Ken Lewis Undoes His Empire

Article Submitted by: JRodgers
Corporate News


Ken Lewis saved Angelo Mozilo from doing a perp walk, and gave Merrill a sweetheart deal of century, but also took down the largest financial institution in the country and now has put the entire US economic in still further jeopardy.

 

Submitted: Jan 18, 2009    Views: 379    Comments: 1    Likes: 2   


On BestCashCow.com in September, I questioned Ken Lewis's decision to pay so much for Merrill Lynch on the same evening that Lehman Brothers filed for bankruptcy.  While my voice was unique, I also thought that the acquisition made strategic sense, whereas I had been less sanguine about the earlier Countrywide acquisition.  It is now increasingly clear that Ken Lewis didn't have a clue what he was doing with Merrill either and destroyed $108 billion in shareholder value in less than 4 months (BoA's stock has fallen from $34 on September 12 to $7 now).  Even more troubling is that he has endangered the entire economy by requiring a government bailout of the largest financial institution in the country.

Even though many, including me (in this article) had believed that Merrill Lynch has marked all of its assets down fully as early as July 2008, Lewis revealed on the January 16, 2009 conference call that he knew of massive losses before the deal closed and declined to inform Bank of America shareholders. In that same conference call, Merrill Lynch recorded an operating loss of $21.5 billion in the Q4 2008, requiring an additional $20 billion cash infusion and a backstop of $118 billion from the U.S. government.

At the time of the acquisition, BoA took pains to convince its shareholders it performed appropriate analysis, cited extensive work by J.C. Flowers to evaluate Merrill's operations and assets.  It is clear now that Lewis misled shareholders at the time and right up to December 5, 2008.  The fixed income markets suffered major dislocations in October and November, ahead of the shareholder vote, but Lewis claimed on the January 16 earnings call that the problems only surfaced in mid to late December.

Ultimately Ken Lewis was forced by the government in a December 17, 2008 meeting government to do the Merrill deal, after he obtained the government's commitment to provide the support that it is now providing.  The company now claims that the Merrill deal will be dilutive to earnings for 2 years.  By that point, Bank of America may be ward of the taxpayer with the equity worthless.  Hardly the earnings powerhouse that Ken Lewis promised shareholders.

Next question: What disaster did Wells Fargo open up when it acquired Wachovia and will any banks survive this?


Sponsor Updates and Offers

Sign up for Zions Direct’s free weekly newsletter.

Get market information, CD and Bond auction updates, new-issue alerts and more.



Related Articles:



2

Email this story Email to someone | Print Story Print Content | Add to reading list

Comments Received:

JBHardy
(Unregistered)

You neglected to point out that Merrill paid out $15 billion in compensation last year which makes this whole thing even more ridiculous.

Posted: Jan 18, 2009



Add Your Comments:

Your Name:

Spam protection control:


© Copyright 2009 JRodgers All rights reserved. JRodgers has granted BestCashCow.com, LLC non-exclusive rights to display this work on Bestcashcow.com.

Financial products of all nature bear inherent risks and this website is not a financial advisory service; it is a forum for users to share and to compare notes and observations on financial publications. The website provides, free of charge, the technical and logistical apparatus and the medium for users to share and to publish financial information and to comment on publications. As such, the website’s operator can not and does not take responsibility for information, observations or opinions of any sort or nature provided by third parties with whom it is not affiliated who use the website to publish, to comment or as a means of solicitation. Users are specifically warned against following any advice related to specific instruments, including, but not limited to, equity securities, that may be provided by other users directly on this site or on web pages to which other users have provided links on this site. BestCashCow.com can not and does not check or verify the qualifications and credentials of users who publish or comment on this site or on linked pages. Users should seek personalized advice from qualified professionals regarding all personal financial issues and evaluate the risks and applicability to their own circumstances of each financial product discussed regardless of who the publisher is or purports to be. Should you, through your use of this site, identify an individual or organization purporting to offer personalized advice, you bear all responsibility to ensure that the individual or organization has the qualifications that they may represent on the website, and that their advice is appropriate for your circumstances. On certain webpages, BestCashCow.com provides information related to rates on US-based savings accounts, CDs, short-term government bonds, and other US cash equivalent securities, also free of charge to internet users for their independent use. The accuracy of this information is not guaranteed, and the information, like all other information on this website, should not be construed to provide investment advice, nor to endorse a financial product of any sort.

© 2009 BestCashCow.com, LLC. All Rights Reserved. Terms under which this service is provided to you. Privacy Policy.