately  capitalized.  Such a guaranty shall expire after the federal banking
agency notifies the institution that it has remained adequately  capitalized for
each of four consecutive calendar quarters. An institution which fails to submit
a written capital  restoration plan within the requisite  period,  including any
required performance  guaranty,  or fails in any material respect to implement a
capital  restoration plan, shall be subject to the restrictions in Section 38 of
the FDIA which are applicable to significantly undercapitalized institutions.

          A  "critically  undercapitalized  institution"  is  to  be  placed  in
conservatorship  or  receivership  within  90  days  unless  the  FDIC  formally
determines  that  forbearance  from such action would better protect the deposit
insurance fund. Unless the FDIC or other appropriate  federal banking regulatory
agency makes specific  further  findings and certifies  that the  institution is
viable and is not  expected to fail,  an  institution  that  remains  critically
undercapitalized on average during the fourth calendar quarter after the date it
becomes critically undercapitalized must be placed in receivership.  The general
rule is that the FDIC will be appointed as receiver  within 90 days after a bank
becomes critically  undercapitalized unless extremely good cause is shown and an
extension  is agreed to by the federal  regulators.  In  general,  good cause is
defined  as  capital  which has been  raised  and is  imminently  available  for
infusion into the Bank except for certain technical requirements which may delay
the infusion for a period of time beyond the 90 day time period.

          Immediately  upon  becoming  undercapitalized,  an  institution  shall
become subject to the  provisions of Section 38 of the FDIA,  which (i) restrict
payment of capital  distributions  and  management  fees;  (ii) require that the
appropriate  federal banking agency monitor the condition of the institution and
its  efforts to restore  its  capital;  (iii)  require  submission  of a capital
restoration plan; (iv) restrict the growth of the institution's  assets; and (v)
require prior approval of certain expansion  proposals.  The appropriate federal
banking agency for an  undercapitalized  institution also may take any number of
discretionary  supervisory  actions if the agency  determines  that any of these
actions is  necessary to resolve the  problems of the  institution  at the least
possible  long-term cost to the deposit insurance fund, subject in certain cases
to  specified  procedures.  These  discretionary  supervisory  actions  include:
requiring the institution to raise additional capital;  restricting transactions
with  affiliates;  requiring  divestiture of the  institution or the sale of the
institution to a willing  purchaser;  and any other supervisory  action that the
agency  deems  appropriate.   These  and  additional  mandatory  and  permissive
supervisory actions may be taken with respect to significantly  undercapitalized
and critically undercapitalized institutions.

          Additionally,  under Section  11(c)(5) of the FDIA, a  conservator  or
receiver  may  be  appointed  for an  institution  where:  (i) an  institution's
obligations  exceed its assets;  (ii) there is  substantial  dissipation  of the
institution's  assets or  earnings  as a result of any  violation  of law or any
unsafe or unsound  practice;  (iii) the  institution  is in an unsafe or unsound
condition;  (iv) there is a willful violation of a  cease-and-desist  order; (v)
the  institution  is unable to pay its  obligations  in the  ordinary  course of
business;  (vi) losses or threatened  losses deplete all or substantially all of
an  institution's  capital,  and there is no  reasonable  prospect  of  becoming
"adequately

                                     - 21 -

<PAGE>


capitalized"  without assistance;  (vii) there is any violation of law or unsafe
or  unsound  practice  or  condition  that is  likely  to  cause  insolvency  or
substantial  dissipation  of  assets  or  earnings,   weaken  the  institution's
condition,  or otherwise  seriously prejudice the interests of depositors or the
insurance fund; (viii) an institution ceases to be insured; (ix) the institution
is  undercapitalized  and  has  no  reasonable  prospect  that  it  will  become
adequately capitalized,  fails to become adequately capitalized when required to
do so, or fails to submit or materially implement a capital restoration plan; or
(x)  the   institution   is   critically   undercapitalized   or  otherwise  has
substantially insufficient capital.

          Regulatory   Enforcement   Authority.   Federal   banking  law  grants
substantial  enforcement powers to federal banking regulators.  This enforcement
authority  includes,  among  other  things,  the  ability to assess  civil money
penalties,   to  issue  cease-and-desist  or  removal  orders  and  to  initiate
injunctive  actions against  banking  organizations  and  institution-affiliated
parties.  In general,  these enforcement actions may be initiated for violations
of laws and  regulations  and  unsafe or  unsound  practices.  Other  actions or
inactions may provide the basis for enforcement action,  including misleading or
untimely reports filed with regulatory authorities.

                                   MANAGEMENT

          The following  table sets forth  certain  information  concerning  the
Directors and Officers of the Company,  including  the number and  percentage of
Shares expected to be acquired in this Offering by each individual (directly and
indirectly),  all  Directors  and  Officers of the  Company as a group,  and all
Directors and Officers of the Company and the Bank as a group.


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                         % of Outstanding Shares

               Name          Age                    Position                     Number of             Minimum            Maximum(1)
                                                                                   Shares

The Company:

<S>                           <C>                                               <C>                      <C>               <C>   
  Leonard L. Abel             71              Chairman of Board of               40,000(2)               5%                5%(2)(4)
                                            Company; Director of Bank

  Dudley C. Dworken           48          Director of Company and Bank           25,000                  3.13%             2.08%

  Eugene F. Ford, Sr.(3)      68               Director of Company               25,000                  3.13%             2.08%

  William A. Koier            78          Director of Company and Bank           40,000(2)               5%                5%(2)(4)

  Ronald D. Paul              41          Vice Chairman, President and           40,000(2)               5%                5%(2)(4)
                                              Treasurer of Company;
                                            Chairman of Board of Bank

All directors and 
officers of Company 
as a group (5 persons)                                                          170,000                 21.25%            19.17%(4)
                                                 
All directors and 
officers of Company 
and Bank as a group
(17 persons)                                                                    253,000                 31.63%            26.08%(4)

</TABLE>

     (1)  Does  not  reflect  sale of  Shares  subject  to the  Oversubscription
          Allotment.

     (2)  In the event  that more than the  minimum  number of Shares  are sold,
          these  individuals may increase their total investment in the Offering
          to maintain their respective percentage interests in the Company at up
          to five percent of the number of Shares  outstanding  after completion
          of the Offering.

    (3)   Eugene F. Ford,  Sr. is the father of Eugene F. Ford,  Jr., a proposed
          director of the Bank. Intended share purchases shown for Mr. Ford, Sr.
          do not include intended purchases by Mr. Ford, Jr.

     (4)  If all Shares subject to the Oversubscription  Allotment were sold and
          individuals identified in note (2) increase their subscriptions to the
          full extent,  the total number and  percentage of Shares  purchased by
          all  Directors and Officers of the Company as a group would be 257,000
          and  18.62%,  respectively,  and the total  number and  percentage  of
          Shares purchased by all Directors and Officers of the Company and Bank
          as a group would be 340,000 and 24.64%, respectively.


                                     - 22 -

<PAGE>




          The  Company's  Bylaws  provide  that the number of  Directors  of the
Company shall be fixed from time to time by the Board of Directors but shall not
be less than 3 nor more than 25.  The  Board  has  fixed the  current  number of
Directors  at 5. The Bylaws may be amended by action of the Board of  Directors.
All of the  Company's  current  Directors  were duly elected or appointed to the
Board and will continue to serve as Directors until their successors are elected
and qualified.

          The Bank's  Bylaws will provide for a range of 5 to 30  Directors  and
will permit its  stockholders  to fix an exact number of  Directors  within that
range.  The Board of Directors plans to initially fix the number of Directors at
16. Before the Bank opens for business, its sole stockholder,  the Company, will
be  required  to elect  Directors  of the Bank,  subject to the  approval of the
Department of Financial  Regulation and Federal Reserve Board.  Directors of the
Bank  will  serve  for one year and  until  their  successors  are  elected  and
qualified.  The Company  intends,  together with the 12  additional  persons set
forth under "MANAGEMENT -- Additional Information About the Directors,  Officers
and  Organizers  of the  Company  and the  Bank - The  Bank" to elect 4 of the 5
current Directors of the Company to serve on the Board of the Bank.

          Each of the Bank's Directors is required by law to own a minimum of 50
shares of Common Stock of the Company.

          The Articles of  Incorporation of the Company provide that to the full
extent  that the  Maryland  General  Corporation  Law (the  "MGCL")  permits the
limitation or elimination of the liability of directors or officers,  a director
or officer of the Company shall not be liable to the Company or its shareholders
for monetary  damages.  The MGCL  provides  that the  liability of a director or
officer in a proceeding brought by or in the right of shareholders, or on behalf
of  shareholders  may be eliminated,  except that the liability of a director or
officer may not be  eliminated  if the officer or director  received an improper
benefit or profit,  or if a judgment against the director or officer is based on
a finding that such  person's  action or failure to act was the result of active
and  deliberate  dishonesty and was material to the cause of action against such
person. The Articles of Incorporation of the Bank will similarly provide that to
the full  extent that the MGCL  permits the  limitation  or  elimination  of the
liability of directors or officers,  subject to federal law  limitations on that
authority,  a  director  or  officer  shall  not be  liable  to the  Bank or its
shareholders for monetary damages.

          The Articles of  Incorporation of the Company provide that to the full
extent  permitted  by the MGCL and  other  applicable  law,  the  Company  shall
indemnify  a director  or officer  of the  Company  who is or was a party to any
proceeding  by reason of the fact that he is or was such a director  or officer,
and the Board of  Directors  of the Company may contract in advance to indemnify
any  director  or  officer.  The MGCL  provides  that  except as  limited by its
articles of incorporation, a corporation shall indemnify a director who entirely
prevails in the defense of any  proceeding to which he was a party because he is
or was a director of the corporation  against  reasonable  expenses  incurred in
connection with the proceeding. The MGCL further provides that a corporation may
indemnify  an  individual  made a party to a  proceeding  because he is or was a
director  against  liability  incurred in the  proceeding  unless (i) the act or
omission  was  material  to the matter  giving  rise to the  proceeding  and was
committed  in bad faith or was the result of active and  deliberate  dishonesty;
(ii) the director actually  received an improper  personal benefit;  or (iii) in
the case of any  criminal  proceeding,  the  director  had  reasonable  cause to
believe  the  act or  omission  was  unlawful,  provided  however,  that  if the
proceeding was by or in the right of the corporation,  no indemnification may be
made if the  director  is  adjudged  liable  to the  corporation.  The  Board of
Directors may also indemnify an employee or agent of the Company who was or is a
party to any  proceeding  by reason of the fact that he is or was an employee or
agent of the Company.

          The  Articles of  Incorporation  and the Bylaws of the Bank  similarly
will provide that,  subject to limitations  under federal statute or regulation,
to the full extent permitted by the MGCL, the Bank shall indemnify a director or
officer  of the Bank who is or was a party to any  proceeding  by  reason of the
fact that he is or was such a director or officer.


                                     - 23 -

<PAGE>



          Insofar  as   indemnification   for  liabilities   arising  under  the
Securities  Act of 1933 may be  permitted  to  Directors,  Officers  and persons
controlling the Company  pursuant to the foregoing  provisions,  the Company has
been informed  that in the opinion of the  Securities  and Exchange  Commission,
such indemnification is against public policy as expressed in the Securities Act
of 1933 and is therefore unenforceable.          

ADDITIONALINFORMATION  ABOUT  THE  DIRECTORS,  OFFICERS  AND  ORGANIZERS  OF THE
COMPANY AND BANK

          Set forth  below is a  description  of the  principal  occupation  and
business  experience of each of the Directors,  Officers,  and organizers of the
Company and the Bank. Except as expressly  indicated below, each person has been
engaged in his principal occupation for at least five years.

The Company

          Leonard L. Abel.  Until 1994,  Mr. Abel was  partner-in-charge  of the
certified  public  accounting  firm of Kershenbaum,  Abel,  Kernus and Wychulis,
Rockville,  Maryland  with which he served for forty five years.  From  October,
1996,  until  resigning in September 1997, Mr. Abel was a member of the Board of
Directors of F&M National  Corporation  (NYSE) and its wholly owned  subsidiary,
F&M Bank -  Allegiance,  Bethesda,  Maryland,  and was  Chairman of the Board of
Allegiance Bank, N.A.  (collectively  with F&M Bank - Allegiance,  "Allegiance")
and its holding company  Allegiance Banc  Corporation,  from their  organization
until their acquisition by F&M National Corporation.  Mr. Abel was also Chairman
of the Board of Directors of Central  National  Bank of Maryland from 1968 until
its acquisition in 1985 by Citizens Bank of Maryland (now Crestar Bank).

          Dudley C. Dworken.  Mr. Dworken is the owner of Curtis  Chevrolet-Geo,
an automobile  dealership in  Washington,  D.C.  Until  becoming a member of the
group  organizing  the  Company  and the Bank,  Mr.  Dworken  was a director  of
Allegiance  from 1988, and was a director of Allegiance  Banc  Corporation  from
1988 until its  acquisition.  In April 1997,  Curtis  Chevrolet filed a petition
under  Chapter  11 of the  Bankruptcy  Code as a  protection  against  potential
liability  resulting from a jury verdict,  currently on appeal, in excess of the
damages  sought,  against  that  company.  Mr.  Dworken  is an active  member of
numerous  community,  business,  charitable and educational  institutions in the
Washington, D.C./Montgomery County area.

          Eugene F. Ford,  Sr. Mr.  Ford is engaged in the  business of property
management and  development as Chairman of Mid-City  Financial  Corporation,  an
apartment  developer,  of which he was also president until 1995. He is Chairman
of  the  Community  Preservation  and  Development  Corporation,   a  non-profit
organization in the business of preserving  public purpose housing complexes and
providing social program support for residents thereof. Mr. Ford was Chairman of
Second National  Federal Savings Bank,  Salisbury,  Maryland,  a federal savings
association  closed by the Office of Thrift Supervision in 1992, and its holding
company.  Through his ownership of Mid-City  Financial,  Mr. Ford is the largest
owner of assisted  housing  units in Maryland  and the  Washington  metropolitan
area.  Mr.  Ford  has  received  numerous  awards  for his  work in the  housing
development field.

          William A.  Koier.  Mr.  Koier is a private  investor  involved in the
ownership,  development  and  management of real estate  properties,  as well as
investment  in debt and equity  instruments.  Mr.  Koier served as a director of
Allegiance  1989 until October 1997, and Allegiance Banc  Corporation  from 1989
until its acquisition.  He also served as a director of Central National Bank of
Maryland until its acquisition by Citizens Bank of Maryland (now Crestar Bank).

          Ronald D. Paul.  Mr. Paul is  President  of Ronald D. Paul  Companies,
which is engaged in the  business  of real  estate  development  and  management
activities.  Mr. Paul was a director  of  Allegiance  from 1990 until  September
1997,  and a  director  of  Allegiance  Banc  Corporation  from  1990  until its
acquisition.

                                     - 24 -

<PAGE>


The Bank

          Arthur H.  Blitz.  Mr.  Blitz,  56, an  attorney  engaged  in  private
practice  since 1971, is a partner in the Bethesda,  Maryland law firm of Paley,
Rothman,  Goldstein,  Rosenberg & Cooper. Mr. Blitz was a director of Allegiance
at various times from 1987 to October 1997.

          Steven  L.  Fanaroff.  Mr.  Fanaroff,  38,  is Vice  President-  Chief
Financial Officer of Magruder Holdings, Inc., a regional supermarket chain, with
which he has served since 1981. Mr. Fanaroff served on the Board of Directors of
Allegiance from 1990 until October 1997.

          Eugene F. Ford,  Jr. Mr. Ford, 45, engages in the business of property
management  and  apartment  development.  He has  been  president  of Van  Buren
Corporation, an apartment developer, since 1984, Chairman of Edgewood Management
Company,  a property  management  company,  and president of Mid-City  Financial
Corporation, an apartment developer, since 1995. From 1992 to 1994, Mr. Ford was
a physical therapist with George Washington University Ambulatory Care.

          Sandra S.  Garrett.,  Ph.D.  Dr.  Garrett,  49, has been President and
Chief Executive Officer of Medifacts,  Ltd. since 1985, and of MIMC, Inc., since
1991. Both companies are involved in pharmaceutical research.

          Harvey M. Goodman. Mr. Goodman, 42, has been with The Goodman,  Gable,
Gould  Company,  the Maryland  based public  insurance  adjusting  firm where he
serves as  President,  since 1977.  He is the current  President of the National
Association of Insurance Adjusters, and is a director and principal of Adjusters
International, a national public adjusting firm.

          Benson Klein.  Mr. Klein,  52, has been an attorney with Ward & Klein,
Chartered  since  1978.  Mr.  Klein is also  engaged in real  estate  investment
activities  in  Montgomery  County.  He  served  as a  director  of  F&M  Bank -
Allegiance  from 1996 to 1997 and  previously  served as a  director  of Lincoln
National Bank.

          David H. Lavine.  Mr. Lavine,  39, has been Chief Executive Officer of
The American Bagel  Company,  Inc.,  franchisor of the  Chesapeake  Bagel Bakery
chain,  and its related retail store  operator  since March 1997.  Prior to that
time,  he was a principal  of the public  accounting  firm of Reznick,  Fedder &
Silverman,  CPA's,  since  1987.  Mr.  Lavine  is also  engaged  in real  estate
development and private  investment.  Mr. Lavine was a director of Suburban Bank
of Virginia and its holding  company,  Suburban  Bancshares,  Inc., from 1991 to
1994.

          Thomas  D.  Murphy.  Mr.  Murphy,  50,  the  proposed  Executive  Vice
President  - Chief  Operating  Officer of the Bank,  served at  Allegiance  from
September  1994,  including  as Executive  Vice  President  and Chief  Operating
Officer  from  December  1995  until  November  1997.  Prior to his  service  at
Allegiance,  he served in the same position at First Montgomery Bank from August
1991 until its acquisition by Sandy Spring National Bank of Maryland in December
1993, and he served as a Vice  President of that  organization  until  September
1994. Mr. Murphy has 28 years experience in the commercial banking industry.

          Donald R.  Rogers.  Mr.  Rogers,  51, has been  engaged in the private
practice  of law since 1972 with the  Rockville,  Maryland  based firm  Shulman,
Rogers,  Gandal, Pordy & Ecker, P.A., of which he is a partner. Mr. Rogers was a
member of the Board of Directors of Allegiance from 1987 until October 1997.

          Worthington H. Talcott,  Jr. Mr. Talcott,  46, an attorney  engaged in
private  practice since 1979, has been a shareholder in the Bethesda law firm of
Marsh, Fleischer & Quiggle,  Chartered,  since 1992, and from 1983 to 1992 was a
partner in the firm of Ross, Marsh, Foster, Meyers and Quiggle.

          H. L. Ward. Mr. Ward, 51, the proposed  President and Chief  Executive
Officer of the Bank,  was  President and Chief  Executive  Officer of Allegiance
from December 1995 to November 1997. Prior to that time he served

                                     - 25 -

<PAGE>


in various  executive lending positions at Allegiance and its former sister bank
Prince  George's  National  Bank,  including  Executive  Vice  President - Chief
Lending Officer,  from 1992 to 1995. Mr. Ward has over 28 years of experience in
the commercial banking and real estate development and finance industries.

                           EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION AND
                      CERTAIN TRANSACTIONS WITH MANAGEMENT

          It is not  anticipated  that following the opening for business of the
Bank,  the Company will  separately  compensate any officers or employees of the
Company  or the Bank for  services  rendered  to the  Company,  except  that the
President  of the Company  will  receive an annual  payment of $18,000  from the
Company  in lieu  of  regular  director  fees  and in  addition  to the  payment
described below to be paid in his capacity as Chairman of the Board of Directors
of the Bank.  Prior to the  opening of the Bank,  Messrs  Ward and  Murphy,  the
proposed  President and Chief  Executive  Officer and Executive Vice President -
Chief Operating  Officer of the Bank will receive  compensation from the Company
at annual rates of $139,000 and $120,000, respectively.

          The  Company  anticipates  that it  will  provide  its and the  Bank's
directors  with fees of $200 per  meeting  of the Board or its  committees.  The
Chairman of the Board of Directors of the Company will receive an annual payment
of $24,000 in lieu of regular  director fees from the Company and the Bank.  The
Chairman of the Board of Directors of the Bank will receive an annual payment of
$18,000 in lieu of regular director fees from the Bank.

          After the Bank opens for business, Mr. Ward will initially be entitled
to an annual  base  salary of  $160,000.  He will also be  entitled  to a bonus,
payable over three years,  in the amount of $30,000,  $750,000 of Bank paid life
insurance,  a $7,200 annual car allowance,  warrants,  exercisable  for a 5 year
term to  purchase,  at the  subscription  price,  7,500  shares of Common  Stock
("Warrants"),  and participation in all other health,  welfare,  benefit, stock,
option and bonus plans, if any, generally  available to officers or employees of
the Bank or the Company. Mr. Murphy will be initially entitled to an annual base
salary of  $130,000.  He will also be  entitled to a bonus,  payable  over three
years, in the amount of $30,000,  $600,000 of Bank paid life insurance, a $6,000
annual car allowance, and Warrants to purchase 6,000 shares of Common Stock, and
participation in all other health,  welfare,  benefit,  stock,  option and bonus
plans, if any,  generally  available to officers or employees of the Bank or the
Company.  Although it is  anticipated  that the Company  will enter into written
employment agreements with Messrs. Ward and Murphy, no such agreements have been
executed to date.

INCENTIVE STOCK OPTION PLAN

          To attract and retain highly qualified personnel,  it is the intention
of the Directors of the Company to adopt a Stock Option Plan (the "Plan"), which
would be subject to approval  by the  holders of a majority  of the  outstanding
Common Stock of the Company  after this  offering.  It is intended that the Plan
provide for incentive options which would be available for grant to officers and
key  employees  of the  Company  and the Bank.  The  exercise  price  under each
incentive  stock  option would not be less than 100% of the fair market value of
the  shares on the date the  option  is  granted.  No  taxable  income  would be
recognized  by the optionee at the time an incentive  stock option is granted or
at the time exercised, and correspondingly, the Company would not be entitled to
a compensation expense deduction for Federal income tax purposes.  The aggregate
fair market  value of the Common Stock for which any one officer or employee may
be  granted  incentive  stock  options  in any  calendar  year  would not exceed
$100,000 as provided in Section  422A of the Code,  including  the  requirements
which restrict the term of such an option to ten years.  Within three (3) months
following termination of employment for any reasons other than death, disability
or  retirement,  or cause,  an optionee would be entitled to exercise his or her
option to the extent such option were  exercisable  on the date of  termination.
The Plan  would  extend  for a period  of ten  years  and be  administered  by a
committee appointed by the Board.

          Since the Plan has not yet been adopted, it is impossible at this time
to designate  the identity of the  recipients  of stock options or the number of
options to be granted.


                                     - 26 -

<PAGE>



CERTAIN TRANSACTIONS

          As of December 1, 1997,  four of the  organizers  of the Company  have
each advanced $20,000 to the Company,  an aggregate of $80,000,  for the purpose
of funding the Company's and Bank's application and organization  expenses.  One
organizer  has obtained a $350,000  unsecured  line of credit for the purpose of
funding  additional  organizational  expenses of the  Company  and Bank  through
additional  organizer  advances to the Company.  The line bears  interest at the
prime rate, adjusted monthly. The Company will repay all organizer advances with
interest at the prime rate out of the proceeds of the  Offering.  Such  expenses
include  organization,   application  and  registration  expenses,   pre-opening
operating  expenses  and  office   improvement  and  equipment.   (See  "USE  OF
PROCEEDS").  The  Company  expects to incur  aggregate  pre-opening  expenses of
approximately  $423,000 (not  including  premises and equipment  expenses of the
Bank) assuming the Bank commences operations in June 1998, and intends to defray
a portion of such expenses with interest  earned from the interim  investment of
the gross proceeds of this Offering.

          It is  anticipated  that the Directors and Officers of the Company and
the business and professional  organizations with which they are associated will
have banking  transactions with the Bank in the ordinary course of business.  It
is the policy of management of the Bank that any loans and loan commitments will
be made in accordance with applicable laws and on substantially  the same terms,
including  interest rates and  collateral,  as those  prevailing at the time for
comparable transactions with other persons of comparable credit standing.  Loans
to  Directors  and  Officers  must comply with the Bank's  lending  policies and
statutory  lending  limits,  and directors with a personal  interest in any loan
application will be excluded from considering any such loan application.

                         SHARES ELIGIBLE FOR FUTURE SALE

          All Shares  sold in this  offering  will be freely  tradeable  without
restriction or  registration  under the  Securities Act of 1933,  except for any
Shares purchased by an "affiliate" of the Company,  which will be subject to the
resale limitations set forth in Securities and Exchange Commission Rule 144.

          All of the Company's Directors are considered  "affiliates" within the
meaning of Rule 144 and will,  therefore,  be subject to the  applicable  resale
limitations with respect to the Shares  purchased in this offering.  In general,
the number of shares that can be sold by each Director in brokers' transactions,
(as that term is used in Rule 144) within any three month  period may not exceed
the greater of (i) one percent  (1%) of the  outstanding  shares as shown by the
most recent  report or statement  published by the Company  (8,000 shares if the
minimum  number of Shares  are sold or 12,000  shares if the  maximum  number of
Shares are sold),  or (ii) the average weekly  reported volume of trading in the
Shares  on  all  national  securities  exchanges  and/or  reported  through  the
automated  quotation system of a registered  securities  association  during the
four calendar weeks preceding the sale.

                          DESCRIPTION OF CAPITAL STOCK

          The  Company's  authorized  capital  consists of  5,000,000  shares of
Common Stock,  $.01 par value,  and 1,000,000 of undesignated  preferred  stock,
$.01 par value,  the terms of which may be  determined by the Board of Directors
at the time of issuance.

          Holders of Common  Stock are  entitled to cast one vote for each share
held of record,  to receive  such  dividends  as may be declared by the Board of
Directors of the Company out of legally available funds, and to share ratably in
any  distribution  of the Company's  assets after payment of all debts and other
liabilities,  upon liquidation,  dissolution or winding up.  Shareholders do not
have cumulative  voting rights or preemptive rights or other rights to subscribe
for  additional  Shares,  and the Common Stock is not subject to  conversion  or
redemption. The shares of Common Stock to be issued by the Company in connection
with this offering will be, when issued, fully paid and nonassessable. No shares
of Common Stock are presently outstanding.


                                     - 27 -

<PAGE>



          The Board of  Directors,  by action of a majority of the full Board of
Directors,  is  authorized  to issue the shares of preferred  stock from time to
time on such terms as it may determine,  and to divide the preferred  stock into
one or more  classes or series,  and to fix by  resolution  or  resolutions  the
designations,  voting powers, preferences,  participation,  redemption,  sinking
fund, conversion, dividend, and other optional or special rights of such classes
or series,  and the  qualifications,  limitations or restrictions  thereof.  The
existence of shares of authorized  undesignated  preferred stock will enable the
Company to meet possible contingencies or opportunities in which the issuance of
shares of preferred  stock may be advisable,  such as in the case of acquisition
or  financing  transactions.  Shares  of  preferred  stock  could be  issued  to
shareholders of another  institution  enabling the Company to acquire such other
institution without the expenditure of any cash. Shares of preferred stock could
also be sold in a public or private  offering to enable the Company to engage in
acquisition  activity,  to expand  the  Company's  ability  to engage in lending
activities or for other  corporate  purposes.  Having shares of preferred  stock
available for issuance  would give the Company  flexibility  in that it would be
able to avoid the expense and delay of calling a meeting of  shareholders at the
time the  contingency or  opportunity  arises.  Any issuance of preferred  stock
could have a dilutive effect on the existing holders of Common Stock.

          The existence of authorized  shares of preferred  stock could have the
effect of rendering more difficult or discouraging  hostile takeover attempts or
of facilitating a negotiated  acquisition of the Company. Such shares, which may
be  convertible  into shares of Common  Stock,  could be issued to the Company's
shareholders  or to a third  party in an attempt  to  frustrate  or render  more
expensive a hostile  acquisition of the Company.  The Company does not currently
intend to issue any shares of preferred  stock unless such  issuance is approved
by a majority of those  directors who are not interested in the issuance,  other
than as a result of being a shareholder  or  subscriber  in a general  offering,
which directors have access to counsel at Company expense.

          Limitations  on Payment of Dividends.  The payment of dividends by the
Company  will  depend  largely  upon the  ability of the Bank to declare and pay
dividends to the Company,  as the principal source of the Company's revenue will
initially be from  dividends paid by the Bank.  Dividends will depend  primarily
upon the Bank's earnings,  financial  condition,  and need for funds, as well as
governmental policies and regulations applicable to the Company and the Bank. It
is  anticipated  that the Bank will incur  losses  during its  initial  phase of
operations, and therefore, it is not anticipated that any dividends will be paid
by the Bank or the  Company  for at least  three  years  and in the  foreseeable
future.  Even if the Bank and the Company have earnings in an amount  sufficient
to pay dividends,  the Board of Directors may  determine,  and it is the present
intention  of the Board of  Directors,  to retain  earnings  for the  purpose of
funding the growth of the Company and the Bank.

          Regulations of the Federal Reserve Board and Maryland law place limits
on the  amount  of  dividends  the Bank  may pay to the  Company  without  prior
approval.  Prior  regulatory  approval is required to pay dividends which exceed
the Bank's net profits for the current  year plus its  retained  net profits for
the preceding two calendar years, less required transfers to surplus.  State and
federal bank  regulatory  agencies  also have  authority to prohibit a bank from
paying dividends if such payment is deemed to be an unsafe or unsound  practice,
and the  Federal  Reserve  Board  has  the  same  authority  over  bank  holding
companies.

          The Federal Reserve Board has  established  guidelines with respect to
the  maintenance  of  appropriate  levels of capital by registered  bank holding
companies.  Compliance with such standards,  as presently in effect,  or as they
may be amended from time to time,  could  possibly limit the amount of dividends
that the Company  may pay in the future.  In 1985,  the  Federal  Reserve  Board
issued a policy  statement  on the  payment of cash  dividends  by bank  holding
companies. In the statement, the Federal Reserve Board expressed its view that a
holding company  experiencing  earnings weaknesses should not pay cash dividends
exceeding its net income,  or which could only be funded in ways that weaken the
holding  company's  financial  health,  such as by  borrowing.  As a  depository
institution, the deposits of which are insured by the FDIC, the Bank may not pay
dividends or distribute any of its capital assets while it remains in default on
any assessment due the FDIC.

                                   LITIGATION

                                     - 28 -

<PAGE>


          To the knowledge of the Company and its Directors and Officers,  there
is no pending or threatened litigation involving the Company.

                                  LEGAL MATTERS

          The validity of the securities  offered hereby will be passed upon for
the Company by Kennedy, Baris & Lundy, L.L.P.,  Bethesda,  Maryland.  Members of
such firm may subscribe to purchase shares of Common Stock offered hereby.

                                     EXPERTS

          The balance sheet of Eagle Bancorp, Inc. (a development stage company)
as of November 30, 1997 included in this  Prospectus has been included herein in
reliance  upon the  report of Stegman & Company,  independent  certified  public
accountants,  and upon the authority of said firm as experts in  accounting  and
auditing.

                                     - 29 -

<PAGE>



                          INDEX TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS



Independent Auditor's Report................................................F-1

Audited Balance Sheet of the Company at November 30, 1997...................F-2

Notes to Audited Balance Sheet..............................................F-3




                                     - 30 -

<PAGE>








                          INDEPENDENT AUDITOR'S REPORT


To the Board of Directors
Eagle Bancorp, Inc.
Bethesda, Maryland

          We have audited the accompanying balance sheet of Eagle Bancorp,  Inc.
(a Development Stage Company) as of November 30, 1997. This financial  statement
is the  responsibility  of the Company's  management.  Our  responsibility is to
express an opinion on this financial statement based on our audit.

          We conducted our audit in accordance with generally  accepted auditing
standards.  Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain
reasonable  assurance  about  whether  the  balance  sheet  is free of  material
misstatement.  An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting
the  amounts  and  disclosures  in the  balance  sheet.  An audit also  includes
assessing the  accounting  principles  used and  significant  estimates  made by
management,  as well as evaluating the overall  balance sheet  presentation.  We
believe that our audit of the balance sheet provides a reasonable  basis for our
opinion.

          In our opinion,  the balance sheet referred to above presents  fairly,
in all material  respects,  the  financial  position of Eagle  Bancorp,  Inc. (a
Development  Stage Company) as of November 30, 1997 in conformity with generally
accepted accounting principles.

                                                  /s/ STEGMAN & COMPANY

Baltimore, Maryland
December 8, 1997

                                      F - 1

<PAGE>



                               EAGLE BANCORP, INC.
                          (A DEVELOPMENT STAGE COMPANY)

                                  BALANCE SHEET
                                NOVEMBER 30, 1997



                                     ASSETS

Cash                                                                   $  49,655
Equipment - net                                                            3,686
                                                                      ----------
                                                                                
          TOTAL ASSETS                                                 $  53,341
                                                                       =========
                                                                                
                                                                                
                      LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' DEFICIT
                                            
LIABILITIES
     Payable to organizers (Note 2)                                    $  80,000
     Accounts Payable                                                     47,577
                                                                      ----------
                                                                                
          Total liabilities                                            $ 127,577
                                                                       ---------
                                                                                
Stockholders' Equity                                                            
     Common stock, $.01 par, 5,000,000 shares authorized,                       
       -0- shares issued and outstanding                                      --
     Deficit                                                            (74,236)
                                                                                
          Total Stockholders' Deficit                                  $(74,236)
                                                                                
          TOTAL LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' DEFICIT                  $  53,341
                                                                       =========
                                                                                




See Accompanying Notes to Balance Sheet.




                                      F - 2

<PAGE>



                               EAGLE BANCORP, INC.
                          (A DEVELOPMENT STAGE COMPANY)

                             NOTES TO BALANCE SHEET
                             AS OF NOVEMBER 30, 1997

1.  NATURE OF BUSINESS

          Eagle Bancorp,  Inc. (the  "Company") was  incorporated on October 28,
          1997  under the laws of the State of  Maryland  to  operate  as a bank
          holding company. It is intended that the Company will purchase all the
          shares of common  stock to be issued by  EagleBank  (the  "Bank").  An
          application   to  organize  the  Bank  was  filed  with  the  Maryland
          Department of Financial  Regulation on December 5, 1997.  The Bank has
          not commenced operations and will not do so unless the public offering
          of stock by the Company is completed and the Bank meets the conditions
          of the  Maryland  Department  of Financial  Regulation  to receive its
          charter  authorizing it to commence  operations as a commercial  bank,
          and has  obtained  the  approval  of the FDIC to  insure  its  deposit
          accounts.

2.  PAYABLE TO ORGANIZERS

          Organizers of the Company have advanced an aggregate of $80,000 to pay
          certain  organization  expenses  (principally  legal and filing fees).
          These  advances are to be repaid with  interest at the prime rate from
          the  proceeds  of the common  stock  offering  at the time the Company
          opens for business. One organizer has obtained a line of credit in the
          amount of $350,000 for the purpose of funding  additional  expenses of
          the  Company  through  additional  organizer  advances.   Organization
          expenses will be expensed as incurred.




                                      F - 3

<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                                                                             <C>    
=============================================================                    ================================
NO  PERSON  HAS  BEEN  AUTHORIZED  TO  GIVE  ANY INFORMATION
OR  TO MAKE  ANY REPRESENTATIONS OTHER THAN THOSE  CONTAINED
IN THIS PROSPECTUS  IN  CONNECTION  WITH THE  OFFERING  MADE
HEREIN,   AND  IF  GIVEN  OR   MADE,  SUCH   INFORMATION  OR
REPRESENTATIONS  MUST  NOT BE  RELIED  UPON AS  HAVING  BEEN
AUTHORIZED  BY THE COMPANY.  NEITHER  THE  DELIVERY  OF THIS
PROSPECTUS NOR  ANY SALE  MADE  HEREUNDER  SHALL, UNDER  ANY                                1,200,000
CIRCUMSTANCES, CREATE ANY IMPLICATION THAT THERE HAS BEEN NO                                SHARES OF
CHANGE IN THE AFFAIRS OF THE COMPANY OR BANK SINCE THE  DATE                              COMMON STOCK
OF THIS PROSPECTUS. THIS PROSPECTUS DOES NOT  CONSTITUTE  AN
OFFER  TO  SELL  OR  A  SOLICITATION  OF AN OFFER TO BUY ANY                            $10.00 PER SHARE
SECURITIES IN  ANY  JURISDICTION TO ANY PERSON TO WHOM IT IS
UNLAWFUL TO MAKE SUCH  AN OFFER OR SOLICITATION, OR IN WHICH 
THE  PERSON  MAKING  SUCH  OFFER  OR  SOLICITATION   IS  NOT 
QUALIFIED TO DO SO.

                      TABLE OF CONTENTS

                                                        PAGE

Available Information......................................2
Prospectus Summary ........................................3
Risk Factors...............................................6                            EAGLE BANCORP, INC.
The Company and the Bank...................................8
The Offering...............................................9
Use of Proceeds...........................................12
Business of the Company...................................13
Pro Forma Capitalization of the Company...................14
Business of the Bank......................................15
Supervision and Regulation................................18
Management................................................22
Executive Compensation and Certain
   Transactions with Management...........................26
Shares Eligible for Future Sale...........................27
Description of Capital Stock..............................28
Litigation................................................29                           _____________________                 
Legal Matters.............................................29                                                                 
Experts...................................................29                                PROSPECTUS                       
Index to Financial Statements.............................30                           _____________________                 
                                                                                                                             
UNTIL _________, 1998, ALL DEALERS EFFECTING TRANSACTIONS IN                                                                 
THE REGISTERED  SECURITIES,  WHETHER OR NOT PARTICIPATING IN                                                                 
THIS DISTRIBUTION,  MAY BE REQUIRED TO DELIVER A PROSPECTUS.                                                                 
THIS IS IN ADDITION TO THE  OBLIGATION OF DEALERS TO DELIVER                                                                 
A PROSPECTUS WHEN ACTING AS UNDERWRITERS AND WITH RESPECT TO                            ____________, 1998                   
THEIR UNSOLD ALLOTMENTS OR SUBSCRIPTIONS.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                             
============================================================                    ================================             
</TABLE>                                                                        
                                                                              
                                                                              
                                                                                
<PAGE>


                                     PART II

                     INFORMATION NOT REQUIRED IN PROSPECTUS

ITEM 24.  INDEMNIFICATION OF DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS

          Article VI of the Company's  Articles of  Incorporation  provides that
the Company shall, to the full extent permitted and in the manner  prescribed by
the Maryland General  Corporation Law and any other applicable law,  indemnify a
director or officer of the Company  who is or was a party to any  proceeding  by
reason of the fact that he is or was a director or officer, or is or was serving
at the  request of the  Company as a  director,  officer,  employee  or agent of
another corporation, partnership, joint venture, trust, employee benefit plan or
other enterprise.

          The Maryland General  Corporation Law provides,  in pertinent part, as
follows:

          2-418 INDEMNIFICATION OF DIRECTORS, OFFICERS, EMPLOYEES AND AGENTS. --
(a) In this section the following words have the meanings indicated.
          (1)  "Director"  means  any  person  who  is or  was a  director  of a
corporation  and any person who,  while a director of a  corporation,  is or was
serving at the  request of the  corporation  as a  director,  officer,  partner,
trustee,  employee,  or  agent  of  another  foreign  or  domestic  corporation,
partnership, joint venture, other enterprise, or employee benefit plan.
          (2) "Corporation"  includes any domestic or foreign predecessor entity
of a corporation in a merger,  consolidation,  or other transaction in which the
predecessor's existence ceased upon consummation of the transaction.
          (3) "Expenses" include attorney's fees. 
          (4) "Official capacity" means the following:
          (i) When used with  respect to a  director,  the office of director in
the corporation; and
          (ii) When used with  respect  to a person  other  than a  director  as
contemplated  in  sub-section  (j),  the  elective or  appointive  office in the
corporation  held by the  officer,  or the  employment  or  agency  relationship
undertaken by the employee or agent in behalf of the corporation.
          (iii)  "Official  capacity"  does not  include  service  for any other
foreign or domestic corporation or any partnership,  joint venture, trust, other
enterprise, or employee benefit plan.
          (5) "Party" includes a person who was, is, or is threatened to be made
a named defendant or respondent in a proceeding.
          (6) "Proceeding"  means any threatened,  pending or completed  action,
suit or proceeding, whether civil, criminal, administrative, or investigative.
          (b)(1) A  corporation  may  indemnify any director made a party to any
proceeding by reason of service in that capacity unless it is established that:
          (i) The act or omission  of the  director  was  material to the matter
giving rise to the proceeding; and
          1. Was committed in bad faith; or
          2. Was the result of active  and  deliberate  dishonesty;  or 
          (ii) The director  actually  received an improper  personal benefit in
money, property, or services; or
          (iii)  In the  case  of any  criminal  proceeding,  the  director  had
reasonable cause to believe that the act or omission was unlawful.
          (2)(i)  Indemnification  may be against judgments,  penalties,  fines,
settlements,  and  reasonable  expenses  actually  incurred  by the  director in
connection with the proceeding.
          (ii)  However,  if the  proceeding  was one by or in the  right of the
corporation,  indemnification  may not be made in respect of any  proceeding  in
which the director shall have been adjudged to be liable to the corporation.
          (3)(i) The  termination  of any  proceeding  by  judgment,  order,  or
settlement  does not create a  presumption  that the  director  did not meet the
requisite standard of conduct set forth in this subsection.
          (ii) The  termination of any  proceeding by  conviction,  or a plea of
nolo contendere or its equivalent, or an entry of an order of probation prior to
judgment,  creates a rebuttal  presumption  that the  director did not meet that
standard of conduct.

                                      II-1
<PAGE>



          (c) A director may not be  indemnified  under  subsection  (B) of this
section in respect of any proceeding  charging  improper personal benefit to the
director,  whether or not involving action in the director's  official capacity,
in which the  director  was  adjudged  to be liable on the basis  that  personal
benefit was improperly received.
          (d)      Unless limited by the charter:
          (1) A director who has been successful, on the merits or otherwise, in
the defense of any  proceeding  referred to in  subsection  (B) of this  section
shall be indemnified  against  reasonable  expenses  incurred by the director in
connection with the proceeding.
          (2) A court of appropriate jurisdiction upon application of a director
and such notice as the court shall  require,  may order  indemnification  in the
following circumstances:
          (i) If it  determines  a director is entitled to  reimbursement  under
paragraph  (1) of this  subsection,  the court shall order  indemnification,  in
which case the  director  shall be entitled to recover the  expenses of securing
such reimbursement; or
          (ii) If it  determines  that the  director  is fairly  and  reasonably
entitled to indemnification in view of all the relevant  circumstances,  whether
or not the director has met the standards of conduct set forth in subsection (b)
of this section or has been adjudged liable under the circumstances described in
subsection (c) of this section,  the court may order such indemnification as the
court shall deem proper. However, indemnification with respect to any proceeding
by or in the right of the  corporation  or in which  liability  shall  have been
adjudged in the  circumstances  described in subsection  (c) shall be limited to
expenses.
          (3) A court of appropriate jurisdiction may be the same court in which
the proceeding involving the director's liability took place.
          (e)(1) Indemnification under subsection (b) of this section may not be
made by the  corporation  unless  authorized for a specific  proceeding  after a
determination has been made that  indemnification of the director is permissible
in the  circumstances  because the  director has met the standard of conduct set
forth in subsection (b) of this section.
          (2) Such determination shall be made:
          (i) By  the  board  of  directors  by a  majority  vote   of a  quorum
consisting of directors not, at the time, parties to the proceeding, or, if such
a quorum cannot be obtained, then by a majority vote of a committee of the board
consisting  solely of two or more  directors  not, at the time,  parties to such
proceeding and who were duly  designated to act in the matter by a majority vote
of the  full  board  in which  the  designated  directors  who are  parties  may
participate;
          (ii) By special legal counsel  selected by the board of directors or a
committee  of the  board  by  vote  as set  forth  in  subparagraph  (I) of this
paragraph,  or, if the  requisite  quorum of the full board  cannot be  obtained
therefor and the committee cannot be established, by a majority vote of the full
board in which directors who are parties may participate; or
          (iii) By the stockholders.
          (3)   Authorization  of   indemnification   and  determination  as  to
reasonableness of expenses shall be made in the same manner as the determination
that  indemnification  is  permissible.   However,  if  the  determination  that
indemnification  is permissible is made by special legal counsel,  authorization
of  indemnification  and determination as to reasonableness of expenses shall be
made in the manner  specified  in  subparagraph  (ii) of  paragraph  (2) of this
subsection for selection of such counsel.
          (4) Shares held by directors who are parties to the proceeding may not
be voted on the subject matter under this subsection.
          (f)(1) Reasonable  expenses incurred by a director who is a party to a
proceeding may be paid or reimbursed by the  corporation in advance of the final
disposition of the proceeding upon receipt by the corporation of:
          (i) A written affirmation by the director of the director's good faith
belief  that the  standard  of  conduct  necessary  for  indemnification  by the
corporation as authorized in this section has been met; and
          (ii) A written  undertaking  by or on behalf of the  director to repay
the amount if it shall ultimately be determined that the standard of conduct has
not been met.
          (2) The undertaking  required by subparagraph (ii) of paragraph (1) of
this  subsection  shall be an unlimited  general  obligation of the director but
need not be secured and may be accepted without  reference to financial  ability
to make the repayment.
          (3) Payments  under this  subsection  shall be made as provided by the
charter, bylaws or contract or as specified in subsection (e) of this section.

                                      II-2
<PAGE>



          (g) The  indemnification  and  advancement  of  expenses  provided  or
authorized by this section may not be deemed  exclusive of any other rights,  by
indemnification  or  otherwise,  to which a director  may be entitled  under the
charter, the bylaws, a resolution of stockholders of directors,  an agreement or
otherwise, both as to action in an official capacity and as to action in another
capacity while holding such office.
          (h) This  section  does not  limit the  corporation's  power to pay or
reimburse  expenses incurred by a director in connection with an appearance as a
witness in a  proceeding  at a time when the  director has not been made a named
defendant or respondent in the proceeding.
          (i) For purposes of this section:
          (1) The  corporation  shall be deemed to have  requested a director to
serve an employee benefit plan where the performance of the director's duties to
the corporation also imposes duties on, or otherwise  involves  services by, the
director to the plan or participants or beneficiaries of the plan:
          (2) Excise  taxes  assessed on a director  with respect to an employee
benefit plan pursuant to applicable law shall be deemed fined; and
          (3) Action  taken or  omitted  by the  director  with  respect  to an
employee benefit plan in the performance of the director's  duties for a purpose
reasonably  believed by the director to be in the  interest of the  participants
and  beneficiaries  of the plan shall be deemed to be for a purpose which is not
opposed to the best interests of the corporation.
          (j) Unless limited by the charter:
          (1) An officer of the  corporation  shall be indemnified as and to the
extent  provided in  subsection  (d) of this section for a director and shall be
entitled, to the same extent as a director, to seek indemnification  pursuant to
the provisions of subsection (d);
          (2) A corporation  may  indemnify and advance  expenses to an officer,
employee,  or agent of the  corporation to the same extent that it may indemnify
directors under this section; and
          (3) A corporation,  in addition, may indemnify and advance expenses to
an officer,  employee,  or agent who is not a director to such  further  extent,
consistent  with law,  as may be  provided by its  charter,  bylaws,  general or
specific action of its board of directors or contract.
          (k)(1) A corporation may purchase and maintain  insurance on behalf of
any  person  who  is or was a  director,  officer,  employee,  or  agent  of the
corporation,  or who,  while a  director,  officer,  employee,  or  agent of the
corporation,  is or was serving at the request of the corporation as a director,
officer,  partner,  trustee,  employee,  or agent of another foreign or domestic
corporation,  partnership,  joint venture, trust, other enterprise,  or employee
benefit plan against any liability  asserted against and incurred by such person
in any such  capacity or arising out of such person's  position,  whether or not
the corporation  would have the power to indemnify  against  liability under the
provisions of this section.
          (2) A corporation  may provide similar  protection,  including a trust
fund, letter of credit, or surety bond, not inconsistent with this section.
          (3) The  insurance  or  similar  protection  may  be  provided   by  a
subsidiary or an affiliate of the corporation.
          (l) Any  indemnification  of, or advance of expenses to, a director in
accordance with this section,  if arising out of a proceeding by or in the right
of the corporation,  shall be reported in writing to the  stockholders  with the
notice of the next stockholders' meeting or prior to the meeting.

ITEM 25.  OTHER EXPENSES OF ISSUANCE AND DISTRIBUTION
          The estimated  expenses  payable by the Company in connection with the
Offering  described  in this  Registration  Statement  (other than  underwriting
discounts and commissions) are as follows:

SEC Registration Fee....................................................$  4,071
*Blue Sky Filing Fees and Expenses (Including counsel fees)...............12,500
*Legal Fees...............................................................40,000
*Broker-dealer Fees and Expenses..........................................20,000
*Edgar Filing Expenses.....................................................3,500
*Printing and Engraving...................................................15,000
*Accounting Fees and Expenses.............................................10,000
*Other Expenses............................................................4,749
                   Total                                                $110,000
*         Estimated                                                  ===========

                                      II-3
<PAGE>




ITEM 26.  RECENT SALES OF UNREGISTERED SECURITIES.

          None.

ITEM 27.  EXHIBITS.

          Number            Description
          ------            -----------   

          3(a)              Certificate of Incorporation of the Company

          3(b)              Bylaws of the Company

          5                 Opinion of Kennedy, Baris & Lundy, L.L.P.

          21                Subsidiaries of the Registrant

          23(a)             Consent of Stegman & Company, Independent  Certified
                            Public Accountants

          23(b)             Consent of Kennedy, Baris & Lundy, L.L.P.,  included
                            in Exhibit 5 

          99(a)             Form of Subscription Agreement

          99(b)             Form of Placement Agent Agreement

          99(c)             Form of Escrow Agreement

ITEM 28.  UNDERTAKINGS.  The Registrant hereby undertakes that it will:

          (1) file, during any period in which it offers or sells securities,  a
post-effective  amendment  to this  registration  statement  to: (i) include any
prospectus  required by section  10(a)(3) of the Securities Act; (ii) reflect in
the prospectus any facts or events which,  individually or together  represent a
fundamental change in the information in the registration  statement;  and (iii)
include  any  additional  or  changed  material   information  on  the  plan  of
distribution.

          (2) for  determining  liability  under the Securities  Act, treat each
post-effective  amendment  as a new  registration  statement  of the  securities
offered,  and the offering of the securities at that time to be the initial bona
fide offering.

          (3) file a post-effective amendment to remove from registration any of
the securities that remain unsold at the end of the offering.

          Insofar  as   indemnification   for  liabilities   arising  under  the
Securities  Act of 1933 (the "Act") may be permitted to directors,  officers and
controlling persons of the Registrant pursuant to the foregoing  provisions,  or
otherwise, the Registrant has been advised that in the opinion of the Securities
and  Exchange  Commission  such  indemnification  is  against  public  policy as
expressed in the Act and is, therefore, unenforceable.

          In the event that a claim for indemnification against such liabilities
(other than the  payment by the  Registrant  of  expenses  incurred or paid by a
director,  officer or  controlling  person of the  Registrant in the  successful
defense of any action, suit or proceeding) is asserted by such director, officer
or controlling  person in connection with the securities being  registered,  the
Registrant  will,  unless in the  opinion  of its  counsel  the  matter has been
settled by controlling precedent,  submit to a court of appropriate jurisdiction
the question of whether such  indemnification  by it is against public policy as
expressed in the Securities  Act and will be governed by the final  adjudication
of such issue.

                                      II-4

<PAGE>


                                   SIGNATURES

          In accordance with the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, the
registrant certifies that it has reasonable grounds to believe that it meets all
of the  requirements  of filing on Form SB-2 and  authorized  this  registration
statement  to be  signed  on its  behalf  by  the  undersigned,  thereunto  duly
authorized, in the City of Bethesda, Maryland on December 8, 1997.


                                                   EAGLE BANCORP, INC.


                                                   By: /s/ Ronald D. Paul
                                                       -------------------------
                                                       Ronald D. Paul, President


          In accordance  with the  requirements  of the  Securities Act of 1933,
this  registration  statement  has been signed by the  following  persons in the
capacities and on the dates stated.



         NAME                POSITION                              DATE


/s/ Leonard L. Abel       Chairman of the Board of             December 8, 1997
- -----------------------       Directors
Leonard L. Abel


/s/ Dudley C. Dworken         Director                         December 10, 1997
- -----------------------
Dudley C. Dworken


/s/ Eugene F. Ford            Director                         December 10, 1997
- -----------------------
Eugene F. Ford


/s/ William A. Koier          Director                         December 10, 1997
- -----------------------
William A. Koier


/s/ Ronald D. Paul        Vice-Chairman of the Board           December 8, 1997
- -----------------------      President & Treasurer
Ronald D. Paul             (Principal Executive, Financial
                              and Accounting Officer)


                                      II-5


<PAGE>
                               EAGLE BANCORP, INC.
                      RESGISTRATION STATEMENT ON FORM SB-2

                                  EXHIBIT INDEX


Number    Description
- ------    -----------

3(a)      Certificate of Incorporation of the Company

3(b)      Bylaws of the Company

5         Opinion of Kennedy, Baris & Lundy, L.L.P.

21        Subsidiaries of the Registrant

23(a)     Consent of Stegman & Company, Independent Certified Public Accountants

23(b)     Consent of Kennedy, Baris & Lundy, L.L.P., included in Exhibit 5

99(a)     Form of Subscription Agreement

99(b)     Form of Placement Agent Agreement

99(c)     Form of Escrow Agreement






                                                                    EXHIBIT 3(a)


                    Articles of Incorporation of the Company


<PAGE>



                           ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION

                                       OF

                               EAGLE BANCORP, INC.

     The  undersigned  incorporators,  Leonard  L. Abel  whose  address is 11209
Potomac Crest Drive, Potomac,  Maryland 20854, and Ronald D. Paul, whose address
is c/o Ronald Paul Industries,  8101 Glenbrook Road,  Bethesda,  Maryland 20814,
each of whom is at least 18 years of age, do hereby form a corporation under the
laws of the State of Maryland.


     ARTICLE I. Name. The name of the corporation is:

                                                Eagle Bancorp, Inc.

     ARTICLE II.  Purpose.  The purpose of the  Corporation  is to engage in any
lawful act or business for which  corporations  may be formed under the Maryland
General Corporation Law.

     ARTICLE III.  Capital  Stock.  The number of shares of stock of all classes
which the Corporation shall have authority to issue is six million  (6,000,000),
five  million  (5,000,000)  of which shall be Common  Stock,  par value $.01 per
share and one million  (1,000,000) of which shall be preferred  stock, par value
$.01 per share,  and the  aggregate  par value of all  shares of all  classes of
stock is $60,000.  The Board of  Directors,  by action of a majority of the full
Board of  Directors,  shall have the  authority to issue the shares of preferred
stock  from time to time on such  terms as it may  determine,  and to divide the
preferred stock into one or more classes or series,  and, in connection with the
creation  of such  classes or series to fix by  resolution  or  resolutions  the
designations,  voting powers, preferences,  participation,  redemption,  sinking
fund, conversion, dividend, and other optional or special rights of such classes
or series, and the qualifications, limitations or restrictions thereof.

     ARTICLE IV.  Preemptive  Rights.  The  holders of the capital  stock of the
Corporation shall not have any preemptive or preferential  rights to purchase or
otherwise  acquire any shares of any class of capital stock of the  corporation,
whether  now or  hereafter  authorized,  except  as the Board of  Directors  may
specifically provide.

     ARTICLE V.  Cumulative  Voting.  The  holders of the  capital  stock of the
Corporation  shall  not have the  right to  cumulate  votes in the  election  of
directors.

     ARTICLE VI. Limitation of Liability and Indemnification.

     (1) To the full extent  permitted by the Maryland  General  Corporation Law
and the Courts and Judicial  Proceedings  Article,  a director or officer of the
Corporation  shall not be  liable to the  Corporation  or its  shareholders  for
monetary damages.

     (2) To the  full  extent  permitted  and in the  manner  prescribed  by the
Maryland  General  Corporation Law and any other applicable law, the Corporation
shall  indemnify a director or officer of the  Corporation who is or was a party
to any proceeding  (whether civil,  criminal,  administrative  or investigative,
threatened,  pending or completed,  herein a "proceeding") by reason of the fact
that he is or was such a director or officer or is or was serving at the request
of the  Corporation  as a  director,  officer,  employee  or  agent  of  another
corporation,  partnership,  joint venture, trust, employee benefit plan or other
enterprise.  The Board of Directors is hereby  empowered,  by majority vote of a
quorum of  disinterested  directors,  to  contract in advance to  indemnify  any
director or officer.


                                      - 1 -

<PAGE>


     (3) The Board of  Directors  is hereby  empowered,  by  majority  vote of a
quorum of  disinterested  directors,  to cause the  Corporation  to indemnify or
contract in advance to  indemnify  any  director  or  officer,  and to cause the
Corporation  to  indemnify  or contract in advance to  indemnify  any person not
specified in Section 2 of this Article who was or is a party to any  proceeding,
by reason of the fact that he is or was an employee or agent of the Corporation,
or is or was serving at the request of the  Corporation  as  director,  officer,
employee or agent of another  corporation,  partnership,  joint venture,  trust,
employee benefit plan or other enterprise,  to the same extent as if such person
were specified as one to whom indemnification is granted in Section 2.

     (4) Notwithstanding   any   other   provisions  in  this  Article  VI,  the
Corporation  shall indemnify a director who entirely  prevails in the defense of
any  proceeding  to which he was a party  because he is or was a director of the
Corporation  against reasonable  expenses incurred by him in connection with the
proceeding.

     (5) The  Corporation  may purchase  and maintain  insurance to indemnify it
against the whole or any portion of the  liability  assumed by it in  accordance
with this Article and may also procure  insurance,  in such amounts as the Board
of Directors  may  determine,  on behalf of any person who is or was a director,
officer,  employee  or agent of the  Corporation,  or is or was  serving  at the
request of the Corporation as a director,  officer, employee or agent of another
corporation,  partnership,  joint venture, trust, employee benefit plan or other
enterprise,  against  any  liability  asserted  against or  incurred by any such
person in any such  capacity or arising from his status as such,  whether or not
the  Corporation  would have power to indemnify him against such liability under
the provisions of this Article.

     (6) In the event there has been a change in the  composition  of a majority
of the Board of  Directors  after the date of the alleged  act or omission  with
respect  to  which   indemnification   is  claimed,   any  determination  as  to
indemnification  and  advancement  of  expenses  with  respect  to any claim for
indemnification  made  pursuant to Section 2 of this Article VI shall be made by
special  legal  counsel  agreed upon by the Board of Directors  and the proposed
indemnitee.  If the Board of Directors and the proposed indemnitee are unable to
agree upon such special legal  counsel,  the Board of Directors and the proposed
indemnitee  each shall  select a nominee,  and the  nominees  shall  select such
special legal counsel.

     (7) The  provisions  of this Article VI shall be applicable to all actions,
claims,  suits or  proceedings  commenced  after the  adoption  hereof,  whether
arising from any action  taken or failure to act before or after such  adoption.
No amendment,  modification  or repeal of this Article shall diminish the rights
provided  hereby or diminish  the right to  indemnification  with respect to any
claim,  issue or matter in any then  pending or  subsequent  proceeding  that is
based in any material  respect on any alleged  action or failure to act prior to
such amendment, modification or repeal.

     (8) The  provisions  of this Article VI shall not be exclusive of any other
indemnification  to  which  such  persons  may  be  entitled  under  any  bylaw,
agreement,   statute,  vote  of  shareholders  or  disinterested  directors,  or
otherwise.

     (9) Reference  herein  to  directors,  officers,  employees or agents shall
include former  directors,  officers,  employees and agents and their respective
heirs, executors and administrators.

     ARTICLE VII. Registered Office. The Corporation's initial registered office
shall  be  located  at  8101  Glenbrook  Road,  Bethesda,  Maryland  20814.  The
Corporation's  initial  registered  agent shall be Ronald D. Paul, a citizen and
resident of Maryland.

     ARTICLE VIII. Principal Office. The current address of the principal office
of the Corporation is 8101 Glenbrook Road, Bethesda, Maryland 20814.

     ARTICLE IX.  Directors.  The number of  directors  constituting  the entire
board shall be not less than three (3) nor more than twenty-five (25), the exact
number of which as may be fixed from time to time in accordance with

                                      - 2 -

<PAGE>


the bylaws,  provided that the number of directors shall not be reduced so as to
shorten the term of any director then in office,  and further  provided that the
number of directors shall be five (5) until otherwise fixed by a majority of the
board.  The names of the  directors  who shall  serve as  directors  until their
successors are elected and qualified are Leonard L. Abel, Dudley Dworken, Eugene
Ford, William A. Koier, and Ronald D. Paul.

     ARTICLE X. Factors to be Considered in Certain  Transactions.  In the event
the board of directors  shall evaluate a business  combination or other offer of
another party to make a tender or exchange offer for any equity  security of the
Corporation;  merge or consolidate  the  Corporation  with another  corporation;
purchase or otherwise  acquire all or  substantially  all of the  properties and
assets of the  Corporation;  engage  in any  transaction  similar  to, or having
similar  effects  as,  any of the  foregoing  (a  "business  combination"),  the
directors shall consider,  among other things, the following factors: the effect
of the business  combination on the corporation and its subsidiaries,  and their
respective  shareholders,  employees,  customers and the communities  which they
serve;  the  timing  of the  proposed  business  combination;  the risk that the
proposed  business   combination  will  not  be  consummated;   the  reputation,
management  capability  and  performance  history  of the person  proposing  the
business  combination;  the current  market price of the  corporation's  capital
stock; the relation of the price offered to the current value of the corporation
in a freely negotiated transaction and in relation to the directors' estimate of
the future  value of the  corporation  and its  subsidiaries  as an  independent
entity  or  entities;  tax  consequences  of  the  business  combination  to the
corporation and its shareholders; and such other factors deemed by the directors
to be relevant. In such considerations,  the board of directors may consider all
or certain of such factors as a whole and may or may not assign relative weights
to any of them. The foregoing is not intended as a definitive list of factors to
be  considered  by the board of  directors in the  discharge of their  fiduciary
responsibility to the corporation and its shareholders, but rather to guide such
consideration  and to provide  specific  authority for the  consideration by the
board of directors of factors  which are not purely  economic in nature in light
of the circumstances of the corporation and its subsidiaries at the time of such
proposed business combination.



Dated:  October 21, 1997              /s/ Leonard L. Abel
                                      --------------------------------
                                      Leonard L. Abel
                                      Incorporator



Dated:  October 21, 1997              /s/ Ronald D. Paul
                                      --------------------------------
                                      Ronald D. Paul
                                      Incorporator


                                      - 3 -




                                                                    EXHIBIT 3(b)


                             Bylaws of the Company


<PAGE>


                                     BYLAWS

                                       OF

                               EAGLE BANCORP, INC.

                                    ARTICLE I

                                PRINCIPAL OFFICE

     The principal  office of Eagle  Bancorp,  Inc.  (herein the  "Corporation")
shall be at 8101 Glenbrook Road, Bethesda, Maryland 20814 or such other place as
the Board of Directors from time to time shall determine. .

                                   ARTICLE II

                             MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS

     SECTION  1.  Place  of  Meetings.   All  annual  and  special  meetings  of
shareholders shall be held at the principal office of the Corporation or at such
other place  within or without  the State of Maryland as the Board of  Directors
may determine and as designated in the notice of such meeting.

     SECTION 2. Annual Meeting. A meeting of the shareholders of the Corporation
for the election of directors and for the  transaction  of any other business of
the  Corporation  shall be held  annually  at such date and time as the Board of
Directors may determine.

     SECTION 3. Special  Meetings.  Special meetings of the shareholders for any
purpose or  purposes  may be called at any time by the  majority of the Board of
Directors in accordance  with the  provisions of the  Corporation's  Articles of
Incorporation,  or a  special  meeting  may be called  by the  Secretary  of the
Corporation  upon the  written  request  of the  holders  of not less than fifty
percent  (50%) of all votes  entitled to be cast at the  meeting.  Such  written
request  shall  state the  purpose or  purposes  of the  meeting and the matters
proposed to be acted on at the meeting and shall be delivered  at the  principal
office of the  Corporation  addressed to the Chairman of the Board of Directors,
the President or the Secretary.  The Secretary shall inform the shareholders who
make the request of the  reasonably  estimated  costs of preparing and mailing a
notice of the meeting and, upon payment of these costs to the  Corporation,  the
Secretary shall then notify each shareholder entitled to notice of the meeting.

     SECTION 4. Conduct  of  Meetings.  Annual  and  special  meetings  shall be
conducted in accordance  with the rules and procedures  established by the Board
of Directors.  The Board of Directors shall designate,  when present, either the
Chairman of the Board of Directors or the President to preside at such meetings.

     SECTION 5. Notice of Meeting.  Written or printed notice stating the place,
day and hour of the meeting and, in the case of a special  meeting,  the purpose
or purposes for which the meeting is called shall be given either  personally or
by mail by or at the direction of the Board of Directors, not less than ten (10)
days nor more  than  sixty  (60) days  before  the date of the  meeting  to each
shareholder  of  record  entitled  to  vote at such  meeting  and to each  other
shareholder  entitled to notice of the meeting.  If mailed, such notice shall be
deemed to be delivered  when  deposited in the United States mail,  addressed to
the  shareholder at his address as it appears on the stock transfer books of the
Corporation  as of the record date  prescribed  in Section 6 of this Article II,
with postage thereon  prepaid.  If a shareholder be present at a meeting,  or in
writing  waives  notice  thereof  before or after the meeting and such waiver is
filed with the records of the meeting of shareholders,  notice of the meeting to
such shareholder shall be unnecessary.  When any shareholders'  meeting,  either
annual or special,  is adjourned  for more than thirty (30) days,  notice of the
adjourned meeting shall be given as in the case of an original meeting. It shall
not be  necessary  to give  any  notice  of the time  and  place of any  meeting
adjourned  for thirty (30) or fewer days or of the business to be  transacted at
such adjourned meeting,  other than an announcement at the meeting at which such
adjournment is taken.


<PAGE>


     SECTION 6. Fixing  of  Record  Date.  For the  purpose of  determining  the
shareholders entitled to notice of or to vote at any meeting of shareholders, or
any  adjournment  thereof,  or  shareholders  entitled to receive payment of any
dividend,  or in order to make a  determination  of  shareholders  for any other
proper purpose, the Board of Directors shall fix in advance a date as the record
date for any such determination of shareholders.  Such date in any case shall be
not more than sixty (60) days and,  in case of a meeting  of  shareholders,  not
less  than ten (10)  days  prior to the  date on which  the  particular  action,
requiring  such   determination   of  shareholders  is  to  be  taken.   When  a
determination  of  shareholders  entitled to vote at any meeting of shareholders
has been made as provided in this section, such determination shall apply to any
adjournment thereof.

     SECTION 7. Quorum. Unless otherwise provided in the Corporation's  Articles
of  Incorporation,  a  majority  of the  outstanding  shares of the  Corporation
entitled to vote,  represented in person or by proxy,  shall constitute a quorum
at a meeting of shareholders.  If less than a majority of the outstanding shares
are  represented  at a meeting,  a majority  of the  shares so  represented  may
adjourn the meeting from time to time without further notice.  At such adjourned
meeting at which a quorum shall be present or  represented,  any business may be
transacted  which  might  have been  transacted  at the  meeting  as  originally
notified.  The shareholders  present at a duly organized meeting may continue to
transact business until  adjournment,  notwithstanding  the withdrawal of enough
shareholders to leave less than a quorum.

     SECTION 8. Proxies. At all meetings of shareholders, a shareholder may vote
by proxy  executed  in  writing  by the  shareholder  or by his duly  authorized
attorney in fact.  All proxies  shall be filed with the Secretary of the meeting
before being voted. Proxies solicited on behalf of the management shall be voted
as  directed  by the  shareholder  or,  in the  absence  of such  direction,  as
determined  by a majority  of the Board of  Directors.  No proxy  shall be valid
after  eleven  (11)  months  from the date of its  execution,  unless  otherwise
provided in the proxy.

     SECTION 9. Voting.  At  each  election  for  directors,  every  shareholder
entitled to vote at such  election  shall be entitled to one vote for each share
of stock held by him. Unless otherwise provided by the Corporation's Articles of
Incorporation,  these  Bylaws,  or the General Laws of the State of Maryland,  a
majority  of those  votes  cast by  shareholders  at a lawful  meeting  shall be
sufficient to pass on any transaction or matter.

     SECTION 10. Informal  Action  by  Shareholders.   Any  action  required  or
permitted  to be taken at a  meeting  of  shareholders  may be taken  without  a
meeting  if a  unanimous  written  consent  to the  action  is  signed  by  each
shareholder entitled to vote on the matter and a written waiver of any rights to
dissent is signed by each  shareholder  entitled  to notice but not  entitled to
vote at the meeting.  The unanimous  written consent and the written waiver,  if
any, shall be filed with the records of the shareholders' meetings.

     SECTION 11. Voting  of  Shares  in  the Name of Two or More  Persons.  When
ownership of stock stands in the name of two or more persons,  in the absence of
written  directions to the  Corporation  to the contrary,  at any meeting of the
shareholders of the Corporation any one or more of such  shareholders  may cast,
in person or by proxy,  all votes to which such  ownership is  entitled.  In the
event an attempt is made to cast  conflicting  votes,  in person or by proxy, by
the several  persons in whose name shares of stock  stand,  the vote or votes to
which  these  persons  are  entitled  shall be cast as directed by a majority of
those holding such stock and present in person or by proxy at such meeting,  but
no votes shall be cast for such stock if a majority cannot agree.

     SECTION 12. Voting  of Shares by Certain  Holders.  Shares  standing in the
name of another  corporation may be voted by any officer,  agent or proxy as the
bylaws of such corporation may provide, or, in the absence of such provision, as
the Board of  Directors of such  corporation  may  determine.  Shares held by an
administrator,  executor, guardian or conservator may be voted by him, either in
person or by proxy,  without a transfer  of such  shares  into his name.  Shares
standing  in the name of a trustee  may be voted by him,  either in person or by
proxy,  but no trustee  shall be  entitled  to vote shares held by him without a
transfer of such shares into his name. Shares standing in the name of a receiver
may be voted by such  receiver,  and  shares  held by or under the  control of a
receiver may be voted by such  receiver  without the  transfer  thereof into his
name if authority to do so is contained in an appropriate  order of the court or
other public authority by which such receiver was appointed.

                                      - 2 -

<PAGE>


     A  shareholder  whose  shares are  pledged  shall be  entitled to vote such
shares until the shares have been  transferred  into the name of the pledgee and
thereafter the pledgee shall be entitled to vote the shares so transferred.

     Treasury shares of its own stock held by the Corporation shall not be voted
at any meeting or counted in determining the total number of outstanding  shares
at any given time for purposes of any meeting.

     SECTION 13. Inspectors  of  Election.   In   advance   of  any  meeting  of
shareholders,  the Board of  Directors  may  appoint  any  persons,  other  than
nominees  for office,  as  inspectors  of election to act at such meeting or any
adjournment  thereof.  The number of inspectors shall be either one or three. If
the  Board  of  Directors  so  appoints  either  one or three  inspectors,  that
appointment  shall not be altered at the meeting.  If inspectors of election are
not so  appointed,  the Chairman of the Board of Directors or the  President may
make such appointment at the meeting.  In case any person appointed as inspector
fails to  appear  or fails or  refuses  to act,  the  vacancy  may be  filled by
appointment  by the Board of  Directors  in  advance  of the  meeting  or at the
meeting by the Chairman of the Board of Directors or the President.

     Unless  otherwise   prescribed  by  applicable  law,  the  duties  of  such
inspectors  shall  include:  determining  the  number of shares of stock and the
voting power of each share, the shares of stock represented at the meeting,  the
existence  of a quorum,  the  authenticity,  validity  and  effect  of  proxies;
receiving votes, ballots or consents; hearing and determining all challenges and
questions in any way arising in connection with the right to vote;  counting and
tabulating all votes or consents;  determining the result;  and such acts as may
be proper to conduct the election or vote with fairness to all shareholders.

     SECTION 14. Nomination Procedures.  The Board of Directors,  or a committee
thereof appointed in accordance with Article IV hereof shall act as a nominating
committee  for  selecting  the  management  nominees for election as  directors.
Except  in the case of a nominee  substituted  as a result of the death or other
incapacity  of a management  nominee,  the  nominating  committee  shall deliver
written nominations to the Secretary at least twenty (20) days prior to the date
of the annual meeting.

     Nominations  for  the  election  of  directors  may  also  be  made  by any
shareholder  of the  Corporation  entitled to vote  generally in the election of
directors.  Such  nominations  by a  shareholder  must be made  in  writing  and
delivered  to the  Secretary  not later than ninety (90) days prior to the month
and day one year subsequent to the date that the proxy  materials  regarding the
last   election  of  directors  to  the  Board  of  Directors   were  mailed  to
shareholders. Each such notice of nomination by a shareholder must set forth (a)
the full name, age and date of birth of each nominee proposed in the notice, (b)
the business and residence addresses and telephone numbers of each such nominee,
(c) the  educational  background  and business  experience of each such nominee,
including a list of positions  held for at least the preceding  five years,  and
(d) a signed  representation  by each such  nominee that the nominee will timely
provide any other  information  reasonably  requested by the Corporation for the
purpose of preparing its  disclosures in regard to the  solicitation  of proxies
for the election of directors. The name of each such candidate for director must
be placed in nomination at the annual meeting by a shareholder present in person
and the nominee  must be present in person at the  meeting  for the  election of
directors.  Any vote cast for a person who has not been duly nominated  pursuant
to this Article II, Section 14, shall be void.

     Section 15. New  Business at Annual  Meeting.  At an annual  meeting of the
shareholders,  only such business shall be conducted as shall have been properly
brought before the meeting.  To be properly  brought  before an annual  meeting,
proposals  for new business  must be (a)  specified in the notice of meeting (or
any supplement  thereto) given by or at the direction of the Board of Directors,
(b) otherwise  properly brought before the meeting by or at the direction of the
Board of Directors,  or (c) otherwise  properly  brought before the meeting by a
shareholder.

     For  business  to  be  properly  brought  before  an  annual  meeting  by a
shareholder, the shareholder must have given timely notice thereof in writing to
the secretary of the Corporation.  To be timely, a shareholder's  notice must be
delivered to or mailed and received at the  principal  executive  offices of the
Corporation  not less than thirty (30) nor more than ninety (90) days before the
date of any such annual meeting of shareholders; provided, however, that

                                      - 3 -

<PAGE>


if less than forty-five (45) days' notice of the date of the meeting is given to
shareholders, such notice by a shareholder must be received by the Secretary not
later than the close of business on the  fifteenth  (15th) day following the day
on which notice of the date of the meeting was mailed to shareholders or two (2)
days before the date of the  meeting,  whichever  is  earlier.  Each such notice
given by a shareholder to the Secretary with respect to business proposals to be
brought before a meeting shall set forth (a) a brief description of the business
and the reasons for  conducting  such business at the meeting,  (b) the name and
address, as they appear on the Corporation's books, of the shareholder proposing
such business,  (c) the class and number of shares of the  Corporation  that are
beneficially  owned by the  shareholder,  and (d) any  material  interest of the
shareholder  in such  business.  Shareholder  proposals  that do not satisfy the
requirements  of this Article II,  Section 15, may, but need not, be  considered
and discussed but not acted upon at an annual meeting.

                                   ARTICLE III

                               BOARD OF DIRECTORS

     SECTION 1. General  Powers.  The  business  and affairs of the  Corporation
shall be under the  direction  of its Board of  Directors.  In addition to other
powers specifically set out in these Bylaws or that apply under the General Laws
of the State of Maryland,  the Board of  Directors  and any  committees  thereof
shall have the power to manage and administer the affairs of the Corporation and
to do and perform all lawful acts with respect to the affairs of the Corporation
except those that may be  specifically  reserved to the  shareholders  under the
General Laws of the State of Maryland.  The Board of  Directors  shall  annually
elect a  Chairman  of the Board of  Directors  and a  President  from  among its
members and shall designate,  when present,  either the Chairman of the Board of
Directors or the President to preside at its meetings.

     SECTION 2. Qualification of Directors.  Each director must be the holder of
unencumbered or unhypothecated  shares of common stock of the Corporation having
an aggregate par value of $500 or a fair market value of $500.

     SECTION 3. Number,  Term and Election.  The maximum  number of directors is
fixed by the Corporation's  Articles of Incorporation and may be altered only by
amendment thereto. The minimum number of directors shall be three (3). The Board
of  Directors  may,  by a vote of a majority  of the  directors  then in office,
between annual meetings of shareholders,  increase or decrease the membership of
the Board of  Directors  within such  limits,  provided  that no decrease in the
number  of  directors  shall  have  the  effect  of  shortening  the term of any
incumbent director.

     SECTION 4. Regular  Meetings.  The annual meeting of the Board of Directors
shall be held  without  other  notice than this Bylaw within two weeks after the
annual  meeting  of  shareholders.  The  Board  of  Directors  may  provide,  by
resolution,  the time and place for the holding of additional  regular  meetings
without other notice than such resolution.

     SECTION 5. Special Meetings. Special meetings of the Board of Directors may
be called by or at the request of the  Chairman of the Board of Directors of the
Corporation,  or by a majority of the directors.  The persons authorized to call
special  meetings of the Board of  Directors  may fix any place as the place for
holding any special meeting of the Board of Directors called by such persons.

     SECTION 6. Conference Telephone Meetings. Members of the Board of Directors
may  participate  in any  meetings by means of  conference  telephone or similar
communications  equipment by which all persons  participating in the meeting can
hear each other. Such participation shall constitute presence in person.

     SECTION 7. Notice of Special Meetings.  Notice of any special meeting shall
be given to each  director  at least  one hour  previous  thereto.  Notice  of a
special  meeting  need not be in writing.  Any  director may waive notice of any
meeting by a writing filed with the Secretary. The attendance of a director at a
meeting  shall  constitute  a waiver of notice of such  meeting,  except where a
director attends a meeting for the express purpose of objecting

                                      - 4 -

<PAGE>


to the transaction of any business because the meeting is not lawfully called or
convened.  Neither  the  business to be  transacted  at, nor the purpose of, any
meeting of the Board of  Directors  need be specified in the notice or waiver of
notice of such meeting.

     SECTION 8. Quorum.  A majority of the directors  shall  constitute a quorum
for the  transaction  of business at any meeting of the Board of  Directors.  If
less than such  majority is present at a meeting,  a majority  of the  directors
present  may  adjourn  the  meeting  from time to time.  Notice of an  adjourned
meeting  need  not be given if the time  and  place  to  which  the  meeting  is
adjourned are fixed at the meeting at which the adjournment is taken.

     SECTION 9. Voting.  The act of the majority of the  directors  present at a
meeting at which a quorum is present shall be the act of the Board of Directors,
unless the vote of a greater number is required by the Corporation's Articles of
Incorporation, these Bylaws, or the General Laws of the State of Maryland.

     SECTION 10. Action by Written Consent.  Any action required or permitted to
be taken by the Board of Directors,  or any committee thereof,  at a meeting may
be taken without a meeting if a consent in writing,  setting forth the action so
taken,  shall be signed by all of the  directors and filed with the Secretary of
the Corporation for inclusion in the corporate minute book.

     SECTION 11. Resignation.  Any director may  resign at any time by sending a
written notice of such  resignation to the principal  office of the  Corporation
addressed  to the  Chairman of the Board of  Directors,  the  President,  or the
Secretary.  Unless otherwise  specified  therein,  such  resignation  shall take
effect upon acceptance thereof by the Board of Directors.

     SECTION 12. Presumption  of Assent.  A director of the  Corporation  who is
present at a meeting of the Board of Directors at which action on any  corporate
matter is taken shall be presumed to have  assented to the action  taken  unless
his  dissent or  abstention  shall be entered in the  minutes of the  meeting or
unless he shall file his written  dissent to such action with the person  acting
as the Secretary of the meeting before the adjournment  thereof or shall forward
such dissent by registered mail to the Secretary of the Corporation  immediately
after the adjournment of the meeting. Such right to dissent shall not apply to a
director who votes in favor of such action.

     SECTION 13. Advisory  Directors  and   Directors   Emeritus.  The  Board of
Directors may by resolution appoint persons to serve as advisory directors,  who
may also serve as directors emeritus,  and shall have such authority and receive
such compensation and reimbursement as the Board of Directors shall provide.  No
advisory  director or director  emeritus shall have the authority to participate
by vote in the transaction of business.

     SECTION 14. Contracts  with  Interested  Directors.  No  contract  or other
transaction between this Corporation and any other corporation shall be affected
by the fact that any  director of this  Corporation  is  interested  in, or is a
director or officer of, such other corporation,  and any director,  individually
or  jointly,  may be a party  to,  or may be  interested  in,  any  contract  or
transaction of this Corporation or in which this Corporation is interested;  and
no contract, or other transaction, of this Corporation with any person, firm, or
corporation, shall be affected by the fact that any director of this Corporation
is a party to, or is interested in, such contract, act or transaction,  or is in
any way connected with such person,  firm, or corporation,  and every person who
may become a director of this  Corporation is hereby relieved from any liability
that might otherwise exist from contracting with the Corporation for the benefit
of himself or any firm,  association,  or  corporation in which he may be in any
way interested.

                                   ARTICLE IV

                      COMMITTEES OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

     The Board of Directors may, by resolution passed by a majority of the whole
Board,  designate one or more committees,  as they may determine to be necessary
or  appropriate  for the  conduct of the  business of the  Corporation,  and may
prescribe  the  duties,  constitution  and  procedures  thereof.  The  Board  of
Directors may delegate to an

                                      - 5 -

<PAGE>


executive  committee  the power to exercise  all the  authority  of the Board of
Directors  in the  management  of the affairs and  property of the  Corporation,
except  such  authority  as may be  specifically  reserved  to the full Board of
Directors  by the General Laws of the State of Maryland.  Each  committee  shall
consist  of  one or  more  directors  of the  Corporation.  In  the  absence  or
disqualification  of a member of a  committee,  the  member or  members  thereof
present at any meeting and not disqualified from voting, whether or not a quorum
exists, may unanimously  appoint another member of the Board of Directors to act
at the meeting in the place of the disqualified or absent member.

     The Board of  Directors  shall have  power,  by the  affirmative  vote of a
majority  of the  authorized  number of  directors,  at any time to  change  the
members of, to fill  vacancies  in, and to discharge any committee of the Board.
Any  member of any  committee  of the Board of  Directors  may be removed at any
time, either with or without cause, by the affirmative vote of a majority of the
authorized  number of  directors  at any  meeting  of the Board  called for that
purpose.

                                    ARTICLE V

                                    OFFICERS

     SECTION 1. Positions.  The officers of the Corporation  shall be a Chairman
of the  Board  of  Directors,  a  President,  one or  more  Vice  Presidents,  a
Secretary, a Treasurer,  and such other officers as the Board of Directors shall
from  time  to time  deem  necessary  for the  conduct  of the  business  of the
Corporation.  Any two or more offices may be held by the same person.  The Board
of  Directors  may  designate  one or more Vice  Presidents  as  Executive  Vice
President or Senior Vice  President.  The officers shall have such authority and
perform such duties as the Board of Directors may from time to time authorize or
determine by resolution. In the absence of action by the Board of Directors, the
officers  shall have such powers and duties as are  generally  incident to their
respective offices.

     SECTION 2. Election  and Term of Office.  The  officers of the  Corporation
shall be elected  annually by the Board of Directors at the first meeting of the
Board of Directors  held after each annual meeting of the  shareholders.  If the
election of officers is not held at such meeting, such election shall be held as
soon thereafter as possible.  Each officer shall hold office until his successor
shall have been duly elected and  qualified or until his death or until he shall
resign or shall have been removed in the manner hereinafter  provided.  Election
or  appointment  of an officer,  employee  or agent  shall not of itself  create
contract  rights.  The Board of Directors may authorize the Corporation to enter
into an employment  contract with any officer in accordance  with state law; but
no such contract  shall impair the right of the Board of Directors to remove any
officer at any time in accordance with Section 4 of this Article V.

     SECTION 3. Resignation.  Any  officer  may  resign  at  any  time by giving
written notice to the Chairman of the Board of Directors,  the President, or the
Secretary.  Any such resignation shall take effect at the time specified therein
or, if no time is specified, upon its acceptance by the Board of Directors.

     SECTION 4. Removal. Any officer may be removed by vote of a majority of the
Board  of  Directors  whenever,  in its  judgment,  the  best  interests  of the
Corporation  will be served  thereby,  but such  removal,  other than for cause,
shall be without  prejudice  to the  contract  rights,  if any, of the person so
removed.

     SECTION 5. Remuneration.  The  remuneration  of the officers shall be fixed
from time to time by the Board of  Directors  and no officer  shall be prevented
from  receiving  such salary by reason of the fact that he is also a director of
the Corporation.

                                   ARTICLE VI

                   CERTIFICATES FOR SHARES AND THEIR TRANSFER

     SECTION 1. Certificates for Shares.  The shares of the Corporation shall be
represented by certificates  signed by the Chairman of the Board of Directors or
by the  President  or a Vice  President  and by the  Treasurer  or an  assistant
treasurer or by the Secretary or an assistant secretary of the Corporation,  and
may be sealed with the seal

                                      - 6 -

<PAGE>


of the Corporation or a facsimile  thereof.  Any or all of the signatures upon a
certificate may be facsimiles if the certificate is  countersigned by a transfer
agent,  or registered by a registrar,  other than the  Corporation  itself or an
employee of the  Corporation.  If any officer who has signed or whose  facsimile
signature  has been  placed upon such  certificate  shall have ceased to be such
officer before the  certificate is issued,  it may be issued by the  Corporation
with the same effect as if he were such officer at the date of its issue.

     SECTION 2. Form of  Certificates.  All  certificates  representing   shares
issued  by the  Corporation  shall  set  forth  upon the  face or back  that the
Corporation  will furnish to any  shareholder  upon request and without charge a
full  statement  of the  designations,  preferences,  limitations,  and relative
rights of the shares of each class  authorized to be issued,  the  variations in
the relative  rights and  preferences  between the shares of each such series so
far as the same have been fixed and  determined,  and the authority of the Board
of  Directors  to fix and  determine  the  relative  rights and  preferences  of
subsequent series.

     Each  certificate  representing  shares shall state upon the face  thereof:
that the Corporation is organized  under the laws of the State of Maryland;  the
name of the person to whom issued;  the number and class of shares;  the date of
issue; the designation of the series, if any, which such certificate represents;
the par value of each share represented by such certificate, or a statement that
the shares are  without  par value.  Other  matters in regard to the form of the
certificates shall be determined by the Board of Directors.

     SECTION 3. Payment  for  Shares.  No  certificate  shall  be issued for any
shares  until such share is fully paid.  The  consideration  for the issuance of
shares shall be paid in  accordance  with the  provisions  of the  Corporation's
Articles of Incorporation.

     SECTION 4. Transfer of Shares.  Transfer  of shares of capital stock of the
Corporation  shall be made only on its stock transfer books.  Authority for such
transfer  shall be given  only by the  holder of record  thereof or by his legal
representative,  who shall furnish proper evidence of such authority,  or by his
attorney thereunto  authorized by power of attorney duly executed and filed with
the Corporation.  Such transfer shall be made only on surrender for cancellation
of the certificate  for such shares.  The person in whose name shares of capital
stock stand on the books of the  Corporation  shall be deemed by the Corporation
to be the owner thereof for all purposes.

     SECTION 5. Stock Ledger.  The stock ledger of the Corporation  shall be the
only  evidence  as to who are the  shareholders  entitled  to examine  the stock
ledger or the books of the  Corporation  or to vote in person or by proxy at any
meeting of shareholders.

     SECTION 6. Lost  Certificates.  The  Board of  Directors  may  direct a new
certificate to be issued in place of any certificate  theretofore  issued by the
Corporation alleged to have been lost, stolen, or destroyed,  upon the making of
an affidavit of that fact by the person  claiming the certificate of stock to be
lost,  stolen,  or destroyed.  When authorizing such issue of a new certificate,
the Board of Directors may, in its  discretion  and as a condition  precedent to
the  issuance  thereof,  require the owner of such lost,  stolen,  or  destroyed
certificate, or his legal representative, to give the Corporation a bond in such
sum as it may direct as indemnity against any claim that may be made against the
Corporation with respect to the certificate  alleged to have been lost,  stolen,
or destroyed.

     SECTION 7. Beneficial  Owners.  The  Corporation  shall   be   entitled  to
recognize the exclusive  right of a person  registered on its books as the owner
of shares to  receive  dividends,  and to vote as such  owner,  and shall not be
bound to recognize any equitable or other claim to or interest in such shares on
the part of any other person,  whether or not the Corporation shall have express
or other notice thereof, except as otherwise provided by law.

                                      - 7 -

<PAGE>


                                   ARTICLE VII

                            FISCAL YEAR; ANNUAL AUDIT

     The fiscal year of the Corporation shall end on the 31st day of December of
each year. The Corporation  shall be subject to an annual audit as of the end of
its fiscal year by independent public  accountants  appointed by and responsible
to the Board of Directors.

                                  ARTICLE VIII

                                    DIVIDENDS

     Subject to the provisions of the  Corporation's  Articles of  Incorporation
and  applicable  law,  the Board of  Directors  may,  at any  regular or special
meeting,  declare  dividends on the  Corporation's  outstanding  capital  stock.
Dividends may be paid in cash, in property or in the Corporation's own stock.

                                   ARTICLE IX

                                 CORPORATE SEAL

     The corporate seal of the Corporation shall be in such form as the Board of
Directors shall prescribe.

                                    ARTICLE X

                                   AMENDMENTS

     The Board of  Directors  of the  Corporation  may repeal,  alter,  amend or
rescind  these  Bylaws by a majority  vote of the Board of  Directors at a legal
meeting held in accordance with the provisions of these Bylaws. These Bylaws may
not be  repealed,  altered,  amended or  rescinded  by the  shareholders  of the
Corporation.


                                    * * * * *

                                      - 8 -




                                                                       EXHIBIT 5


                    Opinion of Kennedy, Baris & Lundy, L.L.P.


<PAGE>


                         KENNEDY, BARIS & LUNDY, L.L.P.

   TEXAS OFFICE:            ATTORNEYS AT LAW            WASHINGTON, DC OFFICE:
    SUITE 1775                  SUITE 300                   SEVENTH FLOOR
112 EAST PECAN STREET       4719 HAMPDEN LANE         1225 NINETEENTH STREET, NW
SAN ANTONIO, TX 78205       BETHESDA, MD 20814           WASHINGTON, DC 20036
  (210) 228-9500             (301) 654-6040                 (202) 835-0313
 FAX: (210) 228-0781       FAX: (301) 654-1733            FAX: (202) 835-0319
                                                                   


                                December 10, 1997


Board of Directors
Eagle Bancorp, Inc.

         Re:  Registration Statement on Form SB-2

Gentlemen:

     As counsel to Eagle Bancorp,  Inc. (the "Company") we have  participated in
the preparation of the Company's Registration Statement on Form SB-2 to be filed
with the  Securities and Exchange  Commission  pursuant to the Securities Act of
1933, as amended, relating to the proposed public offering,  through the efforts
of certain  directors and officers of the Company,  of up to 1,380,000 shares of
the  Company's  Common  Stock,   including  shares  issuable   pursuant  to  the
Oversubscription Allotment (the "Shares").

         As counsel to the Company,  we have  examined such  corporate  records,
certificates and other documents of the Company,  and made such  examinations of
law and inquiries of such officers of the Company,  as we have deemed  necessary
or appropriate for purposes of this opinion. Based upon such examinations we are
of the  opinion  that the  Shares,  when  sold in the  manner  set  forth in the
Registration Statement, will be duly authorized,  validly issued, fully paid and
non-assessable shares of the Common Stock of the Company.

     We hereby  consent to the  inclusion  of this  opinion as an exhibit to the
Registration  Statement  on Form SB-2 filed by the Company and the  reference to
our firm contained therein under "Legal Matters."

                                          Sincerely,



                                          /s/ Kennedy, Baris & Lundy, L.L.P.





                                                                      EXHIBIT 21


                         SUBSIDIARIES OF THE REGISTRANT

     As of the date hereof,  the Registrant has no subsidiaries.  The Registrant
is in the process of formation of  EagleBank,  a bank to be organized  under the
laws of the state of Maryland as a wholly owned subsidiary of the Registrant.






                                                                   EXHIBIT 23(a)


               CONSENT OF INDEPENDENT CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS


     We hereby consent to the use in this Registration Statement on Form SB-2 of
our  report  dated  December  8, 1997  relating  to the  balance  sheet of Eagle
Bancorp,  Inc. as of November 30, 1997,  and to the  reference to our Firm under
the heading "Experts" in the Prospectus.

                                                      Stegman & Company

                                                      /s/ STEGMAN & COMPANY



Baltimore, Maryland
December 9, 1997






                                                                   EXHIBIT 99(a)


                                     FORM OF

                               EAGLE BANCORP, INC.

          SUBSCRIPTION AGREEMENT FOR OFFERING OF SHARES OF COMMON STOCK



THE TERMS  AND  CONDITIONS  OF THE  OFFERING  ARE SET FORTH IN THE  ACCOMPANYING
PROSPECTUS.  PERSONS WHO WISH TO PURCHASE SHARES OF COMMON STOCK IN THE OFFERING
ARE URGED TO CAREFULLY  READ THE  PROSPECTUS IN ITS ENTIRETY PRIOR TO SUBMITTING
THIS SUBSCRIPTION AGREEMENT. ALL SUBSCRIPTIONS,  ONCE SUBMITTED, ARE IRREVOCABLE
BY THE SUBSCRIBER.


1.   Subscription for Shares of Common Stock. The undersigned hereby irrevocably
     subscribes  for  _______________________________  shares of Common Stock of
     Eagle Bancorp, Inc. at the purchase price of 10.00 per share.1

2.   Purchase Price and Manner of Payment. The undersigned submits herewith,  by
     means of:

          check, bank draft or money order in the amount of  $__________________
          ($10.00  multiplied by the total number of shares  subscribed for in 1
          above),  payable  to  "__________________,   Escrow  Agent  for  Eagle
          Bancorp, Inc."


3.   (a) Registration Instructions.  This Part must be completed with respect to
     all Shares purchased.


- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
     (Names(s) in which securities are to be registered)


- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
     (Address, including Street, City, County, State and ZIP Code)

     Taxpayer identification or Social Security Number: ____________________

     Manner in which securities are to be owned:

     [ ] Tenants in Common [ ] Joint Tenants [ ] Uniform Transfer to Minors
     [ ] Individual [ ] Other (for  example,  corporation,  trust or estate.  If
         shares are purchased for a trust,  the date of the trust agreements and
         trust title must be included).


- --------------
         1  Subject  to a  minimum  subscription  of 500  shares  and a  maximum
subscription  of 5% of the total number of shares actually sold in the offering.
Subject to reduction in the event that the offering is oversubscribed.


<PAGE>



         (b) Special Delivery Instructions:  If certificate(s)  representing the
Shares  subscribed  for is to be delivered to an address other than as indicated
on the face of this Agreement.


- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
         Name

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------


- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
         (Address, including Street, City, County, State and ZIP Code)


4.       Deadline.  This  Subscription  Agreement  and  payment  in  full of the
         Subscription  Price must be  actually  received by the Company NO LATER
         THAN 5:00 P.M., EASTERN TIME, ON ____________________ (the "Termination
         Date").


Name of Subscriber:

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

SIGNATURE:

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(Signature(s) of subscriber(s) exactly as name(s) appear above)

Dated: ______________, 199___

If  signature  is by  trustee(s),  executor(s),  administrator(s),  guardian(s),
attorney(s)-in-fact,  agent(s), officer(s) of a corporation or another acting in
a fiduciary or representative capacity, please provide the following information
as to such person.

Name (please print)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Capacity (Full title)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Address (including ZIP Code)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Business Telephone Number (including area code)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Taxpayer identification or Social Security Number
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------


                                      - 3 -




                                                                   EXHIBIT 99(B)


                        Form of Placement Agent Agreement


<PAGE>



                            PLACEMENT AGENT AGREEMENT

         THIS  AGREEMENT is made this ____ day of December,  1997 by and between
Koonce Securities,  Inc., a Maryland corporation ("Koonce"),  and Eagle Bancorp,
Inc., a Maryland corporation ("Issuer").

                                    Recitals
                                    --------

         A. Issuer  desires to offer and sell up to  1,200,000  shares of Common
Stock (with a 15% over allotment),  par value $0.01 per share ("Common  Stock"),
under the terms and conditions set forth in the  prospectus  (the  "Prospectus")
forming a part of the  Registration  Statement  on Form SB-2 (the  "Registration
Statement")  under the  Securities  Act of 1933,  as amended  (the  "Act")  (the
"Offering"), prepared by Issuer.

         B. Koonce is a broker-dealer  registered with the Commission  under the
Securities  Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the "Exchange  Act"), and with the
securities agencies of various states and other jurisdictions, including without
limitation  the  states and other  jurisdictions  listed on Exhibit A hereto and
incorporated herein by reference (collectively, the "States").

         C.  Issuer  desires to appoint  Koonce as its agent to provide  limited
assistance  to Issuer to  complete  the  Offering  to persons  who reside in the
States.

         NOW,  THEREFORE,  in consideration  of the mutual  covenants  contained
herein, the parties hereto agree as follows:

         1.  Duties of Koonce.
             -----------------

         Issuer hereby  appoints  Koonce as its agent to execute such  materials
prepared by Issuer as are  necessary  to file under the  securities  laws of the
States  and with the  Commission  and the  National  Association  of  Securities
Dealers,  Inc.  ("NASD") and so as to comply with the registration  requirements
under  the Act and the  securities  laws of the  States.  Issuer  will  make all
filings  necessary to obtain a "no objection" letter regarding the Offering from
the NASD.  All  subscription  funds will be held in an escrow account at Capital
Bank, N.A.,  Rockville,  Maryland (the "Bank"). To the extent that the Issuer or
the Bank receives  subscriptions from persons resident in the States, the Issuer
will,  and  will  cause  the  Bank  to,  promptly  forward  to  Koonce  executed
subscription  agreements  from such potential  investors.  Upon  notification by
Issuer that all  conditions  precedent to the  consummation  of the Offering (as
defined in the  Registration  Statement)  have been  satisfied  or duly  waived,
Koonce shall authorize the Bank to release subscription funds held in the escrow
account on behalf of  offerees  residing in the States who have  subscribed  for
shares in the Offering.  Except as  contemplated  in this Section,  Koonce shall
have no other duties or responsibilities and Koonce shall not advise offerees in
connection with the Offering.

         2.  Reimbursement of Expenses
             -------------------------

         Issuer  shall,   upon  request,   advance  to  Koonce  all   reasonable
out-of-pocket  expenses  or  filing  fees  and  promptly  reimburse  Koonce  for
reasonable  out-of-pocket  expenses  incurred in connection with Koonce's duties
hereunder.  Koonce  shall  receive  $10,000  as  compensation  for its  services
hereunder,  $5,000  of  which  will  be paid at the  time of  execution  of this
Agreement and $5,000 of which will be paid at the time the Issuer breaks escrow.

         3.  Koonce's Representations, Warranties and Covenants
             --------------------------------------------------

         Koonce hereby  represents  and warrants to, and agrees with,  Issuer as
follows:

         (a) Koonce is a corporation,  duly organized under the laws of Maryland
with all requisite power and authority to enter into this Agreement and to carry
out its obligations hereunder.


                                      - 1 -

<PAGE>


         (b) Koonce is duly  registered as a  broker-dealer  with the Commission
under the Exchange  Act, is a member in good  standing of the NASD,  and is duly
registered as a broker-dealer or agent in the States.

         (c) Koonce shall not act as a broker-dealer in connection with Issuer's
offer and sale of the Common Stock in any state or other  jurisdiction  in which
Koonce is not registered as a broker-dealer.

         (d) This Agreement has been duly and validly  authorized,  executed and
delivered  by Koonce and is the legal,  valid and  binding  agreement  of Koonce
enforceable in accordance with its terms.

         4.  Issuer's Representations, Warranties and Covenants
             --------------------------------------------------

         Issuer hereby  represents  and warrants to, and agrees with,  Koonce as
follows:

         (a) Issuer is a corporation, legally incorporated, validly existing and
in good  standing  under the laws of the State of Maryland,  with all  requisite
power  and  authority  to  enter  into  this  Agreement  and to  carry  out  its
obligations hereunder.

         (b) The Common Stock is duly  authorized,  and upon sale in  accordance
with the Prospectus, will be validly issued, fully paid and non-assessable.

         (c) The offer and sale of the Common Stock will be registered or exempt
from securities  registration under the laws of each State, and Issuer will take
all action  necessary to register the Common Stock or insure the availability of
an exemption in all such States.

         (d) Issuer will circulate the Prospectus  only in such of the States in
which the offer and sale of the Common  Stock has been  registered  or is exempt
from securities registration.

         (e) Issuer will deliver to all offerees and their  representatives,  or
if required,  to Koonce for delivery by Koonce to offerees  identified by Issuer
and their representatives,  copies of the Issuer's Prospectus and any additional
information, documents and instruments which Issuer with consent of Koonce deems
necessary to comply with federal and state securities laws,  rules,  regulations
and judicial and administrative interpretations relating to the Offering. Issuer
has  provided  Koonce for review all  materials  to be delivered to offerees and
their representatives, and will provide to Koonce any additional or supplemental
materials  to be so delivered to offerees in the States.  Such  materials  shall
disclose the limited nature of the services provided by Koonce.

         (f) The Registration  Statement and Prospectus,  and any other offering
documents provided to Koonce by Issuer, will not contain any untrue statement of
a material fact or omit to state any material fact required to be stated therein
or  necessary  to make the  statements  therein not  misleading  in light of the
circumstances under which they were made.

         (g) Issuer  will take all  action  necessary  so that any  subscribers'
checks it may receive are  transmitted  to the Escrow  Agent by noon of the next
business day following  receipt,  and shall notify Koonce of any and all amounts
so transmitted.

         (h)  Issuer  will  promptly  notify  Koonce of any  subscriptions  from
persons residing in the States which it rejects for any reason.

         (i)  Issuer  will  not  authorize  the  release  of funds  relating  to
subscriptions  in the States unless and until Koonce shall have  authorized such
release as contemplated hereby.

         (j) This Agreement has been duly and validly  authorized,  executed and
delivered  by Issuer and is the legal,  valid and  binding  agreement  of Issuer
enforceable in accordance with its terms.

                                      - 2 -

<PAGE>


         5.  Indemnification
             ---------------

         Issuer  agrees to indemnify  and hold  harmless  Koonce,  its officers,
directors,  agents,  employees  and  shareholders,  from and against any losses,
liabilities,  claims,  damages or expenses whatsoever (including attorney's fees
and  reasonable  costs of  investigation)  which are  incurred by Koonce or such
other persons  insofar as such losses,  liabilities and claims or expenses arise
from any claim that:

         (a)  Information  distributed  to any offeree or  purchaser or filed by
Issuer or by Koonce on Issuer's  behalf with the securities  agency of any State
or other jurisdiction,  contains an untrue statement or alleged untrue statement
of a material  fact,  or omits or is  alleged  to omit to state a material  fact
necessary in order to make the statements  therein in light of the circumstances
under which they were made, not misleading,  is materially misleading,  or fails
to meet  the  requirements  of such  information  set  forth  in any  applicable
provisions  of  federal  or state  securities  laws or  regulations  promulgated
thereunder;

         (b) Issuer  has  breached  any  agreement  with,  or legal duty to, any
offeree or purchaser, or any representation or warranty herein; or

         (c) The offer or sale of Common Stock to an offeree or purchaser is not
registered  or  exempt  from  registration  under  the  Act  or  the  applicable
securities laws of any State.

         6.  Offering Expenses.
             ------------------

         Issuer  will  pay  all  expenses  incident  to the  performance  of its
obligations hereunder, including all fees and expenses of registering the Common
Stock or obtaining an exemption from registration  under applicable  federal and
state securities laws and obtaining the clearance of the offering from the NASD.

         7.  Notices.
             --------

         All statements,  requests and notices hereunder shall be in writing and
shall be  sufficient in all respects if sent by first class mail or delivered by
hand:

         If to Issuer, to:

         Eagle Bancorp, Inc.
         8101 Glenbrook Road
         Bethesda, Maryland  20814

         Attention:  Ronald D. Paul


         If to Koonce, to:

         Koonce Securities Inc.
         Suite 600
         6550 Rock Spring Drive
         Bethesda, Maryland  20817

         Attention:  Calvin Koonce


                                      - 3 -

<PAGE>



         8. States Where Offering to be Made.
            ---------------------------------

         Issuer  will offer and sell the  Common  Stock only in states and other
jurisdictions  in which Koonce is registered as a broker-dealer or in states and
other  jurisdictions  in which  offers  and  sales are not  required  to be made
through a registered broker-dealer or agent.

         9.  Governing Law.
             --------------

         This  Agreement  shall be governed by and construed in accordance  with
the laws of the State of Maryland.


         IN  WITNESS  WHEREOF,  the  parties  hereto  have  duly  executed  this
Agreement as of the day and year first above written.

                            EAGLE BANCORP, INC.



                             By: _______________________________
                                 Ronald D. Paul, President


                             KOONCE SECURITIES INC.



                             By: _______________________________
                                 Calvin Koonce, President



                                      - 4 -


<PAGE>


                                                                       Exhibit A




                                 List of States


                                   California
                                    Colorado
                                   Connecticut
                                    Delaware
                              District of Columbia
                                     Florida
                                    Illinois
                                    Maryland
                                    Michigan
                                    Missouri
                                   New Jersey
                                    New York
                                      Ohio
                                  Pennsylvania
                                      Texas
                                    Virginia
                               Washington (State)






                                                                   EXHIBIT 99(C)


                            Form of Escrow Agreement



<PAGE>


                                ESCROW AGREEMENT

         This  ESCROW  AGREEMENT  is made and  entered  into  this  _____ day of
___________ 199___, by and between Eagle Bancorp,  Inc., a Maryland  corporation
(the  "Company"),  and Capital  Bank,  N.A.,  Rockville,  Maryland  (the "Escrow
Agent").

          BACKGROUND.  Pursuant to a prospectus forming a part of a Registration
Statement  on Form SB-2 filed by the Company  with the  Securities  and Exchange
Commission  (the   "Prospectus")  the  Company  is  offering  for  sale,  Koonce
Securities, Inc., a registered broker dealer ("Koonce") or another broker-dealer
in  jurisdictions  in which Koonce is not  registered and through the efforts of
certain  of its  organizers,  a minimum of  800,000  and a maximum of  1,200,000
shares of its common stock,  $5 par value per share, of the Company (the "Common
Stock"), plus an Oversubscription  Allotment of an additional 180,000 shares, at
a price of $10.00  per share  (the  "Offering").  Those  persons  who  desire to
purchase shares are required to execute and deliver a subscription agreement and
are required to pay the full purchase price of the shares  subscribed for at the
time of subscription,  by cash, check, bank draft or money order. The Prospectus
provides  that all  subscriptions  should be delivered  to Koonce,  and that all
checks or other  orders are to be made  payable  to the  Escrow  Agent as escrow
agent for the Company.

         The  sale  of  any  shares  in  the  Offering  is  subject  to  various
conditions,  including  the receipt of acceptable  subscriptions  and payment in
respect  of at least  800,000  shares of Common  Stock,  and the  receipt of all
approvals from state and federal regulatory authorities required for the Company
and its proposed subsidiary,  EagleBank, a Maryland chartered bank (the "Bank"),
to  commence  their  respective  businesses  as a  bank  holding  company  and a
commercial  bank.  Pending closing upon the sale of shares or termination of the
Offering,  all monies  received from  subscribers  on account of the purchase of
shares are to be  deposited  in an escrow  account  with the Escrow  Agent.  The
parties hereto wish to set forth herein the terms and  conditions  governing the
escrow account and the funds being delivered to and held by the Escrow Agent.

         NOW  THEREFORE,   in   consideration  of  the  mutual  promises  herein
contained,  each intending to be legally bound hereby,  the parties hereto agree
as follows:

         1. ESCROW AGENT.  The Company hereby  designates  and appoints  Capital
Bank, N.A. Rockville,  Maryland, as Escrow Agent to serve in accordance with the
terms and conditions of this Escrow Agreement and the Escrow Agent agrees to act
as such Escrow Agent in accordance  with the terms and conditions of this Escrow
Agreement.

         2. CREATION OF ESCROW. At any time and from time to time after the date
hereof until  completion  of the Offering  and Closing  thereunder,  the Company
shall  deliver,  or cause to be delivered  by Koonce,  to the Escrow Agent funds
representing  the purchase price of shares  subscribed for by  subscribers.  The
Escrow Agent shall accept and hold in escrow all such funds  received by it from
the Company or Koonce for deposit in escrow  hereunder  (the  "Escrowed  Funds")
until released as set forth herein.

         3. INVESTMENT OF ESCROWED  FUNDS.  Pending  release  from  escrow,  the
Escrowed Funds shall,  not later than the first business day following  receipt,
be invested by the Escrow Agent in interest  bearing  short-term  United  States
government securities. All interest accrued on the Escrowed Funds or on interest
earned on the  Escrowed  Funds shall be retained by the Escrow  Agent as part of
the Escrowed Funds and released in accordance with the provisions of this Escrow
Agreement.  It is acknowledged and agreed that the Escrowed Funds, including any
interest  or  earnings  thereon,  are not assets or deposit  liabilities  of the
Escrow Agent, but constitute funds submitted to the Escrow Agent for safekeeping
and investment  pending  disbursement  in accordance with the provisions of this
Escrow Agreement.

         4. INFORMATION.  From time to time upon the request of the Company, the
Escrow Agent shall  furnish to the Company a statement of the amount of Escrowed
Funds held by the Escrow Agent,  the approximate  amount of any accrued interest
thereon,  and such other information as the Company may reasonably request.  The
Escrow

                                       -1-

<PAGE>



Agent shall immediately  notify the Company if any check  representing  Escrowed
Funds or other  purported  transfer  of  Escrowed  Funds  fails to result in the
delivery of funds to the Escrow Agent.

         5. RELEASE OF ESCROWED FUNDS.

            (a) Release of Escrowed Funds to the Company.  (i) Immediately  upon
the receipt of the  certificate  of the Company as described  below,  the Escrow
Agent shall  release and deliver to the  Company  such  portion of the  Escrowed
Funds as represents  payment of the purchase price of shares in respect of which
the  Company has  accepted  subscriptions.  Except as  provided in Section  5(b)
hereof,  the Escrow Agent shall not release any portion of the Escrowed Funds to
the Company until it has received:  (1) a  certification  of Leonard L. Abel and
Ronald D. Paul,  Chairman and President,  respectively,  of the Company,  or the
then  serving  Chairman  and  President,  to the effect that (i) the Company has
received  acceptable  subscriptions  (including  payment in full of the purchase
price)  with  respect  to  not  less  than  800,000  shares,  and  has  accepted
subscriptions with respect to not less than 800,000 shares; (ii) the Company has
received  the  approval of the Board of  Governors  of the Federal  Reserve (the
"Federal  Reserve")  to become a bank  holding  company;  and (iii) the Bank has
received the  approval of the Maryland  Department  of Financial  Regulation  to
commence business,  the approval of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation of
the insurance of the Bank's deposits,  and the approval from the Federal Reserve
of the Bank's  application for membership in the Federal  Reserve  System.  Such
certification  shall  indicate  the exact number of shares with respect to which
subscriptions  have been  accepted.  Notwithstanding  anything  to the  contrary
contained herein,  the delivery of the foregoing  certification  shall be in the
sole  discretion  of Messrs.  Abel and Paul and nothing  contained  herein shall
constitute  any  obligation,  express or  implied,  of Messrs.  Abel and Paul to
deliver such certification,  or to deliver it at any specified time; and (2) the
certification of an appropriate officer of Koonce to the effect that the Company
has received  subscriptions  (including  payment in full of the purchase  price)
with  respect  to not less than the  number of shares  for which the  release of
funds is sought.

         (ii) In the event that the  Offering  shall  continue  with  respect to
additional shares following the release of funds described in (a)(i) above, then
the Escrow Agent shall, immediately upon the receipt from time to time of one or
more  certificates  of: (1) Messrs.  Abel and Paul, or the then serving Chairman
and President of the Company,  stating that the Company has received  acceptable
subscriptions  (including payment in full of the purchase price) with respect to
a specified number of additional  shares,  and has accepted  subscriptions  with
respect to such number of additional shares; and (2) the appropriate officers of
Koonce to the effect  that the  Company has  received  subscriptions  (including
payment in full of the  purchase  price) with respect to at least that number of
additional  shares,  release  and  deliver to the  Company  such  portion of the
Escrowed  Funds as  represents  payment of the purchase  price of such number of
additional shares in respect of which the Company has accepted subscriptions.

            (b) Release of  Escrowed  Funds to  Subscribers.  Immediately  after
receiving a certification of Messrs. Abel and Paul, or the then serving Chairman
and  President  to the effect  that the Company  has either (i)  terminated  the
Offering in whole or in part; or (ii) rejected, revoked or cancelled in whole or
in part any  subscription  payment  in  respect of all or a portion of which has
been  received by the Escrow  Agent,  then the Escrow  Agent shall return to the
subscriber whose subscription shall have been rejected, revoked or cancelled, in
whole or in part,  as a result of  termination  of the  Offering  or  otherwise,
Escrowed Funds  representing  such  subscriber's  payments,  or all subscribers'
payments  in the event of  termination  of the  Offering  as a whole,  and shall
release to the Company,  all interest or other earnings  accrued on such portion
of the Escrowed Funds.

         6. LIMITATION OF LIABILITY.  It is agreed that the duties of the Escrow
Agent are limited to those herein  specifically  provided and are ministerial in
nature.  It is further  agreed that the Escrow  Agent  shall incur no  liability
whatever  except by reason of its willful  misconduct,  gross  negligence or bad
faith.  The Escrow Agent shall be under no obligation in respect to amounts held
in escrow  hereunder  other than  faithfully to follow the  instructions  herein
contained  or  delivered  to the Escrow  Agent in  accordance  with this  Escrow
Agreement.  It shall not be required to institute legal proceedings of any kind.
It  shall  have no  responsibility  for  computations  to be made in  accordance
herewith  or for the  genuineness  or  validity  of any  document  or other item
deposited with it, and it shall be fully  protected in acting in accordance with
the Escrow Agreement upon any written instructions given to it and reasonably

                                       -2-

<PAGE>


believed by it to have been duly executed by the Company in accordance herewith.
The Company  shall  indemnify  and hold the Escrow  Agent  harmless  against any
claims, demands,  damages or losses with respect to any thing done by the Escrow
Agent  in good  faith  in any and  all  matters  covered  by this  Agreement  in
accordance with the instructions or provisions set forth herein,  except such as
may arise through or be caused by the wilful  misconduct or gross  negligence of
the Escrow Agent.

         7. INTENTIONALLY OMITTED.

         8. RESIGNATION.  The Escrow  Agent,  or  any  successor to it hereafter
appointed,  may at any time  resign by giving  notice in writing to the  Company
and, upon the appointment of a successor  Escrow Agent as hereinafter  provided,
shall be  discharged  from any further  duties  hereunder.  In the event of such
resignation,  a successor  Escrow Agent,  which shall be a bank or trust company
organized under the laws of the United States of America,  shall be appointed by
the Company.  Any such  successor  Escrow  Agent shall  deliver to the Company a
written instrument accepting such appointment hereunder,  and thereupon it shall
succeed to all of the unaccrued  rights and duties of the Escrow Agent hereunder
and shall be  entitled  to receive  all of the then  remaining  amounts  held in
escrow hereunder.

         9. TERMINATION.  This Escrow Agreement shall terminate upon the earlier
of:  (i) the  receipt  by the Escrow  Agent of a written  notice of  termination
signed  by  the  Company  accompanied  by  sufficient  certifications  or  other
documentation  to verify  that all  subscriptions  to which the  Escrowed  Funds
relate shall have been accepted and certificates representing such shares issued
or rejected in whole;  or (ii) the  distribution of all of the Escrowed Funds in
accordance with this Escrow Agreement following termination or completion of the
Offering.  Upon termination pursuant to clause (i) above, the Escrow Agent shall
deliver any Escrowed  Funds  remaining  after return to  subscribers of Escrowed
Funds  representing  rejected  subscriptions  as  instructed  in such  notice of
termination.

         10. NOTICES. Except as otherwise provided in this Agreement, any notice
or  other  communication  hereunder  shall be in  writing  and  shall be  deemed
delivered  upon  personal   delivery  or  upon  receipt  if  sent  by  facsimile
transmission,  express  delivery  service or mailed by  registered  or certified
first class mail, postage prepaid, and addressed as follows:

     To the Company:                    To the Escrow Agent:

     Ronald D. Paul                     Capital Bank, N.A.
     Eagle Bancorp, Inc.                         Attention:
     8101 Glenbrook Road                One Church Street
     Bethesda, Maryland  20814                   Rockville, Maryland  20850

or to such other  addresses  or persons as the parties,  from time to time,  may
furnish one another by notice given in accordance with this section.

         11.      MISCELLANEOUS.

                  (a)  Assignment.  This Escrow  Agreement and the rights of the
parties hereunder may not be assigned by the Escrow Agent without the consent of
the Company,  which  consent may be withheld in the absolute  discretion  of the
Company,  and any attempted  assignment in violation of this Section 11(a) shall
be void. This Escrow Agreement and all action taken hereunder in accordance with
its terms shall be binding  upon and inure to the benefit of each of the parties
hereto  and its  respective  successors,  permitted  assigns,  heirs,  and legal
representatives.


                                       -3-

<PAGE>


                  (b)  Amendment.  This  Escrow  Agreement  may be amended  upon
written  notice to the Escrow  Agent at any time by the  Company but the duties,
responsibilities or compensation of the Escrow Agent may not be modified without
its consent.

                  (c)  Waiver.  Waiver of any term or  condition  of this Escrow
Agreement by any party shall not be construed as a waiver of a subsequent breach
or  failure  of the same term or  condition,  or a waiver  of any other  term or
condition of this Escrow Agreement.

                  (d) Governing Law. This Escrow  Agreement shall be governed by
and  construed in  accordance  with the laws of the State of  Maryland,  without
reference to the conflicts or choice of law principles thereof.

                  (e) Integration.  This Escrow Agreement constitutes the entire
agreement  between the parties  hereto with respect to the subject matter hereof
and there are no other  agreements,  covenants,  representations  or  warranties
except as set forth herein.

                  (f)  Authority.  Each party  executing  this Escrow  Agreement
warrants its authority to execute this Escrow Agreement.

                  (g) Counterparts. This Escrow Agreement may be executed in two
or more  counterparts,  each of which  shall be deemed an  original,  but all of
which taken together shall constitute one and the same instrument.

                  IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties hereto have caused this Escrow
Agreement to be signed the day and year first above written.

ATTEST:                                     EAGLE BANCORP, INC.



________________________            By__________________________________________
Name:                                       Name:
Title:                                      Title:

ATTEST:                                     CAPITAL BANK, N.A.


________________________            By__________________________________________
Name:                                       Name:
Title:                                      Title:


                                       -4-



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