Posts with tag Washington Mutual
Posted Sep 19th 2008 10:30AM by Douglas McIntyre
Filed under: Rumors
Citigroup (NYSE: C) is considering buying Washington Mutual (NYSE: WM), the nation's largest savings and loan. It sounds like Sandy Weill is back in charge and trying to create the kind of financial conglomerate he built in the 1990s and earlier this decade.
According to The Wall Street Journal, "Citigroup and several other banks are reviewing the Seattle thrift holding company's books, which are packed with shaky mortgages."
Just a few months ago, Citi CEO Vikram Pandit was talking about cutting the big bank's expenses by 20% and selling off "non-core" assets. Now he is thinking about buying the most troubled large financial company in America.
Pandit would be better off staying with his first plan. There is a reason WaMu's stock got down to under $2. If mortgage defaults move up and housing prices move down, the mortgage company's financial situation could get much worse.
Pandit is proving to be a "flavor-of-the-month" CEO. Investors never know what he plans to do tomorrow, let alone what he wants to do with Citi over the next year.
Douglas A. McIntyre is an editor at 247wallst.com
Posted Apr 8th 2008 9:43AM by Jon Ogg
Filed under: Top deals, Texas Pacific Group
There is good news and bad news in a financing pact for
Washington Mutual (NYSE:
WM) that has been
outlined this morning. It has outlined details of a financial aid or rescue finance package.
The company is raising a total of $7 billion via direct stock sales to an investment vehicle managed by
TPG Capital, which includes other top institutional holders.
While this financing pact is great in that it provides needed liquidity, the share placement price is essentially at the low of the stock since the malaise began. The company has also slashed its dividend down to $0.01 and outlined details of its losses.
TPG as the anchor will buy $2 billion in newly issued securities. WaMu is issuing 176 million shares at $8.75 and 55,000 contingently convertible perpetual non-cumulative preferred stock at a purchase price and liquidation preference of $100,000.00 per share with an exercise price of $8.75 per share.
This financing package is more similar to an old fashioned rights offering that is at a deep discount and highly dilutive. You can
read the full story from 247WallSt.com..
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