UPDATE: Regulator To Sell $4 Billion Worth Of Failed Banks' Assets
March 02 2010 - 4:51PM
Dow Jones News
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., to rid itself of assets
from failed banks, is tapping the securitization market with three
new guaranteed deals worth $4 billion.
The first of these deals, expected to be sold this week, is a
$1.8 billion offering, according to documents obtained by Dow Jones
Newswires.
The offerings pool assets held by failed banks the agency has
seized to protect depositors, including Franklin Bank in Houston
and Corus Bank in Chicago. The FDIC took over Franklin in November
2008 and Corus in September 2009.
Over the past two years, the FDIC has had to take over 165
financial institutions brought down by nonperforming commercial and
residential loans. For more than a year, the banking regulator has
been selling some of the loans through a vehicle structured as a
public-private partnership.
Essentially, in these deals, the buyer pays 20% of the assets'
value and tries to work out the loans by reducing the interest
rate, extending the maturity, writing off some principal or getting
buyers to put up equity. Once the loans start to perform, the FDIC,
which retains 80% ownership, shares in the returns. The arrangement
allows the FDIC to reduce its risk. In 2009, the FDIC sold $2.45
billion worth of loans, with an original book value of $5.7
billion.
Assets from the Corus and Franklin banks, which include
residential, commercial and construction loans, in addition to
other failed bank assets, have been pooled into three notes worth
$4 billion, according to the documents.
These notes are wrapped with an FDIC guarantee and backed by the
U.S. government.
The deals, offered via the private-placement market, are led by
Barclays Capital. Barclays declined to comment, and the FDIC
declined to confirm or deny that it was marketing a deal at
all.
The first offering is a structured sale of previously issued
non-agency residential-mortgage-backed securities. The second deal
is of Corus Bank assets, and the third is of Franklin Bank
loans.
Market participants say the banking regulator, which is expected
to take over many more banks this year, is looking at various
options to fast-track asset sales.
"The FDIC can't sell all the assets they have through the
public-private partnership transactions," said Jesse Litvak,
managing director and trader in the mortgage and asset-backed group
at Jefferies & Co. "This is their way of diversifying their
exit strategy."
-By Anusha Shrivastava, Dow Jones Newswires; 212-416-2227;
anusha.shrivastava@dowjones.com
(Prabha Natarajan contributed to this report.)
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