Stan O'Neal, chairman and CEO of Merrill Lynch, has decided to retire from the company effective immediately.
The board of directors has elected Alberto Cribiore as interim non-executive chairman. Ahmass Fakahany and Gregory Fleming will continue as Merrill Lynch co-presidents and chief operating officers.
Tuesday, October 30, 2007
Saturday, October 27, 2007
Countrywide
Countrywide Financial Corp., the nation's largest mortgage lender, said Tuesday it will begin calling borrowers to offer refinancing or modifications on $16 billion in loans whose interest rate is set to adjust by the end of 2008.
There's two aspects of the story on which I'd like to comment...
Countrywide said it would refinance about $10 billion in loans and modify another $4 billion. It also plans to contact borrowers of some $2.2 billion who are late on their loans and having trouble paying because of a recent rate reset. In total Countrywide's plan would reach out to about 82,000 borrowers for some kind of relief. [...] The company estimates some 10,000 borrowers with subprime loans who are now behind on their payments due to their mortgage interest rate resetting will be offered rate reductions by the end of the year.
So if you did the right thing and did NOT overextend by taking on more mortgage than you could afford, Countrywide only has one thing to say to you: SUCKER!
There's two aspects of the story on which I'd like to comment...
Countrywide said it would refinance about $10 billion in loans and modify another $4 billion. It also plans to contact borrowers of some $2.2 billion who are late on their loans and having trouble paying because of a recent rate reset. In total Countrywide's plan would reach out to about 82,000 borrowers for some kind of relief. [...] The company estimates some 10,000 borrowers with subprime loans who are now behind on their payments due to their mortgage interest rate resetting will be offered rate reductions by the end of the year.
So if you did the right thing and did NOT overextend by taking on more mortgage than you could afford, Countrywide only has one thing to say to you: SUCKER!
So far this year, Countrywide has completed about 20,000 loan modifications -- a figure that represents less than 5% of the more than 500,000 loans the lender reports were behind in payments as of last month and about 24% of the roughly 82,000 loans the company said were in foreclosure as of September.
There's over 80,000 loans in foreclosure and another420,000 behind? That doesn't mean anything good for Countrywide.Friday, October 26, 2007
Thursday, October 25, 2007
Wednesday, October 24, 2007
Merrill Lynch Loss Wider Than Expected
From Yahoo...
Merrill Lynch said it was taking a sharper-than-expected writeoff of 7.9 billion dollars for losses in its mortgage activities in the third quarter. Merrill Lynch said the charge was "significantly greater" than the 4.5 billion dollars forecast earlier this month. The investment bank reported a third-quarter net loss from continuing operations of 2.24 billion dollars compared with a net profit of 2.14 billion dollars a year ago. The loss amounts to 2.85 dollars a share, far wide that that the Wall Street consensus forecast for a loss per share of 45 cents.
From TheStreet...
Merrill Lynch stunned Wall Street for the second time this month with the disclosure that it was forced into a $7.9 billion writedown of bad debt tied to risky mortgages and structured paper. The announcement comes three weeks after Merrill surprised investors by estimating that its third quarter would swing to a loss under the weight of $4.5 billion in writedowns on certain securities. Merrill said the writedown increased after the firm took a second look at its valuation of collateralized debt obligations and subprime mortgage backed securities.
Merrill's third-quarter report has to rank among the worst in modern Wall Street history. The firm swung to a loss of $2.24 billion, or $2.85 a share, from continuing operations from a year-ago profit of $3.05 billion, or $3.14 a share. The firm took a $5.9 billion loss on its in-house trading operation. said $6.9 billion of the third-quarter writedown was related to its CDO positions and $1 billion to its subprime holdings. The firm said its net exposure to those securities dropped from second-quarter levels, but it continues to have $15 billion worth of CDO exposure and nearly $6 billion worth of subprime exposure.
What I (and I'm sure others) want to know is how could the loss be SIX TIMES as large as expected just three weeks ago. What kind of risk management do the guys at Merrill Lynch have in place?
Merrill Lynch said it was taking a sharper-than-expected writeoff of 7.9 billion dollars for losses in its mortgage activities in the third quarter. Merrill Lynch said the charge was "significantly greater" than the 4.5 billion dollars forecast earlier this month. The investment bank reported a third-quarter net loss from continuing operations of 2.24 billion dollars compared with a net profit of 2.14 billion dollars a year ago. The loss amounts to 2.85 dollars a share, far wide that that the Wall Street consensus forecast for a loss per share of 45 cents.
From TheStreet...
Merrill Lynch stunned Wall Street for the second time this month with the disclosure that it was forced into a $7.9 billion writedown of bad debt tied to risky mortgages and structured paper. The announcement comes three weeks after Merrill surprised investors by estimating that its third quarter would swing to a loss under the weight of $4.5 billion in writedowns on certain securities. Merrill said the writedown increased after the firm took a second look at its valuation of collateralized debt obligations and subprime mortgage backed securities.
Merrill's third-quarter report has to rank among the worst in modern Wall Street history. The firm swung to a loss of $2.24 billion, or $2.85 a share, from continuing operations from a year-ago profit of $3.05 billion, or $3.14 a share. The firm took a $5.9 billion loss on its in-house trading operation. said $6.9 billion of the third-quarter writedown was related to its CDO positions and $1 billion to its subprime holdings. The firm said its net exposure to those securities dropped from second-quarter levels, but it continues to have $15 billion worth of CDO exposure and nearly $6 billion worth of subprime exposure.
What I (and I'm sure others) want to know is how could the loss be SIX TIMES as large as expected just three weeks ago. What kind of risk management do the guys at Merrill Lynch have in place?
Tuesday, October 23, 2007
[Obsolete] Bear - Citic Swap
Bear Stearns and Citic Securities [a Chinese firm, not to be confused with Citi] will each invest about $1 billion in each other. In return for its investment in Bear Stearns, Citic will receive securities that can be converted into about 6% of Bear Stearns's outstanding shares. As part of the deal, Citic has the right to buy an additional 3.9% of the brokerage's outstanding shares [for that magic 9.9% share]. In return for its investment in Citic, Bear Stearns will receive a 2% stake in the firm. It has the option to buy an additional 5%.
Edited (3/17/2008): Citic Securities has canceled this investment deal with Bear Stearns. "The situation has changed," said Citic Chairman Dan Kong, after Bear's buy-out yesterday by JPMorgan Chase.
Edited (3/17/2008): Citic Securities has canceled this investment deal with Bear Stearns. "The situation has changed," said Citic Chairman Dan Kong, after Bear's buy-out yesterday by JPMorgan Chase.
Thursday, October 18, 2007
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