"Ross Buys Florida Bank, Paving Way for Acquisitions (Update3)
By Jonathan Keehner and Jamie McGee
Jan. 16 (Bloomberg) -- Wilbur L. Ross, the investor who made billions turning around distressed steel and textile companies, will buy a majority stake in First Bank and Trust Co., giving him a platform to purchase more banking assets.
The agreement allows Ross, who previously said he was targeting regional lenders, to acquire 68.1 percent of the shares in the Indiantown, Florida-based community bank, subject to regulatory approval, Ross said today in a statement.
The bank has “good opportunities” to expand, Ross said in a Bloomberg Television interview today. “We view the whole financial services sector as a very interesting one.”
Ross joins J. Christopher Flowers, founder of private-equity firm J.C. Flowers & Co., in purchasing lenders personally, rather than through their firms. Buyout funds are wary of becoming bank holding companies, a status that may trigger restrictions on non- banking activities and the amount of debt they can take on.
Ross, who heads the WL Ross & Co. buyout firm, has a pattern of acquiring one company in a struggling industry and augmenting it by buying similar firms.
He was drawn to First Bank and Trust because of its growth prospects, Ross said. Florida Power & Light Co., a utility company based in Miami, broke ground in December on a solar energy plant in Indiantown, according to the company’s Web site.
“That’s stimulating the economy there,” Ross said. “The expansion of business opportunities by the Seminole tribe is also helpful to that area.”
First Bank and Trust has $83.5 million in total assets as of Sept. 30, and the bank is ranked 252nd of 309 Florida banks in total assets as of Jan. 15, according to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Web site.
Coal, Loan Servicing
In textiles, Ross began with Burlington Industries Inc. and Cone Mills Corp., both based in Greensboro, North Carolina, creating International Textile Group Inc. Then he expanded with joint ventures in places such as Turkey and India.
He bought into the coal industry in 2005, assembling International Coal Group Inc. from the mines of bankrupt Anker Coal Group Inc. of Morgantown, West Virginia, and Coalquest Development LLC of Ashland, Kentucky. He paid $275 million in stock and then raised about $250 million in an initial public offering.
Ross also won an Oct. 5 auction for the home-loan servicing unit of Melville, New York-based American Home Mortgage Investment Corp.
The lender has branches in Lakeport, Okeechobee and Palm City. Linda Post, whose family founded the bank in 1959, will retain a 23 percent stake, according to Ross’s statement. Terms weren’t disclosed.
Ross said he will focus on regulatory approval for the First Bank and Trust purchase before looking into other acquisitions.
Banks Possible
“We’d look at all the banks that are offering themselves up,” Ross said. “What we think will now happen is some of the institutions that already got TARP money will need more. The question will be, will TARP continue to provide the money on very inexpensive terms or will they need to look to private equity?”( WHY NOT MAKE AN OFFER? HAS HE HEARD OF BARCLAYS? )
The U.S. Senate voted yesterday to allow the use of $350 billion in financial rescue funds as a part of the Troubled Asset Relief Program.
Flowers was approved personally in August by regulators to acquire the First National Bank of Cainesville in Missouri, a move that may allow him to buy other lenders. He may use the bank, which had assets of about $14 million, as a platform to buy failed institutions( IF THEY ARE BANKS, THIS NEEDS TO BE DONE BY THE FDIC I BELIEVE. ), according to a person close to Flowers, who asked not to be identified because the plans are private.
The Flowers firm agreed earlier this month to take a minority stake in IndyMac Bank as part of a group of investors.
To contact the reporter on this story: Jonathan Keehner in New York at jkeehner@bloomberg.net"
Wilbur Ross Says He'll Consider Buying Large Banks
By the way, if TARP is so good a deal, why didn't he buy a bank to get in on it, as others did?
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