| October 3, 2008 Wells Fargo acquiring Wachovia for $15.1 billion
|
NEW YORK (AP) - In an abrupt change, Wachovia said Friday it
agreed to be acquired by San Francisco-based Wells Fargo & Co. in a
$15.1 billion all-stock deal that trumps Citigroup's plan to
acquire Wachovia's banking operations and avoids government
assistance.
The Citigroup deal would have been done with the help of the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., but the Wells Fargo deal for
Wachovia deal will be done without it.
"This deal enables us to keep Wachovia intact and preserve the
value of an integrated company, without government support,"
Robert Steel, Wachovia's president and chief executive, said in a
statement.
The Wachovia-Wells deal, announced Friday, comes in a turbulent
time for banks and financial firms as they grapple with the ongoing
credit crisis, which led to the recent bankruptcy of Lehman
Brothers Holdings Inc. and the failure of Washington Mutual Inc.
Wachovia Corp. shareholders will receive 0.1991 shares of Wells
Fargo for every share of Charlotte, N.C.-based Wachovia stock they
own, valuing Wachovia at about $7 per share. This is a nearly 80
percent premium over the stock's Thursday closing price of $3.91.
Shares closed at $10 last Friday, the last trading session before
the deal with Citigroup Inc. was announced.
The board approved Wells Fargo's offer late Thursday. The deal
is still subject to Wachovia shareholder and other regulatory
approvals. Wells Fargo said it expects the deal to
close by
year-end.
"It provides superior value compared to the previous offer to
acquire only the banking operations of the company and because
Wachovia shareholders will have a meaningful opportunity to
participate in the growth and success of a combined Wachovia-Wells
Fargo that will be one of the world's great financial services
companies," said Wells Fargo Chairman Dick Kovacevich.
Wells Fargo will record merger and integration charges of about
$10 billion, but says it expects earnings to be boosted within the
first year after the acquisition closes. No government assistance
is part of the deal terms.
Wells Fargo said it will record Wachovia's credit-impaired
assets at fair value, but provided no estimate of what that would
be. In its planned takeover of Wachovia, Citigroup said it would
write down those assets by $30 billion at the close of the
transaction and be responsible for the next $12 billion in losses
over a period of three years. If the total exceeded that, the FDIC
would cover the difference.
Additionally, Wells Fargo plans to issue up to $20 billion of
stock, primarily common stock, to maintain a strong capital
position.
Charlotte will be the headquarters for the combined company's
East Coast retail and commercial and corporate banking business.
St. Louis will remain the headquarters of Wachovia Securities.
Additionally, three members of the Wachovia board will join the
Wells Fargo board when the transaction is completed.
The combined company will have total deposits of $787 billion
and assets of $1.42 trillion, more than doubling Wells Fargo's
totals on both counts. The bank will operate more than 10,000
locations. The two banks currently employ a combined 280,000
people.
On Monday, Citigroup agreed to buy Wachovia's banking operations
for $2.16 billion in a deal orchestrated by the federal government.
That deal, which had been approved by the boards of both companies,
was still subject to approval by Wachovia's shareholders and
regulators. It is not clear whether Citigroup will be entitled to a
break-up fee.
In addition to assuming $53 billion worth of debt, Citigroup had
agreed to absorb up to $42 billion of losses from Wachovia's $312
billion loan portfolio. The FDIC agreed to cover any remaining
losses in exchange for $12 billion in Citigroup preferred stock and
warrants.
But the failure of the government's proposed $700 billion
bailout for financial institutions Monday afternoon cast doubt on
whether Citigroup would be able to rid itself of some of Wachovia's
bad debt.
While the proposal would have prevented most banks from
profiting on the sale of troubled assets to the government, an
exception would have been made for assets acquired in a merger or
buyout.
That would have allowed Citigroup to sell Wachovia's distressed
mortgage-related assets to the government for a profit.
A revised version of the bailout plan was passed on Wednesday by
the Senate and goes up for a House vote on Friday. The plan still
centers on enabling the government to spend billions of dollars to
buy bad mortgage-related securities and other devalued assets from
troubled financial institutions.
Citigroup has not turned a profit for three straight quarters,
and lost a total of $17.4 billion during that period after writing
down its assets by about $46 billion. That's the most write-downs
of any U.S. bank.
While Wells Fargo has logged three straight quarters of profit
declines, the bank has been weathering one of the nation's worst
credit crises much better than most of its competitors, in part
because it had less exposure to the subprime mortgages whose
failure undermined the financial sector.
That means it hasn't been forced to take the huge number of
write-downs that other banks have needed. Under Stumpf the bank
also has continued raising its dividend at a time when many other
financial institutions are slashing theirs to preserve capital.
John G. Stumpf, Wells Fargo president and CEO, took over in June
2007 - near the start of the credit crisis - from Kovacevich, who
remains chairman. Both men worked since the 1980s at Norwest Corp.,
Wells Fargo's predecessor.
Wachovia, like Washington Mutual, which was seized by the
federal government last week, was a big originator of option
adjustable-rate mortgages, which offered very low introductory
payments and let borrowers defer some interest payments until later
years. Delinquencies and defaults on these types of mortgages have
skyrocketed in recent months, causing big losses for the banks.
This summer, Wachovia reported a $9.11 billion loss for the
second quarter, announced plans to cut 11,350 jobs - mostly in its
mortgage business - and slashed its dividend. Wachovia also boosted
its provision for loan losses to $5.57 billion during the second
quarter, up from $179 million in the year-ago period.
Wachovia shares rose $3.03, or 78 percent, to $6.04 in morning
trading, while Wells Fargo rose $3.49, or 10 percent, to $38.65.
Citigroup shares were down $3.05, or 13.4 percent, to $19.45.
AP Business Writer Jennifer Malloy Zonnas contributed to this
story from New York.
(Copyright 2008 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
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