GEF @ 6:18 PM ET
TOO BIG TO FAIL ?? REALLY ?

Wachovia loses $8.9B, cuts 6,350 workers, dividend
By Ieva M. Augstums, AP Business Writer
Wachovia slashes dividend, jobs, to shut mortgage unit after $8.86B loss in second quarter CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — Wachovia Corp. reported a surprisingly large second-quarter loss Tuesday, deflating Wall Street’s hopes that the nation’s big banks are weathering the credit crisis well. The bank said it lost $8.86 billion, is slashing its dividend and eliminating 10,750 positions after losses tied to mortgages soared.
Even excluding one-time items, the results substantially missed analysts’ estimates.
But by the afternoon its stock joined a modest Wall Street rally and rose as much as 13 percent — after its shares sank to mid-1991 levels in premarket trading, and after Wachovia’s new CEO said he plans to cut $2 billion of expenses by the end of next year and sell parts of the fourth-biggest U.S. bank.
Its shares rose $1.19, or 9 percent, to $14.37 in afternoon trading.
“Our reported results today are clearly a disappointing performance for which we take responsibility,” said Wachovia’s Chief Executive Bob Steel on a conference call with analysts. “We are serious about getting on top of these issues quickly and we believe we have a good grasp of the challenges facing the economy, the industry and Wachovia.”
Three rating agencies — Moody’s Investors Service, Standard & Poor’s and Fitch Ratings — downgraded their ratings on Wachovia’s debt, citing increased expectations of losses in the bank’s mortgage portfolio and its reduced flexibility to raise new capital.
Wachovia said it lost the equivalent of $4.20 per share in the April-June period. In the same timeframe last year, the bank earned $2.34 billion, or $1.22 per share.
Excluding $6.1 billion in write-downs to the value of its intangible assets and merger-related and restructuring charges of $128 million, Wachovia lost $2.67 billion, or $1.27 per share. Second quarter results include the bank’s October acquisition of A.G. Edwards Inc., which the bank said the merger is proceeding as planned and is 40 percent complete.
Analysts on average expected a loss of 78 cents per share on revenue of almost $8.4 billion.
Earlier this month, the Charlotte-based bank had projected a $2.6 billion to $2.8 billion quarterly loss, equal to $1.23 to $1.33 per share, excluding goodwill items.
“Wachovia’s new management has pulled its head of out the sand and is fully acknowledging the problems not challenges,” said Bart Narter, senior analyst at Celent, a Boston-based financial research and consulting firm. “While the company’s wealth management, corporate and investment banks, and capital management groups all had more encouraging results than the general bank, the general bank is the bulk of Wachovia and it isn’t performing well.”
Wachovia cut its quarterly dividend to 5 cents per share from 37.5 cents, which will conserve approximately $700 million of capital per quarter. In April, Wachovia slashed its dividend 41 percent.
Steel, who replaced ousted Ken Thompson earlier this month, said it was “clearly prudent and necessary” to further cut the dividend.
“While this is a difficult decision, it is the best course for our shareholders over the long term,” he said.
Steel said the company is moving to “sell selected non-core assets” and reduce the number of business customers who only use the bank for loans rather than other services. Wachovia expects to cut expenses during the second half of this year by $490 million and then reduce 2009 spending by $1.5 billion.
As part of that plan, Wachovia said it would lay off 6,350 workers, affecting more than 5 percent to fits roughly 120,000 employees. A majority of those jobs will come from the mortgage area, Steel said.
Wachovia also said it will also eliminate 4,400 open positions and contractors. The bank has already cut 2,000 retail mortgage jobs, it said.
During the quarter, the Wachovia boosted its provision for loan losses to $5.57 billion from $179 million a year ago, and added $4.2 billion to its reserves for bad loans.
Results also included a $975 million charge related to the tax treatment of leveraged leases, $936 million of losses from disrupted capital markets, a $590 million charge for other legal matters, and $391 million of losses on securities sales.
Wachovia’s current problems stem largely from its acquisition of mortgage lender Golden West Financial Corp. in 2006 for roughly $25 billion at the height of the nation’s housing boom. With that purchase, Wachovia inherited a deteriorating $122 billion portfolio of Pick-A-Payment loans, Golden West’s specialty, which let borrowers skip some payments.
Wachovia’s increase in loan loss reserves included $3.3 billion related to the “Pick-a-Payment” mortgage portfolio. In April, the bank tightened underwriting standards, and last month it stopped offering an option on “Pick-A-Payment” loans that let borrowers pay less than the interest owed. On Monday, Wachovia said it will stop offering home loans through brokers.
Wachovia said it is setting aside $10.96 billion for credit losses, up from $6.77 billion in the first quarter and $3.55 billion a year earlier. Net charge-offs, loans it doesn’t think are collectable, increased more than eight-fold from a year earlier to $1.31 billion.
Profits in consumer and business banking, Wachovia’s largest unit, fell 23 percent to $1.12 billion, hurt by rising credit costs, mainly for mortgages.
The corporate and investment banking unit had a $209 million profit, down 73 percent, reflecting write-downs tied to subprime mortgages, commercial mortgages, non-subprime debt and consumer mortgages.
Capital management profit fell 5 percent to $297 million, hurt by the liquidation of an Evergreen Investments fund, while wealth management profit rose 9 percent to $98 million.















A lot of Surprises huh ?
Meanwhile Govt is Lying their ass off…
HANK PAULSON SAID ON JULY 20th, ONLY TWO DAYS AGO THAT:
“BANKS ARE SAFE AND SOUND!!”
Bwahahahahahahahah!
Lawmakers move to curb Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac pay
“ WASHINGTON – Democrats and Republicans queasy about a federal rescue of mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are coalescing around the idea of letting the government slap limits on the multimillion-dollar pay packages of their executives.
Key lawmakers — puzzling over how to explain to constituents why they voted to bail out the troubled government-sponsored firms — see new curbs on compensation for the top officers as a crucial measure to cut down on the cringe factor. ”
This is really a half measure if you ask me. Better would be to make these pay limits retroactive and bankrupt the already morally bankrupt CEOs pour encourager les autres. Best would be to drag a few of them out of their limousines kicking and screaming and give ‘em the old Moussolini treatment at the nearest convenient lamppost.
The idea that greed is good has been thoroughly discredited time and time again. The predator class deliberately maneuvered to have safeguards removed that were put in place to avoid a second Great Depression. Well guess what? They’ve enriched themselves with salaries and bonus packages that would make A-Rod drool with envy – and here’s the result. I’m willing to pony up to buy knitting needles for the modern Madame LaFarge.
Banks failing left right and centre!
I don’t believe it.
Banks are as safe as houses.
Next you’ll be telling us is that marshal law is on its way.
Yep..
Civil Unrest too..
Wake up call number 6? IndyMac is not the first one to go.
American’s woke up to another slap in the face, IndyMac.
The bank giant where many people deposited their life savings is going out of business.
There you had them!
People waiting in line to take their money out, only to be rejected later by other bank institutions when trying to deposit their money or what they could get of it because the letterhead of the cashier’s check had the infamous word: Indymac.
It was reported in the media that a california woman tried to deposit a cashier’s check from Indymac at a washington mutual branch in pasadena and she was told that it could take up to eight weeks for her funds to be available
Other bank institutions said that they are following the federal guidelines in regards to availability of funds on the new deposits, and that those same guidelines apply to checks from indymac.
The truth of the matter is that failures like indymac’s have name: greed from the Real Estate boom.
Now banks are paying the consequences, first it was Countrywide that have bailed out by a purchase from Bank of America, not without having the ceo (angelo mozillo) walk away with a multimillion severance package.
Now indymac is under investigation by the fbi for possible fraud in the subprime market.
According to the media reports, the investigation is focusing in the company and not in the individuals who run it.
Apparently, indymac officials approved loans to people who otherwise wouldn’t be able to qualify for one, leaving now thousands on the verge of foreclosure.
Some IDIOT has posted this story in the Yahoo Message Boards… even though the article was written JULY 22, 2008. The poster goes by “vendetta1475″…
DUMBER THAN DUMB!