InvestorsHub Logo
Followers 154
Posts 13656
Boards Moderated 3
Alias Born 11/24/2007

Re: linda1 post# 118980

Saturday, 11/07/2009 3:42:02 PM

Saturday, November 07, 2009 3:42:02 PM

Post# of 728646
A little bit of info here.

EDIT - http://www.tpg.com/

TPG Leads $7 Billion WaMu Investment

April 9, 2008, 7:33 am

Washington Mutual, the nation’s largest savings and loan, on Tuesday received a$7 billion lifeline from the buyout firm TPG and other investors in an effort to stabilize its finances.

But Washington Mutual, hit hard by rising delinquencies and defaults on mortgages, said it would post a wider-than-expected loss for the first quarter. The savings and loan, based here, said it would lose $1.1 billion and take a provision for loan losses of $3.5 billion, $1.5 billion more than previously expected. Wall Street had forecast a loss of $344.3 million.

Washington Mutual also said it would get out of wholesale lending, close remaining stand-alone home loan centers, cut its dividend and lay off 3,000 workers. It will sell equity securities to an investment fund managed by TPG Capital and to other investors.

TPG, formerly the Texas Pacific Group, put up the bulk of the money by buying new preferred stock. TPG, run by David Bonderman, will get one seat on Washington Mutual’s 14-person board.

Washington Mutual sold 176 million shares at $8.75 a piece, 33 percent below Monday’s closing price on the New York Stock Exchange, and $5.5 billion in convertible preferred shares, the company said in a statement yesterday. TPG will buy $2 billion of the shares. The lender also slashed its dividend and announced 3,000 job cuts.

It is a remarkable turnabout for Washington Mutual, whose once highflying stock has swooned along with home prices. Under Kerry Killinger, its longtime chief executive, Washington Mutual grew rapidly in recent years by lending aggressively, particularly to low- and middle-income borrowers, and by buying smaller competitors.

But during the past year Washington Mutual’s stock price plunged more than 67 percent as the mortgage crisis spread through the financial markets. The stock closed up $2.98, at $13.15 on Monday.

The new funds - equal to more than half of Washington Mutual’s $9 billion market value on Friday - would probably offset losses on par with levels last seen during the savings and loan crisis of the early 1990s. Even so, Washington Mutual, based in Seattle, may yet seek out a diversified partner, given the risks of its big mortgage portfolio and its focus on the West Coast.

“Nobody really knows where the bottom is, but you are taking away the worst-case scenario,” David Hendler, a financial services analyst at CreditSights, an independent research firm in New York, told The New York Times Monday. “This just stabilizes their businesses to cover the losses on the old business that were worsening. They haven’t shown the vision to execute on a growth plan to diversify away from mortgages.”

Washington Mutual is the latest financial institution to go hat in hand to outside investors. Since the sharp downturn in the credit and housing markets last summer, Wall Street giants like Citigroup, Merrill Lynch and UBS have raised tens of billions of dollars. But Main Street lenders have been hit hard, too. Many have slashed their dividends, and investment bankers say several are looking to raise money or are seeking out acquisitions.

The deal is a departure for TPG, which typically seeks to gain control of companies. It also poses significant risks.

Washington Mutual has been hit hard by losses stemming from mortgages made to borrowers with risky, or subprime, credit. The thrift pushed aggressively into products like interest-only and so-called negative amortization loans, which are now among the most toxic.

The lender also has significant exposure in California and Florida, where property values have declined the most.

And after acquiring Providian Financial’s subprime credit card business in 2005, Washington Mutual now expects a sharp increase in loan charge-offs. In response, Washington Mutual has cut its dividend, eliminated several thousand jobs and raised $3.7 billion in a separate preferred stock offering. Still, its stock price has continued to plummet.

http://dealbook.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/04/09/tpg-leads-7-billion-washington-mutual-investment/


Volume:
Day Range:
Bid:
Ask:
Last Trade Time:
Total Trades:
  • 1D
  • 1M
  • 3M
  • 6M
  • 1Y
  • 5Y
Recent COOP News