"Shareholders are on Tuesday expected to vote in favour of two bank deals forged at the height of the financial crisis, helping to mark the end of a transformative year for the US banking industry.
The fire sales of Wachovia and National City took place under regulatory pressure to stabilise the banks’ deposit bases after heavy mortgage-related losses led to concerns over capital. For the buyers – Wells Fargo( VIA TARP ) and PNC Financial respectively – the deals are strategic victories, emblematic of how stronger players have used the crisis to expand.
Wells’ acquisition of Wachovia in late September fended off an earlier government-assisted bid ( FROM THE FDIC )from Citigroup, winning regulatory support both by giving Wachovia’s shareholders a better price and getting the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation off the hook for Wachovia’s losses( WHICH IS WHY THEY SOUGHT OUT CITIGROUP. HOWEVER, ONE WONDERS IF THE FDIC WILL HAVE CREDIBILITY IN DOING THIS GOING FORWARD, OR INVESTORS WILL DOUBT THEIR ABILITY TO SEAL THE DEAL ).The deal will create a national retail banking powerhouse( TOO BIG TOO FAIL ), greatly expanding Well’s West Coast franchise east of the Mississippi river and creating a coast-to-coast network of 12,200 branches – larger than those of Bank of America and JPMorgan Chase.
PNC, based in Pittsburgh, will become the 8th-largest US depository institution( TOO BIG TO FAIL. BOTH HAVE JUST PURCHASED GOVERNMENT INSURANCE ).
The deals were the first to take advantage of a tax ruling that allows acquirers to use the built-in losses of target banks to reduce their own taxable income, a factor that helped clinch the Wells-Wachovia transaction in particular( TARP. PAULSON'S CHANGES ).
PNC’s acquisition of National City for $5.58bn in cash and stock was also facilitated by a $7.7bn capital commitment from the US Treasury under its capital purchase programme( DO TELL ). PNC, which had shied away from doing a deal without government assistance( AND YOU STILL BELIEVE THAT THESE PEOPLE DESPISE GOVERNMENT? ), said this allowed it to acquire National City using “attractively priced” government money to help cope with the potential effects on its balance sheet.
Wells Fargo received $25bn under the Treasury’s programme( GOVERNMENT AID. AGAIN ), but said it still intended to raise $20bn of new capital to help fund its acquisition. Wells raised a total of $12.6bn, at a heavy discount, in November.
Yet, while the deals are blockbusters for Wells and PNC, neither is without risks. In both cases, the greatest of these lies with managing the targets’ troubled mortgage portfolios.
Wells is set to take on Wachovia’s $312bn portfolio of residential and commercial mortgage debt, on which Wells expects to take a $40bn writedown when the deal closes and a total of $60bn worth of losses over the life of the portfolio. PNC expects National City’s portfolio to experience $20bn of losses.
Wells’ integration with Wachovia will also proceed in the shadow of continued legal costs from its skirmish with Citigroup. Citi has vowed to pursue its claim for up to $60bn in damages “vigorously”( DUE TO THE FDIC VS TARP DEVELOPMENT ).
● The US Federal Reserve Board on Monday approved commercial finance firm CIT Group’s bid to become a bank holding company( JOIN THE CLUB ), clearing the way for it to access up to $2.5bn in capital from a financial rescue programme, Reuters reports from Washington."
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