Wells, Not Citi, Getting Wachovia if FDIC OKs

The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. -- which five days ago thought it had sold the ailing Wachovia Corp. to Citigroup -- has a conundrum on its hands: back Citi's original bid (which had federal aid) or allow the Charlotte, N.C.-based banking giant to be bought by Wells Fargo, which isn't asking for any type of government assistance. As of MortgageWire's deadline, the situation -- to say the least -- was fluid. Citigroup was threatening legal action while demanding that its original purchase go through as planned. The FDIC issued a statement saying it stood behind the original purchase agreement (which it helped engineer) but also said it will review "all proposals" with an eye toward coming up with a resolution "that best serves" the public interest." (The Citi deal values Wachovia at $1 a share, while the Wells bid amounts to about $7.) The trouble started Friday morning when Wells Fargo unexpectedly announced that it was buying Wachovia with no federal assistance whatsoever. The deal, if it goes through, will help Wells battle Bank of America for control of the residential lending and servicing sectors. With Wachovia under its belt, Wells would control 17.65% of the $9.6 trillion housing receivables market, compared with Bank of America's 21.06%. In lending, Wells/Wachovia would have an origination share of 17.73% vs. BoA's 19.99%. (The market share figures are based on June 30 data and take into account BoA's July 1 purchase of Countrywide Home Loans.) Even though the FDIC put no money into the original Citi-Wachovia purchase deal, it was on the hook for potential losses on Wachovia's payment-option ARM portfolio. Wells is buying Wachovia outright in a stock deal valued at $15 billion.

Processing Content

For reprint and licensing requests for this article, click here.
Originations Servicing
MORE FROM NATIONAL MORTGAGE NEWS
Load More