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Battle to buy Wachovia heats up | |
(about 3 hours later) | |
The battle for troubled US bank Wachovia has heated up with two rival suitors now competing for the firm. | |
Wells Fargo has announced it is set to buy Wachovia for $15.1bn (£8.5bn). | |
This scuppered an earlier US government-backed rescue deal in which Citigroup would buy Wachovia's banking arm for $2.2bn. | |
Citigroup has now objected, saying the new agreement breached its exclusive acquisition rights and has demanded that it be called off. | |
Exclusive agreement | |
But a few days later it was courted by another suitor Wells Fargo. | |
Wachovia's agreement with Wells Fargo is in clear breach of an exclusivity agreement between Citi and Wachovia Citigroup statement | |
Wells offered to buy all of Wachovia for much more money, and so Wachovia walked away from its agreement with Citi. | |
This has clearly angered Citigroup, which said it had nearly completed its own deal with Wachovia. | |
This would have been overseen by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), and would have included government help. | |
"Wachovia's agreement to a transaction with Wells Fargo is in clear breach of an exclusivity agreement between Citi and Wachovia," Citigroup said in a statement. | |
The fight for Wachovia has come amid a crisis that has seen investment bank Lehman Brothers go bust, and the failure of giant mortgage lender Washington Mutual. | |
Financial difficulties | |
Cassandra Toroian, chief investment officer at Bell Rock Capital added: "For Citigroup, this is a real loss...this was a deal that was going to save them as much as it was saving Wachovia." | Cassandra Toroian, chief investment officer at Bell Rock Capital added: "For Citigroup, this is a real loss...this was a deal that was going to save them as much as it was saving Wachovia." |
This deal enables us to keep Wachovia intact and preserve the value of an integrated company. Robert Steel Wachovia chief executive | This deal enables us to keep Wachovia intact and preserve the value of an integrated company. Robert Steel Wachovia chief executive |
Wachovia's financial difficulties stemmed from its 2006 purchase of mortgage lender Golden West for $25bn at the height of the then US housing boom, according to analysts. | Wachovia's financial difficulties stemmed from its 2006 purchase of mortgage lender Golden West for $25bn at the height of the then US housing boom, according to analysts. |
Wachovia's chief executive, Robert Steel, said: "Today's announcement creates one of the strongest financial firms in the world." | Wachovia's chief executive, Robert Steel, said: "Today's announcement creates one of the strongest financial firms in the world." |
"This deal enables us to keep Wachovia intact and preserve the value of an integrated company," he said. | "This deal enables us to keep Wachovia intact and preserve the value of an integrated company," he said. |
Shareholder questions | Shareholder questions |
Wells Fargo said it expected its earnings to benefit from the new agreement within a year, but some question the attraction of the deal for Wells' shareholders. | Wells Fargo said it expected its earnings to benefit from the new agreement within a year, but some question the attraction of the deal for Wells' shareholders. |
Nancy Bush, analyst at Nab research said: "I think it's a more elegant solution for Wachovia shareholders." | Nancy Bush, analyst at Nab research said: "I think it's a more elegant solution for Wachovia shareholders." |
But she added: "If I were a Wells Fargo shareholder...I wouldn't be so happy. Wells is going to have to go to the capital markets at a time when it's not so easy to raise capital." | But she added: "If I were a Wells Fargo shareholder...I wouldn't be so happy. Wells is going to have to go to the capital markets at a time when it's not so easy to raise capital." |
The deal still has to be approved by shareholders. | The deal still has to be approved by shareholders. |