Archive for July, 2008

WaMu, a drunk Wall Street, and $1 trillion - all news I didn’t get to today

I’m on the road training folks as part of my job, so unfortunately I wasn’t able to cover much of the news today - that primarily being Washington Mutual tanking and respected, former White House economist Nouriel Roubini estimating that it will take $1 trillion to get us out of the housing/mortgage mess.

Here’s the links to the stuff I wish I could have written about had time permitted - maybe your schedule is currently more flexible )

WaMu’s $3.3 billion loss for the quarter (Bloomberg)

Washington Mutual Inc., the biggest U.S. savings and loan, reported a $3.3 billion second-quarter loss on uncollectible loans as a record number of borrowers were unable to keep up with mortgage payments.

The loss of $6.58 a share compared with net income of $830 million, or 92 cents a share, a year earlier, Seattle-based Washington Mutual said today in a statement. The company said mortgage-related losses through 2011 will be at the high end of its previous forecast of $12 billion to $19 billion.

George Bush says Wall Street got “drunk” (WSJ.com) — yes “W” they were the only ones…

“Wall Street got drunk — that’s one of the reasons I asked you to turn off the TV cameras — it got drunk and now it’s got a hangover,” Bush said Friday, according to a video obtained by Houston’s ABC affiliate KTRK. “The question is how long will it sober up and not try to do all these fancy financial instruments.”

Roubini’s $1 trillion call (C/R)

Mortgage rates reach year high (WSJ.com)

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Wachovia posts record $8.9 billion quarterly loss

Buying World Savings (a/k/a Golden West) appears to have been a terrible decision as Wachovia took a $6.1 billion charge related to declining asset values on its way to posting a $9 billion loss for the quarter.  In addition to suspending it’s wholesale lending department, the bank is slashing jobs, dividends and non-core businesses in an attempt to keep the company going after suffering at the hands of the dreaded pay option, neg-am ARM loan.

From Bloomberg on the loss:

Wachovia Corp., the U.S. bank that hired Treasury Undersecretary Robert Steel as chief executive officer two weeks ago, reported a record quarterly loss of $8.9 billion and cut the dividend by 87 percent. The stock fell as much as 12 percent in early New York trading.

The second-quarter loss of $4.20 a share compared with net income of $2.3 billion, or $1.23, a year earlier, the Charlotte, North Carolina-based company said today in a statement. The loss included a $6.1 billion charge tied to declining asset values.

The second-quarter loss marks the first time Wachovia has posted consecutive losses in at least 20 years, data compiled by Bloomberg show. Wachovia’s report follows the release of better- than-estimated quarterly results at JPMorgan Chase & Co., Bank of America Corp., Citigroup Inc. and Wells Fargo & Co.

Wachovia said July 9 that losses in the three months ended June 30 would be at least $2.6 billion, after $3.3 billion of losses on option-adjustable-rate mortgages. The loans let borrowers skip part of their payment and add the balance to principal. The bank said last month that it stopped offering the mortgages.

Declining house prices in California and Florida, which account for about 70 percent of Golden West’s $121 billion of loans, have left 14 percent of the bank’s option-ARM customers with zero or negative equity in their homes. Merrill Lynch & Co. analyst Edward Najarian estimated on July 9 that losses from the loans would total about $18 billion over four years, double those previously estimated by Wachovia.

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