"Hypo Real Estate offer blunts Flowers' power
FRANKFURT (Reuters) - U.S. investor J. Christopher Flowers' strategy of betting on distressed banks hit a brick wall in Germany.
Flowers, a former partner at U.S. investment bank Goldman Sachs, made his fortune by taking on distressed financial firms in need of a bailout.
He would try to make money by restructuring them and selling them on for a profit, sometimes benefiting from a backstop on losses in the form of government bailouts of the banks.
The strategy has worked for him in past, but Germany's power grab on Thursday to buy a majority stake in Hypo Real Estate (HRXG.DE: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) sidelined the U.S. dealmaker, limiting his options for recouping the losses on his investment.
The German government made a 1.39 euros offer per share in a first step toward nationalizing Hypo Real Estate, a move Flowers, who has a reputation for being reserved yet polite, opposes.
"Flowers should cut his losses and accept the offer," says Dirk Becker, a Frankfurt-based analyst with Kepler Capital Markets. "Without the government bailout he would have lost his money anyway."
Flowers, who has not done a large U.S. deal in some time, headed a consortium of investors that took a stake of almost 25 percent in the Munich-based commercial real estate lender for 1.1 billion euros ($1.46 billion) in May 2008.
Flowers paid 22.50 euros a share, a premium of 25 percent at the time. By early 2009, the value of the shares had sunk to 0.64 euros. They were trading at 1.37 euros after the government's voluntary offer on Thursday.
PLAYING CHESS
After quitting Goldman Sachs in 1998, Flowers launched New York-based J.C. Flowers LLC, a private equity firm that has been involved in a string of deals.
In 2000, Flowers -- a hobby chess player who is known to be wary of the media -- bought distressed lender Long-Term Credit Bank from the Japanese government.
After a brief period of restructuring, which included rebranding the bank to Shinsei Bank, J.C. Flowers and Ripplewood Holdings more than doubled their money with a $2.34 billion initial public offering in 2004.
Shinsei was forced to raise capital in March after the bank was hit by subprime losses.
For Flowers, a graduate of Harvard University, investing in Germany has not proved to be a success.
In addition to his stake in Hypo Real Estate, Flowers also controls almost 26 percent in ailing HSH Nordbank, after making an initial investment of 1.25 billion euros as part of a consortium in 2006.
His two German investments have suffered losses as both institutions were hard hit by fallout from the credit crunch, forcing them to write off billions of euros in bad loans as well as the value of their investment in complex structured-finance products. Both banks have needed a bailout.
Time for Flowers to restructure Hypo Real Estate appears to have run out with the German government's attempt to seize control. The Berlin government has propped up Hypo Real Estate with more than 100 billion euros in loans and guarantees.
Berlin says control of Hypo Real Estate is crucial for the stability of the covered bond market. But Flowers is holding on to his shares for now.
"There is still a clear preference to remain a shareholder and thus to be treated exactly the same as other shareholders that had to go under (Germany's bank) rescue shield," a spokesman for J.C. Flowers said of the takeover offer.
The voluntary takeover offer gives the German government an opportunity to get a majority stake. This will allow it to force through a capital increase at an extraordinary general meeting as a way to dilute Flowers' stake.
Once the government has more than 90 percent control it can squeeze out remaining shareholders.
(Editing by Andrew Macdonald)
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