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XLF, Banking and Financial Sector Stocks
This archived discussion is "read only". « Previous 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 Next » » JenL_2 - Citigroup Buys Associates First Capital Just heard on Business News Radio that Financials are rallying this AM on this news from 9/6 WSJ:Citigroup Agrees to Buy Associates First In a Share Deal Valued at $31.1 Billion Dow Jones Newswires NEW YORK -- Citigroup Inc. said Wednesday that it has agreed to acquire Associates First Capital Corp. in a share transaction valued at $31.1 billion. Shareholders of Associates First will receive 0.7334 of a Citigroup share for each of their shares, valued at $42.49 based on the companies' closing share prices Tuesday in New York. At 4 p.m. Tuesday on the New York Stock Exchange, shares of Citigroup were quoted at $57.94, while Associates First shares were at $28. Citigroup said the purchase will add at least 10 cents a share to earnings in the first year of the groups' combined operation. Associates First, which in the past has been seen as a potential target of Citigroup, offers the company a chance to build on its credit-card operations and branch network, both of which would help Citigroup's efforts to boost its consumer operations. Indeed, Citicorp purchased 129 branches from Associates First in a separate transaction last year. The boards of both companies have approved the transaction, which Citigroup said it expects to close on or about the end of the year. Associates First shareholders still need to approve the company's purchase by Citigroup. The transaction also requires approval from domestic and foreign antitrust, banking and insurance regulators. Citigroup will account for the transaction as a pooling of interests. It will be tax free to Associates First common stock holders. Once the transaction is complete, Associates First shareholders will own about 10% of Citigroup common shares. Citigroup said the purchase of Associates First accelerates the company's consumer financial services expansion on a global basis. Once the transaction is complete, Associates First's North American consumer finance operations will combine with CitiFinancial, Citigroup's consumer finance business. Associates First's commercial unit will join with Citigroup's Global Equipment Finance operations. Finance company Associates First's credit card operation will combine with financial services company Citigroup's card operations. Associates First Chairman and Chief Executive Keith W. Hughes will become a Citigroup vice chairman and join the company's board. Associates First Chief Financial Officer and Senior Executive Vice President Roy A. Guthrie will have responsibilities that include Associates First's current operations in commercial and international finance. Associates First has managed assets of more than $100 billion, while Citigroup has assets of more than $791 billion. Subscribe to WSJ Online @ http://www.wsj.com ....it was said that the financial sector was rallying in the anticipation of more mergers to come.......Jen -- posted by JenL_2 » Kirk - Goldman to buy Wholesale Share Trader Goldman’s shoring up retail, back-endNEW YORK (CBS.MW) – Goldman Sachs Group shares traded higher Monday after the firm confirmed buying wholesale share trader Spear, Leeds & Kellogg for $6.5 billion in stock and cash. The terms set the purchase price at 34.4 million Goldman shares, valued at $4.4 billion, and $2.1 billion in cash, Goldman said in a conference call. The deal is Goldman’s second acquisition of a trading business since the investment bank went public last year. This latest move “puts (Goldman) at the center of (share) price discovery,” Chief Executive Henry Paulson told investors and analysts on the call. SLK is a top specialist on the New York Stock Exchange and one of the top Nasdaq market makers, giving the firm one of the biggest share order flows in the U.S. SLK is also the largest stock and options clearing firm in the U.S. with 20,000 clients, according to Goldman. The deal underlines the increasing importance of back-office operations on Wall Street, where profits are made by volume instead of the direction of the market. Clearing accounted for some 40 percent of SLK’s profits in the last 9 months. With SLK, Goldman also gains a big foothold in the business of the small investor. Spear, Leeds is the third largest market maker in Nasdaq stocks. Goldman (GS) shares were up $6.19 to $130.44. It’s not clear Goldman will keep the NYSE specialist operation, which accounts for some one-third of Spear, Leeds revenue. One executive from a rival specialist firm on Monday said he expects Goldman may seek to sell off SLK’s NYSE business. Goldman added to the speculation, saying in a statement that SLK’s “market making, execution and clearing” businesses provide “tangible benefits for Goldman Sachs and its clients.” However, Paulson indicated on the call that Goldman needs to retain “human talent” in reference to the specialist on the floor of the NYSE. “Our view is that as the market evolves, the specialists will also evolve … It’s hard to predict exactly how it will evolve. We are going to need a combination of great technology … and human talent to make it work.” Shares of LaBranche (LAB), the only publicly traded specialist stock, dropped 10 percent on Monday. Still, the stock has more than doubled in the past three months, partially on takeover speculation. Shares of Knight-Trimark (NITE), the largest Nasdaq market maker, rose 94 cents to $32. Goldman said it expects the SLK deal to close within the next four months, and to add “greater than 2 percent” to current estimates of its earnings next year. Goldman expects to take a $350 million to $400 million charge in the quarter that the deal closes, largely because of a $900 million “retention pool” of Goldman stock that the firm will use to keep key SLK employees. Emily Church is a managing editor of CBS.MarketWatch.com. -- posted by Kirk » Kirk - JPM Chart http://finance.yahoo.com/q?s=JPM&d=1dthis shows the after hours trading... and this one shows JPM vs XLF Nice move! and to think how many of us used this thread back in the Dec/March time frame to discuss and buy XLF and other stocks in the sector! -- posted by Kirk » Kirk - Lehman profit rises 58%, Announces Stock Split Lehman profit rises 58%, Announces Stock Splithttp://biz.yahoo.com/rf/000920/nrt000728... Wednesday September 20, 8:45 am Eastern Time NEW YORK, Sept 20 (Reuters) - Lehman Bros Holdings Inc., one of Wall Street's few remaining independent investment banks, on Wednesday reported a 58 percent rise in quarterly profits, driven by trading gains, and said its board approved a two-for-one stock split. Lehman (NYSE:LEH - news) reported net income of $457 million, or $3.37 per share, for the fiscal third quarter, ended Aug. 31. That compared with profits of $290 million, or $2.20 per share, a year ago. The results easily beat average analyst estimates of $2.74 per share, according to First Call/Thomson Financial. Net revenues were up 51 percent to $2.052 billion, driven by more than $1 billion in revenues from trading stocks and bonds and record revenues from advising on mergers and acquisitions (M&A). The 150-year-old firm, previously best-known for trading bonds, has shifted its focus overseas to lucrative businesses like stock trading and merger advisory. Lehman said its stock split is payable Oct. 20 to shareholders of record as of Oct. 5. Its shares have surged more than 65 percent since June on speculation the company will be sold amid a wave of consolidation in the financial services sector. Lehman shares closed in Tuesday trading on the New York Stock Exchange at $143-11/16, off from their year high of $160-1/4, set on Sept. 11. -- posted by Kirk » Kirk - Recap: Recap:Back in December 1999 as mentioned HERE some of us were buying Financial Stocks such as XLF as the 30 year bond hit 6.7%. Here Rande says it isn't too late to buy BTO and XLF "PROVIDED it fits into your overall allocation and investment plan". I ONLY bought the XLF as I was using taxable dollars. (I DID buy some Fidelity Select Regional Bank in my IRA in addition to more XLF). The chart below shows that BTO, XLF and FSRBX are up a good amount since we bought. Then again on Feb 10th, 2000 I posted Here that I was rolling some HWP profit taking dollars ($124) into XLF. In my newsletter and in my personal account, I ALSO bought BTTRX stripped Zero's to diversify out of technology and get some great rates while 30 year bonds were above 6.3%. Remember Rande was saying he was buying BTTRX when the 30 yr was above 6.25 and he sold for a very nice profit when rates dropped to 5.75%. I've held as I like the coupon plus I think rates could go lower but even if they don't the coupon is fine for me. <img src=http://pvcharts.quicken.com/bin/icenter.... width=470 height=185> Too bad we didn’t' have a crystal ball that told us to sell ALL technology at the beginning of March, but I am happy with the results of profit taking then rolling the dollars into bonds and Financials last Spring! -- posted by Kirk » JenL_2 - Big Banks 1st Q Performance This from 4/16 WSJ:Citigroup's 1st-Quarter Net Fell 8.2% As Bank of America's Declined 17% A WSJ.COM News Roundup Citigroup Inc. and Bank of America Corp. were among a handful of big banks that Monday reported a fall-off in first-quarter profit amid weak investment performance. Citigroup posted a 8.2% drop in net income, and Bank of America, which was hurt also by an increase in provisions for credit losses, suffered a 17% decline. First Union Corp., while announcing a major acquisition, also reported a 30% drop in net income. Meanwhile, Bank of New York Co. saw its net income jump 14% to match analysts' estimates. Citigroup, the New York financial-services giant, said net income fell to $3.54 billion, or 69 cents a diluted share, from $3.86 billion, or 75 cents a share, a year earlier. The latest quarter included an accounting adjustment of $42 million and an $80 million aftertax charge for severance and related costs. But even excluding items, the company results turned lower, to $3.66 billion, or 71 cents a share, from $3.94 billion, or 76 cents a share, a year earlier. Analysts surveyed by Thomson Financial/First Call expected Citigroup to report earnings excluding items of 70 cents a share in the latest period. Citigroup's total revenue rose 6% to $21 billion. Excluding investment activities, revenue rose 11%. Return on equity in the first quarter was 22.5%. Income from investment activities in the first quarter fell by $497 million, or 10 cents a share, to $136 million. Excluding investment activities, core income rose 7% from a year earlier. Citigroup's Corporate and Investment Bank unit reported first-quarter core income of $1.01 billion, 21% lower than a year ago but 74% higher than the fourth quarter. Citigroup said first-quarter income for its Global Corporate business fell 7% from the year-ago result but rose 38% from the fourth quarter. The Global Consumer Finance unit earned $394 million in the first quarter, rising 28% on the strength of 19% revenue growth. Travelers Property Casualty Commercial Lines had first-quarter core income growth of 13%. Bank of America's Results Top Estimates Bank of America's net income slipped to $1.87 billion, or $1.15 a diluted share, from $2.24 billion, or $1.33 a share, a year earlier. The results topped analysts' estimates by three cents a share. Bank of America, based in Charlotte, N.C., attributed the decline to a $415 million increase in the provision for credit losses and a $416 million decline in equity investment gains. Without these factors, earnings rose about 7% from a year ago. Revenue fell 2% from a year earlier, reflecting a "significant drop in equity investment gains driven by the weakening stock market," the company said. The company's provision for loan losses rose 99% to $835 million from $420 million a year ago. "We are pleased with our continued progress in meeting strategic goals and continue to see good customer flows across many business lines," Hugh L. McColl Jr., the bank's chairman and chief executive, said in a prepared statement. "It is clear, however, that the increasingly weak economic environment is making it difficult for our efforts to show up on the bottom line." Nonperforming assets were $5.9 billion, or 1.5% of loans, leases and foreclosed properties at March 31, compared with $3.5 billion, or 0.9% a year earlier. Bank of America's equity investments reflected the weaker equity markets and earned $35 million in the first quarter, compared to $301 million a year ago. Equity investment gains came in at $141 million, with return on equity registering at 6% for the quarter. Revenue from credit-card fees rose 18% for the quarter due to increased purchase volume and a "sharp rise" in debit-card usage. The latest quarter includes a $140 million gain from the sale of an interest in the Star ATM network, a one-time $83 million accounting charge and a charge of $41 million associated with the closing of Price Auto Outlet. The bank's earnings from consumer and commercial banking rose 14% for the quarter to $1.09 billion from $954 million a year ago. Earnings from global corporate and investment banking fell 17% for the quarter to $604 million from $724 million a year ago. Bank of New York's Earnings Jump 13.6% Bank of New York said first-quarter earnings rose to $384 million, or 52 cents a share, from $338 million, or 46 cents a share, a year earlier. The results matched estimates generated by Thomson Financial/First Call. "Our first-quarter results reflect the strength of our strategy in an uncertain business climate," said Thomas A. Renyi, Chairman and chief executive. "Despite declining equity values in the past quarter, our business model continues to perform well given the diversity of markets, products and client bases we serve throughout the world." The company raised its loan-loss provision by 50% to $30 million from $20 million. Return on equity was 25.9% in the latest quarter compared with 27.1% last year. Bank of New York's net interest income was $455 million in its latest quarter, compared with $447 million last year. Noninterest income was $858 million, compared with $737 million last year. Bank of New York's fee revenue rose 23% in the first quarter to $458 million from $372 million last year. Private-client services and asset management fees rose 14% to $79 million and foreign exchange and other trading revenue rose 9% to $83 million. Bank of New York said it still expects 12% to 14% full-year earnings-per-share growth, absent a further slowdown in the global markets. Last year, the company earned $1.43 billion, or $1.92 a share. In mid-December, the company had said it was comfortable with the 2001 consensus estimate of analysts surveyed by Thomson Financial/First Call, which was then, and remains, $2.17 a share. First Union's Net Slips 30% First Union Corp., which confirmed Monday that it would acquire Wachovia Corp. for $13.4 billion in stock, reported a 30% decline in first-quarter net income The Charlotte, N.C., bank said net income dropped to $584 million, or 59 cents a share, from $840 million, or 85 cents a share, a year earlier. Results were hurt by decreased principal investing revenue, the winding down of divested businesses and a "difficult financial market environment," First Union said. The latest period included a pretax restructuring charge of $116 million and a gain of $73 million on branch sales. Excluding items, the company reported operating income of $610 million, or 62 cents a share, on target with estimates generated by Thomson Financial/First Call. First-quarter interest income fell 13% to $1.73 billion, while fee and other income fell 16% to $1.55 billion. First Union said nonperforming assets rose 29% to $1.7 billion. Excluding $344 million of assets held for sale, nonperforming assets rose 5%. Subscribe to WSJ Online @ http://www.wsj.com Let's take a look.... <img src="http://pvcharts.quicken.com/bin/icenter...." width=470 height=250> <img src="http://pvcharts.quicken.com/bin/icenter...." width=470 height=250> Looks like our purchases of BTO and XLF in 12/99 were good moves.....Jen -- posted by JenL_2 » Kirk - Re: Big Banks 1st Q Performance In response to message posted by JenL_2:Thanks for posting that great summary article Jen! Looks like our purchases of BTO and XLF in 12/99 were good moves.....Jen Indeed! here is a chart that shows just how good XLF has done since mid Dec 1999. I actually bought more in Feb 2000 after taking some HWP profits... Watermelon smile for those funds! Too bad I didn't sell ALL my HWP for XLF... I also bought a little bit of FSRBX and it seems to track BTO ... Staying even is just fine compared to the S&P being down 15% in that same time so BTO and FSRBX are doing great (add in dividends they paid and they are probably up!) <img src=http://www2.marketwatch.com/charts/int-a... width=452 height=366> <img src=http://www2.marketwatch.com/charts/int-a... width=452 height=366> XLF has been a bright spot the last 16 months or so! -- posted by Kirk » JenL_2 - More Merger Mania We've recently discussed company buyouts in the Biotech, Energy, Lumber/Paper, and Food sectors - now the merger mania continues in the Financials....from 5/14 WSJ:SunTrust Makes Its Move for Wachovia With Unsolicited Bid of $14.54 Billion By NIKHIL DEOGUN and CARRICK MOLLENKAMP SunTrust Banks Inc. (STI), moving aggressively to wrest a long-coveted competitor from the arms of another suitor, is making an unsolicited $14.54 billion bid for Wachovia Corp. (WB), SunTrust said Monday. The move comes less than a month after First Union Corp. (FTU) agreed to buy Wachovia in a transaction currently valued at $12.46 billion in stock. The hostile bid to break up a friendly marriage is sure to roil the courtly world of Southern banking and is an uncharacteristic move for SunTrust, considered the most genteel of the major Southeastern banks. The First Union agreement stunned Wall Street because Wachovia, a storied franchise in Southeast banking, agreed to sell for only a tiny premium, and the buyer was a bank that has stumbled badly in recent years thanks in part to botched acquisitions. Furthermore, investors for more than a decade have expected Wachovia to merge not with First Union but with SunTrust, given the two banks' similarly conservative cultures and history of periodic merger discussions. Indeed, SunTrust came very close to inking a deal with Wachovia in December but the discussions fell apart at the 11th hour, people familiar with those discussions have said. Now, SunTrust is offering 1.081 of its shares for each Wachovia share, which would value Wachovia at $70.06 a share based on Friday's closing price. The bid also is 16.7% higher than the current value of the offer from First Union, which has offered two of its shares for each share of Wachovia. In 4 p.m. Friday New York Stock Exchange composite trading, Wachovia, which had been trading strongly in anticipation of a competing bid, slipped 75 cents to $60.90, while First Union fell 26 cents to $30.02, 6% lower than before it announced the Wachovia deal. SunTrust shares closed at $64.81, down 23 cents, also on the Big Board. As an additional sweetener, SunTrust would increase its annual dividend to $2.22 a share from the $1.60 expected for 2001 so that Wachovia shareholders, after receiving 1.081 of SunTrust shares, would effectively get the same $2.40 annual dividend they already receive from Wachovia. First Union recently slashed its dividend in half to 96 cents a share and is offering a special dividend of 48 cents a share to compensate Wachovia shareholders, but that payout is a one-time event only, whereas SunTrust would permanently increase its dividend. SunTrust is expected to file a proxy statement so it can solicit Wachovia shareholders to vote against the First Union deal. While SunTrust's offer currently represents a significant premium, much will depend on how SunTrust investors react to the maneuver. Since SunTrust trades at a high price-to-earnings multiple, the deal is expected to add to SunTrust's earnings per share in the first year after merger-related charges. SunTrust should be able to extract $500 million in annual cost savings, people familiar with the matter say. SunTrust's most potent weapon may be its stock, which has a solid track record, having risen 81% in the past five years compared with a 2% decline in First Union stock in the same period. Now, if First Union gets into a bidding war, it could damage its already wounded credibility. The idea of a merger between SunTrust and Wachovia dates to the 1980s. Analysts have for years dubbed the potential merger as "the Coke and Smoke deal" because of SunTrust's close ties to Coca-Cola Co. and Wachovia's ties to R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Holdings Inc. Under the conservative leadership of Robert Strickland and later James Williams, predecessors to current chief executive L. Phillip Humann, SunTrust stayed out of the acquisition fray partly because it feared a dilutive deal would anger shareholders. That enabled banks such as First Union and Bank of America Corp. to leapfrog past SunTrust. In 1998, the bank finally cast its lot by acquiring Crestar Financial Corp., a Richmond, Va., bank that gave SunTrust entree into Virginia, Maryland, and Washington, D.C. Wachovia was always seen as the logical partner for SunTrust, since the Atlanta bank had no presence in the Carolinas, where Wachovia is strong, and the region represents a gaping hole in SunTrust's Southeast territory. In December, the two sides nearly clinched a deal but Wachovia seemed to get cold feet. On the mid-April weekend before First Union and Wachovia announced their deal, SunTrust's top executives heard rumblings of the pending nuptials and called their counterparts at Wachovia, who kept SunTrust's CEO and finance chief in the dark. In a recent securities filing, Wachovia disclosed it received a call from an unnamed bank but that it had already considered a deal with this bank in late 2000 and determined it wouldn't benefit Wachovia shareholders. The brushoff undoubtedly angered SunTrust, which apparently feels it was misled by Wachovia officials that April weekend. At the same time, SunTrust may have realized that with Wachovia in the hands of First Union, SunTrust's growth prospects would be limited. Buying Wachovia would give SunTrust the No. 1 market share in Georgia, Virginia and South Carolina. Since SunTrust has no operations in the Carolinas, it likely wouldn't slash costs as aggressively and is expected to cut only 4,000 jobs, compared with the 7,000 First Union is planning to cut. By not cutting as much, SunTrust may endear itself to rank-and-file Wachovia employees and local politicians. Winning Wachovia won't be easy, since First Union and Wachovia have granted each other options to buy 19.9% stakes in one another. In an unusual move, the banks are permitted to buy the stakes using cash, securities or any property, such as distressed loans or real estate. SunTrust is almost sure to challenge the takeover deterrent in court. Subscribe to WSJ Online @ http://www.wsj.com <img src="http://pvcharts.quicken.com/bin/icenter...." width=470 height=250> Our XLF & BTO buys in 12/99 are still looking good. Wonder if this merger mania across sectors will lead us out of The Bear?......Jen -- posted by JenL_2 « Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 Next » Please follow the guidelines set forth in the Suite101 Posting Etiquette when adding to the discussion. |
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