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Re: DewDiligence post# 413

Tuesday, 12/11/2007 8:20:57 AM

Tuesday, December 11, 2007 8:20:57 AM

Post# of 610
NEWS AT A GLANCE.....quick hits

http://finance.yahoo.com/expert/article/business/57147

WaMu quits subprime business

Washington Mutual said it is exiting the subprime mortgage business, cutting 3,150 jobs, and selling $2.5 billion in convertible preferred stock to shore up its tenuous financial position. (MarketWatch) It is also slashing its dividend to 15 cents a share, from 56 cents, and writing down the value of its home-lending unit by $1.6 billion. "They're clearly concerned the industry will stay in a negative mode for an extended period," said Punk Ziegel analyst Richard Bove. (Bloomberg) Moody's and Fitch both downgraded Washington Mutual debt, saying the bank's mortgage losses will be worse than previously thought. The bank's shares dropped 9 percent in extended trading. (AP in Yahoo! Finance)

Citi quietly unloads SIVs

Citigroup has quietly reduced the size of its seven structured investment vehicles by $15 billion, the Financial Times reported. The deals, largely through side deals with junior investors, has reduced the SIVs to about $66 billion, from $83 billion in September. (Financial Times, free registration required) The deals, combined with several banks' recent bailouts of their SIVs, raise questions about the relevance of a proposed "SuperSIV" fund. (Reuters) Separately, Bank of America is liquidating an "enhanced cash" fund for wealthy investors, after an investor pulled $20 billion from the $33 billion fund due to concerns over the fund's SIV exposure. (Los Angeles Times, free registration required)

Newspaper magnate sentenced to 6 1/2 years

Former Hollinger International chairman Conrad Black was sentenced to 6 1/2 years in prison for swindling Hollinger shareholders out of $6.1 million. He also has to give back the $6.1 million and pay a $125,000 fine. Black, 63, built up a newspaper empire that at one point included the Chicago Sun-Times, London's Daily Telegraph, and the Jerusalem Post. (The New York Times, free registration required) The sentence was less that the up to 30 years sought by prosecutors. "Conrad Black dodged a bullet today," said former federal prosecutor Orin Snyder, although he called the sentence "fair and very reasonable." (Reuters)


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