Friday, January 11, 2008

Rock raises £2.25bn from mortgage sale

(FT.com) - Northern Rock expects to raise £2.25bn through the sale of its portfolio of Lifetime home equity release mortgages to JPMorgan Chase at a premium to its balance sheet value.
 
The move is likely to be seen as an encouraging sign that buyers are beginning to emerge for mortgage assets owned by the stricken bank that are regarded as good quality.
 

However it may raise concerns that Northern Rock is selling off the better quality assets, leaving the government and shareholders with less attractive portfolios.

A spokesman for Northern Rock said: "It's not a question of degrees of quality. This was an opportunity to sell a relatively small percentage of our assets."

In another twist in the Northern Rock saga, trustees of the pension scheme have asked the company to place members on the same footing as depositors by setting aside enough mortgage assets to guarantee that all promised benefits could be fully paid if the bank becomes insolvent.

The move, detailed in a letter to scheme members sent on Friday, puts yet more pressure on a government that has already extended more than £25bn in loans to keep Northern Rock solvent.

But the bank would be unable to meet the trustees' request to pledge assets as security without the permission of its regulator and the guarantors of its loans - the Financial Services Authority, Bank of England and the Treasury.

In the letter, Sir David Chapman, chairman of the Trustees, notes that if Northern Rock were to become insolvent immediately "significant additional funds would need to be paid into the scheme" of around £150m to £200m.

Last October, as the lender's woes mounted, Trustees moved to shift the scheme's assets into much less risky areas. Nearly half is currently invested in index-linked government gilts.

But Friday's sale of the mortgage portfolio may raise hopes at the Treasury, the FSA and the Bank that a private sale may still be possible.

However, among leading shareholders concerns that the bank is selling the lender's most desirable assets may rise.

The sale value of £2.2bn, represents a premium of 2.25 per cent or about £50m over the balance sheet value, bringing the total cash proceeds from the agreed sale to £2.25bn. The Lifetime assets comprise about 2 per cent of the company's total assets.

Andy Kuipers, new chief executive, welcomed the sale.

"This...is a positive development in the company's ongoing strategic review," he said in a statement.

"It illustrates the quality of our assets, which has enabled us to achieve a sale at a premium despite continuing difficult financial markets, and will allow the company to reduce its debt to the Bank of England."

Read more at FT.com

FTSE falls amid global weakness, food stocks weigh

(Reuters) - Britain's top share index fell on Friday amid global weakness in equities fuelled by fears of more subprime-related writedowns and as food stocks suffered from a brokerage downgrade and profit-warning talk.

Britain's FTSE 100 .FTSE shed 0.3 percent to end at 6,202.0 points, while the pan-European FTSEurofirst 300 benchmark hit its lowest level in over a year before ending down 0.5 percent.

The New York Times reported Merrill Lynch (MER.N: Quote, Profile, Research) is expected to suffer $15 billion in losses stemming from soured mortgage investments, reminding investors the jury was still out on the extent of the fallout of the credit crisis.

This came on the heels of a profit warning from American Express (AXP.N: Quote, Profile , Research).

Worries over global growth pushed the price of crude further off record highs hit last week, taking oil stocks along with it. BP (BP.L: Quote, Profile, Research) fell 0.7 percent and Royal Dutch Shell (RDSa.L: Quote, Profile, Research) shed 1.6 percent as crude slipped to near $93 a barrel.

Unilever (ULVR.L: Quote, Profile, Research) was among the biggest percentage losers on the index after Morgan Stanley downgraded its rating on the consumer goods giant late on Thursday to "underweight" from "equal weight".

Elsewhere in the sector Reckitt Benckiser (RB.L: Quote, Profile, Research) fell 3.4 percent and Associated British Foods (ABF.L: Quote, Profile, Research) fell 0.9 percent. Cadbury (CBRY.L: Quote, Profile, Research) shed nearly 3 percent, with traders citing market talk the confectionery group would issue a profit warning. The company had no immediate comment.
 

Merrill seen suffering $15 billion loss: report

(Reuters) - Merrill Lynch (MER.N: Quote, Profile, Research) is expected to suffer $15 billion in losses stemming from soured mortgage investments, almost twice the company's original estimate, the New York Times reported on Friday.

The losses were prompting the company to raise additional capital from an outside investor, the newspaper said in a report on its Web site. Merrill is expected to disclose the huge write-down when it reports earnings next week, the New York Times said, citing people who had been briefed on the company's plans.

The loss exceeds the $12 billion hit that many Wall Street analysts had forecast, the newspaper said.