FDIC to sieze WaMu assets to be sold to JPMorgan Chase

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the bear is back biatches!! printing cancel....
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yeah not sure what's going on with WM right now

if its failing FDIC swoops in cleans up mess (over 100k and you lose) and than transfers to JPM so the transition smooth vs. not being able to access funds like in the case of indymac...

or JPM just buying some of the branches to give WM some money to try to survive and there is no FDIC involvement

WM stock tanking on the news....77 cents now

JPM having an investors conference call tonight so that'll clear things up a bit i think
 

L5Y, USC is 4-0 vs SEC, outscoring them 167-48!!!
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OK...stock holders are "Wiped out" according to CNBC (TV).

WaMu Branches will be opened tomorrow even as FDIC siezes and transfers deposits to Chase.
 

the bear is back biatches!! printing cancel....
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y stock 45 cents now

musta been getting run on pretty damn hard

usually they wait till bank fail friday so they got the weekend to deal with it
 

L5Y, USC is 4-0 vs SEC, outscoring them 167-48!!!
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yea..very, very odd to do this Thursday night.
 

the bear is back biatches!! printing cancel....
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well for now what i'm reading is no FDIC involvement as far as the bank insurance fund goes.....

but i have no clue why JPM would want to hold all its toxic mortgages or what the fuck happens to those

anyway we shall see as more details arise

9:15 eastern tonight the details should come out as that is when the JPM conference call is
 

Triple digit silver kook
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Another song that the dj will play tonight for cheapseats.

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the bear is back biatches!! printing cancel....
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your so cold woof :)

by the way how did WM go down with no shorts pounding its stock down? :think2:
 

There's no such thing as leftover crack
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Couldn't happen to a more deserving group.

I'm in agreement. Fuck any company that rate jacks millions of their credit card customers (who've always paid on time and kept their credit clean) in an attempt to recoup some their losses from their bad mortgage loans.
 

the bear is back biatches!! printing cancel....
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bloomberg saying FDIC might get involved AP still saying WSJ saying no FDIC involvement

big difference since i heard at least of a few months back WM had 30% of its deposits uninsured (over 100k limit although i'm sure that was reduced some as its stock continued to say we gonna die at anytime)

no notice on FDIC website as of yet

---------------------

JPMorgan Chase May Acquire Washington Mutual After FDIC Seizure

By Ari Levy

Sept. 25 (Bloomberg) -- Washington Mutual Inc. may be seized by regulators later today and parts sold to JPMorgan Chase & Co. in what will rank among the biggest banking failures in U.S. history.

The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. plans to take control of Seattle-based WaMu, the biggest U.S. savings and loan, according to the CNBC television network, and New York-based JPMorgan will buy deposits and branches, the Wall Street Journal said, without citing any sources. The FDIC insurance fund is not expected to contribute any money, the Journal said.

WaMu's fate played out as Congress tried to reach an accord that will ease the global credit crunch, which has already driven Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. and IndyMac Bancorp out of business, and Bear Stearns Cos. and Merrill Lynch & Co. into hastily arranged rescues. As many as five banks had considered bids for WaMu without making an offer, balking in part because the lender faced as much as $19 billion in mortgage loan losses.

Resolving WaMu's situation ``is a positive,'' said Patrick Becker Jr., who oversees $2 billion as chief investment officer at Becker Capital Management in Portland, Oregon. ``That's been a big cloud over the market and financial shares.'' His firm does not own JPMorgan or WaMu shares.

WaMu and JPMorgan officials didn't return calls seeking comment.

Five banks that were considering bids, including JPMorgan Chase & Co., have failed to make an offer in the week since WaMu put itself up for sale. WaMu also approached Carlyle Group and Blackstone Group LP, two people briefed on the matter said.

Deal Pressure

WaMu came under increasing pressure to strike a deal as its stock sagged and ratings companies pummeled its debt. Standard & Poor's yesterday cut WaMu's rating for the second time in nine days, dropping it to CCC from BB-. WaMu's regulator, the Office of Thrift Supervision, and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., which guarantees customer deposits, have declined to comment.

WaMu fell 57 cents, or 25 percent, to $1.69 at 4 p.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. The stock skidded about 88 percent this year, the biggest decline in the 24- company KBW Bank Index. WaMu is the only junk-rated company in the index.

A record 392 million WaMu shares changed hands today, more than twice the daily average this month and seven times the average over the past year, Bloomberg data show.
 

the bear is back biatches!! printing cancel....
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oops spoke too soon....no cost to FDIC

question is what happens with all its mortgages and shit

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JPMorgan Chase Acquires Banking Operations of Washington Mutual
FDIC Facilitates Transaction that Protects All Depositors and Comes at No Cost to the Deposit Insurance Fund

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
September 25, 2008
Media Contact:
Andrew Gray (202) 898-7192
angray@fdic.gov

JPMorgan Chase acquired the banking operations of Washington Mutual Bank in a transaction facilitated by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. All depositors are fully protected and there will be no cost to the Deposit Insurance Fund.

"For all depositors and other customers of Washington Mutual Bank, this is simply a combination of two banks," said FDIC Chairman Sheila C. Bair. "For bank customers, it will be a seamless transition. There will be no interruption in services and bank customers should expect business as usual come Friday morning."

JPMorgan Chase acquired the assets, assumed the qualified financial contracts and made a payment of $1.9 billion. Claims by equity, subordinated and senior debt holders were not acquired.

"WaMu's balance sheet and the payment paid by JPMorgan Chase allowed a transaction in which neither the uninsured depositors nor the insurance fund absorbed any losses," Bair said.

Washington Mutual Bank also has a subsidiary, Washington Mutual FSB, Park City, Utah. They have combined assets of $307 billion and total deposits of $188 billion.

Thursday evening, Washington Mutual was closed by the Office of Thrift Supervision and the FDIC named receiver. WaMu customers with questions should call their normal banking representative, service center, 1-800-788-7000 or visit www.WaMU.com. The FDIC's consumer hotline is 1-877-ASK-FDIC (1-877-275-3342) or visit www.fdic.gov.

# # #

Congress created the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation in 1933 to restore public confidence in the nation's banking system. The FDIC insures deposits at the nation's 8,451 banks and savings associations and it promotes the safety and soundness of these institutions by identifying, monitoring and addressing risks to which they are exposed. The FDIC receives no federal tax dollars – insured financial institutions fund its operations.

FDIC press releases and other information are available on the Internet at www.fdic.gov, by subscription electronically (go to www.fdic.gov/about/subscriptions/index.html) and may also be obtained through the FDIC's Public Information Center (877-275-3342 or 703-562-2200). PR-85-2008
 

the bear is back biatches!! printing cancel....
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basically sounds like JPM taking over branches and deposits

basically they found a way to make WM fail but not seem like a bank failure....like deposits over 100k i think are safe in this scenerio....

all about calming the masses and not creating panic in the streets....either way its costs us money and WM went tits up essentially

and than some other government agency (which will cost billions) will be involved with liquidating all the toxic leftovers and any other property JPM isn't taking in this deal

yeah 16.7 bil left WM since september 15 they were getting run on

also i think this might have an impact on MM funds as it whipes out WM's senior debt etc....

will be interesting to see the details of this transation...they trying to treat it in such a way so the sheep on the streets don't panic about their money in WM banks

-----------------------------------------------------

J.P. Morgan to Take Over Faltering WaMu
U.S. Government Helps Broker a Deal to Dispose of Huge Thrift; Banking Giant Expected to Get Deposits, Branches

In what is by far the largest bank failure in U.S. history, federal regulators seized Washington Mutual Inc. and struck a deal to sell the bulk of its operations to J.P. Morgan Chase & Co.

The closing represents the demise of what once was the largest U.S. thrift but came to symbolize many of the worst excesses of the mortgage boom. Federal regulators said WaMu has suffered an exodus of $16.7 billion in deposits since Sept. 15, leaving the Seattle thrift "with insufficient liquidity to meet its obligations." As a result, WaMu was in "an unsafe and unsound condition to transact business," according to the Office of Thrift Supervision.

While the exact structure of the transaction wasn't immediately known, J.P. Morgan is expected to acquire Washington Mutual's deposits and branches, as well as other operations. The deal isn't expected to result in any hit to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.'s bank-insurance fund, according to a person familiar with the arrangement. But it's likely that another arm of government would have to pick up the tab. Some analysts have worried that a WaMu failure could cost more than $20 billion.

Federal regulators have been heavily involved in orchestrating the transaction, which comes as WaMu grapples with its bad mortgage loans. Regulators were hoping to fend off a collapse of WaMu, which, with more than $300 billion in assets, would mark by far the largest banking failure in U.S. history.

Under the deal, New York-based J.P. Morgan, which has long coveted WaMu as a way to secure a footprint on the West Coast, will assume most of the thrift's deposits and branches, as well as some other operations.

Unlike many of the 12 bank failures that the FDIC has overseen this year, the J.P. Morgan-WaMu transaction isn't expected to impact the agency's national deposit-insurance fund. It wasn't immediately clear how the transaction would be structured to avoid the insurance fund taking a hit.

With mortgage losses mounting, and its stock price plunging, WaMu has been scrambling over the past month to find a solution; last week it put itself on the auction block. A number of banks -- including Citigroup Inc., Wells Fargo & Co. and Banco Santander SA -- pored over WaMu's books, but the bank didn't receive any offers. This week, WaMu's outside bankers approached a group of private-equity funds to gauge their interest in a deal, but that was viewed as a last-ditch effort.

Also this week, the FDIC took the step of reaching out to banks, asking them to express interest in taking over some or all of WaMu, according to people familiar with the matter. Those bids were due at 6 p.m. Wednesday. J.P. Morgan's takeover of WaMu's deposits represents a huge blow for private-equity firm TPG, which injected $7 billion into the thrift this spring. The transaction is expected to wipe out WaMu stockholders and holders of the company's senior debt, one person said. A key unknown: the fate of WaMu's bad assets, which include mortgage loans that have soured as housing markets tanked.

Arranging the deal in a way that doesn't cost the FDIC's deposit insurance fund any money would be an achievement for Chairman Sheila Bair, who has had a hawkish view about the state of many financial institutions. Federal regulators faced criticism from many after the July failure of IndyMac Bank, which the FDIC estimated might have cost the deposit insurance fund close to $9 billion.

This is the second time the government has gone to J.P. Morgan as a buyer of last resort. In March, the government agreed to backstop J.P. Morgan's takeover of Bear Stearns.

This will likely prompt criticism from rivals about preferential treatment. Bank of America Corp., for instance, didn't receive government assistance in its recently announced purchase of Merrill Lynch. Of course, in the case of WaMu, there were presumably other bidders who simply wouldn't offer that much for the deposits and branches.

Before the deal, J.P. Morgan ranked as the fourth-largest bank as measured by branches, ranking below Bank of America, Wachovia Corp. and Wells Fargo. Its network of more than 3,100 branches stretches across 17 states with deep penetration in New York, Illinois, Texas, Michigan and Ohio.
 
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Triple digit silver kook
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Wow, you still are attached to Wolfie's sac, after all these years. You ever finish fucking school and get off the gov'y tit?

He started here bashing me as much as anyone, but finally realized I had more of a clue than the typical sheep around here and elsewhere.
 

the bear is back biatches!! printing cancel....
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well it looks like JPM is taking one for the team so to speak as they are taking on some bad assets

curious to see how JPMs stock reacts tomorrow

anyway still alot of questions surrounding this one how all the toxic shit is handled who holds the bag etc...

but looks like they avoided having to blow through alot of FDIC funds as i thought was going to be the case

---------------------------

JPMorgan Chase buys WaMu assets after FDIC seizure
Thursday September 25, 10:40 pm ET
By Marcy Gordon, Sara Lepro and Madlen Read, AP Business Writers
JPMorgan Chase buying Washington Mutual's assets after FDIC seizes ailing thrift

NEW YORK (AP) -- JPMorgan Chase & Co. Inc. came to the rescue of Washington Mutual Inc. Thursday, buying the thrift's banking assets after WaMu was seized by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. in the largest failure ever of a U.S. bank. This is the second time in six months that JPMorgan Chase has taken over a major financial institution crippled by bad bets in the mortgage market.

The deal will cost JPMorgan Chase $1.9 billion, and the bank said in a statement it planned to write down WaMu's loan portfolio by approximately $31 billion. JPMorgan Chase, which acquired Bear Stearns Cos. last March, also said it would sell $8 billion in common stock to raise its capital position.

The FDIC, which insures bank deposits, said it would not have to dip into the insurance fund as a result of the seizure. There had been concerns that the fund, which took a big hit after the seizure of IndyMac Bank, could be depleted by a WaMu seizure.

WaMu "was under severe liquidity pressure," FDIC Chairman Sheila Bair told reporters in a conference call.

"For all depositors and other customers of Washington Mutual Bank, this is simply a combination of two banks," Bair said in a statement. "For bank customers, it will be a seamless transition. There will be no interruption in services and bank customers should expect business as usual come Friday morning."

The government measures bank failures by an institutions's assets; Seattle-based WaMu has roughly $310 billion in assets. The previous record was the failure of Continental Illinois National Bank in 1984, with $40 billion in assets when it closed. IndyMac, seized in July, had $32 billion.

WaMu was searching for a lifeline after piling up billions of dollars in losses due to failed mortgages. WaMu has seen its stock price plummet by 87 percent this year, and it suffered a ratings downgrade by Standard & Poor's earlier this week that put it in danger of collapse.

The Bush administration's proposal for a $700 billion bailout for distressed financial institutions was believed to have given fresh impetus to a buyout and new allure to WaMu. However, it was not immediately known how the bailout, which was still being negotiated in Washington late Thursday, would affect the JPMorgan Chase-WaMu deal.

JPMorgan Chase's chief executive, Jamie Dimon, said in a conference call, said the "only negative" related to the deal was "how to handle some of these bad assets." He did not elaborate.

Besides JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo & Co., Citigroup Inc., HSBC, Spain's Banco Santander and Toronto-Dominion Bank of Canada were all mentioned as possible suitors. WaMu was also believed to be talking to private equity firms.

The FDIC was seeking a buyer will to bear a large burden of WaMu's losses to lessen the impact on the insurance fund.

In a statement, JPMorgan Chase said it was not acquiring any senior unsecured debt, subordinated debt, and preferred stock of Washington Mutual's banks, or any assets or liabilities of the holding company, Washington Mutual Inc.

JPMorgan Chase said the acquisition will give it 5,400 branches in 23 states. JPMorgan Chase said it plans to close less than 10 percent of the two companies' branches; the bank has not yet decided which to close.

In March, the bank acquired the failing Bear Stearns in a deal brokered by the government. It paid $2.3 billion for the company and its stock, bringing its expenditure on both Bear Stearns and WaMu to a total of $4.2 billion.

Washington Mutual ran into trouble after it got caught up in the booming part of the mortgage business that made loans to people with bad credit, known as subprime borrowers.

Troubles spread to other parts of WaMu's home loan portfolio, namely its "option" adjustable-rate mortgage loans. Option ARM loans offer very low introductory payments and let borrowers defer some interest payments until later years. The bank stopped originating those loans in June.

Problems in WaMu's home loan business began to surface in 2006, when the bank reported that the division lost $48 million, compared with net income of about $1 billion in 2005.

At the start of 2007, following the release of the company's annual financial report, then-CEO Kerry Killinger said the bank had prepared for a slowdown in its housing business by sharply reducing its subprime mortgage lending and servicing of loans. Killinger was replaced as CEO on Sept. 8 by Alan H. Fishman, the former president and chief operating officer of Sovereign Bank and president and CEO of Independence Community Bank.

As more borrowers became delinquent on their mortgages, WaMu worked to help troubled customers refinance their loans as a way to avoid default and foreclosure, committing $2 billion to the effort last April. But that proved to be too little, too late.

At the same time, fears of growing credit problems kept investors from purchasing debt backed by those loans, drying up a source of cash flow for banks that made subprime loans.

In December, WaMu said it would shutter its subprime lending business and reduce expenses with layoffs and a dividend cut.

WaMu became one of the first retail banks to seek outside cash in the wake of the credit crisis when it agreed to sell equity securities to an investment fund managed by TPG Capital and to other investors this spring, raising $7.2 billion in fresh capital.

The bank in July reported a $3 billion second-quarter loss -- the biggest in its history -- as it boosted its reserves to more than $8 billion to cover losses on bad loans.

JPMorgan Chase said the WaMu acquisition would add 50 cents per share to its earnings in 2009, and said it expects to have pretax merger costs of approximately $1.5 billion while achieving pretax savings of approximately $1.5 billion by 2010.

Before Thursday's announcement, there were concerns that the FDIC would have to turn to taxpayers to build up its fund, which has dipped from $52.4 billion at the end of last year to $45.2 billion, mostly because of the costs of IndyMac's failure.

Next month, Bair plans to propose increasing the premiums paid by banks and thrifts to replenish the fund. That plan is likely to be approved by the FDIC board. It is scheduled to be presented at a board meeting on Oct. 7, FDIC spokesman Andrew Gray said Thursday.
 

the bear is back biatches!! printing cancel....
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plus long term will be interesting to see how many people want to do business with JPM

guessing you see deposits continue to flee

and sounds like they doing 8 billion dollar dilution of JPM stock

plus this will all lead to more consolidation and more cuts in jobs etc...
 

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