Arrow-right Camera
The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

WaMu sale looms, reports say

Challenge in buyer hunt: ‘No one knows what’s in their books’

Associated Press

Ailing bank Washington Mutual Inc. appeared headed toward a sale Wednesday after a major investor removed a potential stumbling block and nervous banking regulators began approaching the most logical buyers.

The New York Times, citing unidentified people familiar with the matter, said an auction of the bank was already under way, and the Wall Street Journal reported Wells Fargo & Co. and Citigroup Inc. had expressed interest in a takeover.

WaMu, Wells Fargo and Citigroup all declined to comment.

A concession by investment firm TPG, which injected $7 billion into WaMu five months ago, may have opened the way to a sale – or, failing that, made it easier for the bank to raise another round of capital.

TPG could have stymied the process because of protection when it bought its stake in April. A clause in its agreement could have required a buyer or another major investor to pay TPG hundreds of millions, if not billions, of dollars in addition to whatever money was injected into WaMu.

But TPG agreed to waive the clause after concluding WaMu needs all the help it can get.

“It became clear that it would be in the best interests of Washington Mutual and our investors to waive the … provisions,” Fort Worth, Texas-based TPG said in a statement. “Our goal is to maximize the bank’s flexibility in this difficult market environment.”

The efforts to find a buyer, though, were being complicated by uncertainty about the magnitude of losses still lurking in Washington Mutual’s home loan portfolio.

“No one knows what’s in their books,” said a person briefed on the talks between regulators and banks, speaking Wednesday on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the matter.

Citing unidentified sources, the New York Post said the potential buyers include JPMorgan Chase & Co. and HSBC Holdings PLC., as well as Wells Fargo. The banks all declined to comment.

Federal regulators would like to sell WaMu to a healthy bank, rather than risk a failure that would drain an already depleted deposit insurance fund. By some estimates, a WaMu failure could cost the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.’s fund more than $20 billion. At $45.2 billion, the fund is already at a five-year low.

After losing $6.3 billion in the past three quarters, Washington Mutual believes it is slowly healing under a new chief executive, Alan Fishman, who will receive an $8 million bonus if he can keep WaMu alive through 2009.

“I think people do know what is in our books and we’ve been pretty transparent,” WaMu spokeswoman Olivia Riley said Wednesday, pointing to a financial update the company released late last week. Those figures suggested WaMu’s loan problems are becoming less severe compared to recent quarters, giving some analysts hope that the company can still be salvaged.

Nonetheless, analysts still expect the company to sustain a loss of about $1.8 billion in the quarter ending Sept. 30. And investors are showing little confidence in WaMu.

“Something needs to happen soon because WaMu is twisting in the wind,” said Bert Ely, an Alexandria, Va., banking consultant. “It’s a detrimental situation that has become corrosive to the franchise.”