The battle between Wells Fargo and Citi for Wachovia is over and Wells is the winner. Citi walked away citing concerns over Wachovia's loan portfolio. Wells gets to greatly expand its banking franchise but also inherits billions in bad loans.
For customers of Wachovia, the transition to Wells Fargo should be like any regular bank acquisition. Wachovia is offering some relatively high rates for a large bank including their 3.5% APY High Performance Money Market account and a 1 year CD that ranges anywhere from 4.10% APY to 4.30% APY depending on your state of residence. Both the money market account rate and the 1 year cd account rate are competitive.
As we saw with Bank of America's purchase of Countrywide, and Chase's purchase of WaMu, these competitive rates generally don't last long. Look for Wells to lower them in the next couple of months, if not sooner.
Was this a good deal for Wells? In the plus column Wells gains control of $448 billion in deposits in 21 states for the low price of $12 billion. On the minus column it inherits Wachovia's $498 billion loan portfolio, which includes about $122 billion of option adjustable-rate mortgages. These option adjustable-rate-mortgages have been defaulting at high levels and analysts estimate as many as $40 billion could go bad. The number could climb higher if the economy continues to deteriorate.
I'd have to assume Wells has had a chance to take a look at Wachovia's loan portfolio and feels comfortable with the risk they are taking. But if the economy continues to deteriorate they could be on the hook for more than they originally estimated. Overall though, I think Wells got a pretty good deal and now becomes the largest bank by branches in the United States.
Sponsor Updates and Offers
|
|
|
Related Articles:
Bank Stocks Worth Taking A Look At by Sam Cass - Aug 18, 2007
Wells Fargo Results Show All Banks Not Created Equal by JRodgers - Jul 16, 2008
Many Investors Still Stuck in Auction Rate Securities by JRodgers - Sep 04, 2008
Wachovia Weekly Economic and Financial Commentary - July 20, 2007 by Sam Cass - Jul 26, 2007
Throw Out Wachovia and Bank of America and Grab a McDonald's Hamburger by MBANewlyMinted - Oct 19, 2007
Wachovia Bank by BankMan - Jun 21, 2008
Which will fail first - Lehman, Wachovia, Merrill or Citibank? by JRodgers - Jul 15, 2008
Wells Fargo to Buy Wachovia, Citi Left Out by Sam Cass - Oct 03, 2008
PNC Corp Buying National City for $5.2 Billion by Sam Cass - Oct 24, 2008.


Add to reading list



