Thursday, August 23, 2007

Bank of America's Countrywide Bet May Bolster Mortgage Market

Bank of United States Corp. bought $2 billion of preferable stock from Countrywide Financial Corp. to stabilise the nation's biggest mortgage loaner as radioactive dust from the U.S. lodging slack paralyzes recognition marketplaces worldwide.

``Countrywide is no longer on the endangered company list,'' Hood Ziegel & Co. analyst Dick Bove wrote in a short letter to clients yesterday. ``This investing do sense for both companies. Depository Financial Institution of United States will now presumably be the preferable loaner to Countrywide.''

Depository Financial Institution of America, the second-biggest U.S. bank, acquires shares that output 7.25 percentage and can be converted into common stock at a terms of $18, Calabasas, California-based Countrywide said yesterday in a statement. Countrywide shares climbed 21 percentage in drawn-out trading followers the announcement.

While Countrywide acquires hard cash needed to maintain making loans, the extract also may assist to reassure investors that the mortgage marketplace is safe after rising default rates sparked a planetary recognition crunch and forced the U.S. Federal Soldier Modesty to cut adoption costs for banks. The Fed's Aug. Seventeen move, designed to direct more than hard cash to companies starved for short-term financing, came a twenty-four hours after Countrywide tapped $11.5 billion of exigency recognition lines.

``With last week's Federal action and today's announcement, it looks that the mortgage working capital marketplaces will go back to more than normal degrees of activity and liquidness sooner than we thought,'' Fox-Pitt Kelton Inc. analyst Leslie Howard Shapiro wrote in a short letter to investors yesterday.

The proclamation sent Countrywide shares to $26.33 as of 7:07 p.m. yesterday, after they gained 3 cents to $21.82 in New House Of York Stock Exchange composite trading. Countrywide had dropped 49 percentage for the year, including the diminution that followed the Aug. Fifteen Merrill Lynch & Co. study predicting the company's hard cash deficit might coerce it into bankruptcy.

Off the List

Converting the preferable stock would give Depository Financial Institution of United States 111 million common shares, or a 16 percentage interest in Countrywide, Bove estimated. The dealing will be ``additive'' to Depository Financial Institution of America's earnings, he said.

``We were able to travel to California, expression at their trading operations and their books,'' said Henry Martin Robert Stickler, a spokesman for Charlotte, North Carolina-based Depository Financial Institution of America. ``We determined the value is greater than what the marketplace was giving them recognition for.''

The ballot of assurance sent shares of mortgage loaners up in after-hours trading. Thornburg Mortgage Inc. gained as much as 10 percent, IndyMac Bancorp added 7 percentage and American Capital Mutual Inc. advanced about 2.5 percent. Accredited Home Lenders Retention Co., which slashed 1,600 occupations yesterday in an attempt to sit out the mortgage meltdown, rose almost 9 percent.

Worth Less

Countrywide, which made $421.1 billion of loans last year, have struggled to maintain its terms after investors stopped buying mortgages and short-term debt investors refused to refinance its commercial paper.

The company may necessitate to raise more than working capital because falling terms for place loans inch the secondary market, where they're bought and sold by Wall Street traders, have got pared the value of its mortgage portfolio, according to Sean Egan, managing manager of Egan-Jones Ratings Co. in Haverford, Pennsylvania.

The assets are probably deserving ``less than its outstanding obligations,'' he said.

In January, Countrywide shares were buoyed by guess that it might be acquired by Depository Financial Institution of America. The stock tumbled after Depository Financial Institution of United States Head Executive Military Officer Kenneth Jerry Lee Lewis said he had reserves about the pattern of loaning through mortgage brokers, as Countrywide does.

``We like the product, but we don't like the business,'' Jerry Lee Lewis said Jan. 31. Six calendar months later, in a June 19 interview, he said the lag in place gross sales was ``just about over'' and predicted that the economic system would pick up in the 2nd one-half of this year.

Back to Normal

In yesterday's statement, Jerry Lee Lewis said Depository Financial Institution of America's investing in Countrywide ``will be a measure toward a tax return to more than normal liquidness in the mortgage markets.''

Countrywide chief executive officer Angelo Mozilo said the bank's investing ``strengthens our balance sheet, enabling us to place Countrywide for future growth.''

Depository Financial Institution of United States won't acquire any Countrywide board seating in connexion with its investment, Stickler said.

Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc., the greatest investment banker of U.S. chemical bonds backed by mortgages, announced yesterday that it will fold its subprime-lending unit and fire 1,200 employees. Accredited Home announced 1,600 occupation cuts, and HSBC Holdings Plc said it would get rid of 600 occupations in the U.S. and stopping point a mortgage business office in Indiana.

To reach the newsman on this story: Thomas Bradley Keoun in New House Of York at
.

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Thursday, May 10, 2007

Japan's Bank Lending Slows as Companies Shun Debt (Update5)

Japan's lending growth slowed for a
third month as cash-rich companies ignored the lowest borrowing
costs among major economies and used their own funds to invest.

Loans excluding trusts rose 1 percent in April from a year
earlier, the Bank of Japan said in Tokyo today, slowing from 1.1
percent in March. Lending adjusted for currency fluctuations, bad
loan write-offs and securitizations climbed 1.9 percent.

Lending has risen less than 2 percent in each of the past nine
months as companies including Toyota Motor Corp. and Canon Inc.
shun the use of debt for expansion, instead using money generated
by the longest stretch of profit growth in 36 years. Borrowing is
unlikely to accelerate in coming months, said Takuji Aida.

``Companies have ample cash and that reduces their need to
borrow from banks,'' said Aida, chief economist at Barclays Capital
in Tokyo. ``The extra liquidity is more a reflection of strong
business activity.''

The yen traded at 120.21 per dollar at 5:11 p.m. in Tokyo
compared with 120.17 before the report was published. Bank lending
including trusts climbed 1 percent in April, the same pace as the
previous month, the central bank said.

Japan's banks began to increase lending in February 2006,
having disposed of bad debts accumulated after the bubble economy
burst 16 years ago. Growth in borrowing has slowed since peaking at
2.2 percent last July, the same month the Bank of Japan ended its
five-year policy of keeping interest rates near zero percent.

BOJ's Fukui

Loans excluding trusts were 388 trillion yen ($3.2 trillion)
in April, down from the record 537 trillion yen in March 1996.

The bank doubled the key overnight lending rate to 0.5 percent
in February. Governor Toshihiko Fukui's policy board will keep
borrowing costs on hold at its next meeting on May 16-17, according
to all 29 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News.

Interest rates are ``very low'' given the economy's strength
and failing to increase borrowing costs could cause overinvestment,
Fukui said in a speech to business leaders in Tokyo today.

Fujio Mitarai, chairman of the Japan Business Federation, said
he's ``not uncomfortable'' with the country's interest-rate levels.
``There's no great demand for financing'' among Japan's companies,
Mitarai, who is also chairman of Canon, said on May 7.

Canon, the world's largest maker of digital cameras, posted a
record profit last quarter. Toyota, the world's largest automaker
by market value, said yesterday that profit rose 8.9 percent in the
three months ended March 31.

Largest Banks

Growth in lending last month was dragged down by the country's
largest banks, while loans offered by regional banks accelerated.

Lending by Japan's 10 mega banks contracted 0.3 percent in
April from a year earlier, after rising 0.1 percent in March, the
report showed. Regional banks' loans climbed 2.4 percent, faster
than the 2.2 percent growth the previous month.

``Growth in loans has been driven by regional banks lending to
consumers and mid-sized companies,'' Takamasa Hisada, the Bank of
Japan's deputy director of bank surveillance.

An index of demand for loans from companies fell to 9 in April,
the lowest in more than a year, from 14 in January while that of
consumers rose to 13 from 7 in the same period, the Bank of Japan
said in a quarterly report last month.

Lack of loan demand is forcing banks to keep their borrowing
rates low, reducing interest income, said Tomoko Fujii, a senior
economist and strategist at Bank of America N.A. in Tokyo.

Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group Inc., Japan's third-biggest
bank by assets, said last month full-year profit fell 36 percent,
worse than its forecast.

Other economists have a different view on the stalled growth
in loans.

`Sick of Borrowing'

``Companies are so sick of borrowing,'' said Richard Koo,
chief economist at Nomura Research Institute Ltd. They're slowly
regaining confidence to borrow after repaying debt amid a decade of
economic stagnation. ``This may take a while,'' Koo said.

The collapse of the bubble in the early 1990s triggered a
slump in stock and land prices, leaving companies laden with debt
and smothering demand for loans. Banks, which had secured loans
with land, became reluctant to extend credit, plunging the economy
into more than seven years of deflation.

Interest-bearing liabilities held by Japanese companies have
fallen to about 80 percent of gross domestic product, the lowest
since 1970, from more than 125 percent of GDP in the mid-1990s,
according to Merrill Lynch & Co.

Japan's money supply, or M2 plus notes in circulation, rose
1.1 percent in April, the central bank said in a separate report.
Broad liquidity, which includes bonds and investment trusts, gained
2.6 percent.

Savers, taking advantage of higher interest rates, have been
shifting money from current accounts to time deposits since the
central bank increased borrowing costs in July. Time deposits grew
3.7 percent in April and funds in current accounts dropped 1.3
percent, the bank said today.

``We expect a continuing shift from current accounts to time
deposits, as the impact of the additional rate hike in February
works through the economy,'' said Chiwoong Lee, research assistant
at Goldman Sachs Japan Ltd.

To contact the reporters on this story
Toru Fujioka in Tokyo at

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