FDIC Faces '3-D Tic-Tac-Toe' In Puerto Rico Banking Crisis
April 08 2010 - 2:51PM
Dow Jones News
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. faces a daunting task in
finding a solution for the broken banks in Puerto Rico that doesn't
damage the surviving banks or the island's economy.
The FDIC is trying to minimize its potential loss from three
weak Puerto Rican banks by drumming up interest among banks and
private equity investors in buying W Holding Co Inc.'s (WHI)
Westernbank, R&G Financial Corp.'s (RGFC) R-G Premier Bank, and
EuroBancshares Inc.'s (EUBK) EuroBank, according to several people
familiar with the matter. All three banks are in dire financial
condition; closing them could cost the FDIC insurance fund as much
as $10 billion, based on worst-case losses from recent bank
failures.
None of the banks returned phone calls requesting comment.
The FDIC hired Deutsche Bank AG (DB, DBK.XE) for advice, and the
agency itself is marketing the three banks aggressively to
potential buyers, according to several people familiar with the
matter. The FDIC is hoping to find a solution by April 30, two
people familiar with the matter said.
Not since the savings-and-loan crisis has the FDIC faced such a
steep challenge in a specific banking market, and one as isolated
as Puerto Rico. The three banks in danger of failing have a total
of $21 billion in assets and hold 30% of the island's deposits.
The goal is to strengthen the island's remaining banks--an aim
at the intersection of the FDIC's mandate to protect its funds, and
political interests that would prefer that Puerto Rican banks
swallow the three institutions in danger of failing.
"The end result must be that we have a smaller number of
players, but solid players, that will be lending" in Puerto Rico,
said Pedro Pierluisi, who is the island's nonvoting representative
in Congress. "But if you are as challenged as we are, we should
welcome investment" from foreign banks or mainland investors, he
said.
Puerto Rico has been in a deep recession since 2006, when the
government's fiscal imbalances led the economy into a tailspin.
Popular Inc. (BPOP), Oriental Financial Group Inc. (OFG), Doral
Financial Corp. (DRL), First Bancorp. (FBP), all local Puerto Rican
banks, have expressed interest in expanding on the island through
acquisition.
The surviving Puerto Rican banks, however, "are not in the
greatest shape. Each has its own issue do deal with," said John
Douglas, a partner with law firm Davis Polk & Wardwell, and
former FDIC general counsel.
Oriental recently raised $100 million that it said could be used
to acquire a failed bank. Popular could easily raise $500 million,
said Amanda Larsen, an analyst with Raymond James &
Associates.
Meanwhile, "anybody of any size" among mainland private equity
investors "is taking a look," one lawyer said, "with clear eyes and
fully understanding the risk."
Douglas said he has had clients "kicking the tires," but "it's
hard to gauge what [the interest] will amount to."
One person familiar with the matter said, "Everybody leaves [the
island] shrugging their shoulders."
The biggest problem for banks in Puerto Rico is soured real
estate construction loans. Bank failures could lead to further
writedowns of real estate assets, which could further damage the
island's real estate market and hamper lending.
One tough wrinkle: Foreclosing on delinquent owner-occupied real
estate loans would lead to more unemployment. For almost 15% of
Westernbank's $4 billion in owner-occupied real estate loans,
collection is uncertain, according to the bank's most recent
regulatory filings.
Finding a solution for the island's banks is "three-dimensional
tic-tac-toe," said one lawyer who represents potential
investors.
The FDIC could bundle several banks together, strip out their
troubled assets into a separate "bad bank," and sell those assets
separately. Sources familiar with the matter said such a structure
has come up in discussions between the FDIC and potential bidders,
but bundling three sick banks into one bigger bank may not make the
FDIC's task of finding buyers for the banks any easier.
A big market share in Puerto Rico may not be enough to entice
buyers. Puerto Rico "is not a growth area," said Gerald Ford, a
private equity investor hunting for failed banks, who looked at
Puerto Rican banks in the past. "I don't think we'd be
interested."
Pierluisi said, "Puerto Rico has a lot of potential," but
resolving the banking problems "is indispensible for the
development of the economy."
-By Matthias Rieker, Dow Jones Newswires; 212-416-2471;
matthias.rieker@dowjones.com
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