Beitrag schreiben
Beliebteste Beiträge
Ansicht
-
Umgekehrte Sortierung (neuste zuerst)
-
Die letzten 30 Beiträge
-
500 Beiträge pro Seite
[ Seite: 1, 2 … 11559, neuster Beitrag ]
schrieb am 17.09.08 10:38:59
Beginn einer NEUEN Zeitrechnung...unter JPMorgan ?
Bitte nur FUNDIERTES einstellen !!!
Viel Glück ALLEN NEUEN im FORUM...
schrieb am 17.09.08 10:41:12
Hier nochmal d. FAKTEN:
Presse: JPMorgan hat Interesse an Washington Mutual
10:20 17.09.08
New York, NY (aktiencheck.de AG) - Die US-Bankgesellschaft JPMorgan
Chase & Co. (Profil) hat Presseangaben zufolge Interesse an
einer Übernahme der Washington Mutual Inc. (Profil).
Wie die britischen Zeitung "Daily Mail" am Dienstagabend in ihrer
Online-Ausgabe berichtete, wird JPMorgan voraussichtlich ein
Übernahmeangebot für die angeschlagene Sparkasse - die größte in
den USA - vorlegen. Die Parteien würden sich dabei bereits in
fortgeschrittenen Verhandlungen befinden, hieß es.
Die Aktie von JPMorgan schloss gestern an der NYSE bei 40,74
Dollar, die von Washington Mutual bei 2,32 Dollar.
(17.09.2008/ac/n/a)
schrieb am 17.09.08 11:00:49
Hier die NEWS:
Steht doch klar geschrieben...
JPMorgan Chase in new bid for Washington Mutual
Last updated at
10:46 AM on 16th September 2008
Jamie Dimon’s JPMorgan Chase is expected to make a new bid for
Washington Mutual, the biggest building society in the US, after
its credit rating was cut to junk by Standard & Poor’s.
The Wall Street bank, which bought Bear Stearns earlier this year,
is said to be in 'advanced talks' over buying the Seattle-based
firm.
Dimon is understood to be dealing with the matter personally, and
to be in talks with WaMu chief Alan Fishman.
Jamie Dimon
Bid: JPMorgan Chase's Jamie Dimon is expected to make a new bid for
Washington Mutual
He reportedly approached WaMu earlier this year but was
rebuffed.
He is said to have offered a stock-swap buyout at $8 a
share.
The current share price is $2, giving the company a market
capitalisation of $3.40 billion (£1.89 billion).
WaMu went instead with a $7 billion financing, selling a 13%
stake to TPG Capital that valued WaMu at $8.75 a share.
The share price has since fallen heavily. S&P has put the
building society on notice for possible future downgrades.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/money/article-1056491/JPMorgan-Ch…
schrieb am 17.09.08 11:19:23
Einfach LESEN:
Hier werden viele Fragen beantwortet:
WaMu's $143 Billion Retail Deposit Base May Buy Time (Update2)
By Ari Levy
Enlarge Image/Details
Sept. 16 (Bloomberg) -- Washington Mutual Inc.'s $143 billion in
retail deposits may buy Chief Executive Officer Alan Fishman enough
time to prove wrong speculators who say the bank will follow Lehman
Brothers Holdings Inc. into oblivion.
The reason: WaMu, the biggest U.S. savings and loan, funds its
daily business with federally insured deposits at its 2,300
branches, instead of short-term lending from other companies. With
no sign that customers are defecting, and another $50 billion on
hand for liquidity, newly hired Fishman may ride out the turmoil
that halved WaMu's market value in a week. The stock rose 16
percent today after plunging 27 percent yesterday.
``It takes millions of people making that decision to drive the
bank under, as opposed to three banks with exposure to Lehman that
say they don't want to renew loans,'' said Charles Haley, professor
emeritus of finance at the University of Washington's Foster School
of Business in Seattle. ``It's a very different scenario.''
WaMu shares jumped after the company said Standard & Poor's
decision yesterday to cut the lender's credit rating to junk,
matching a move by Moody's last week, won't have a ``material''
effect. WaMu rose 32 cents to $2.32 as of 4:07 p.m. on the New York
Stock Exchange. The stock tumbled yesterday as Lehman filed for
bankruptcy and Merrill Lynch & Co. agreed to sell itself to
Bank of America Corp. for $50 billion.
WaMu spokesman Brad Russell declined to comment.
No JPMorgan Talks
WaMu's sinking market value leaves it worth close to the $4 a share
that JPMorgan Chase & Co. was willing to pay in March, reviving
speculation that Fishman may put the entire bank up for sale.
JPMorgan isn't in talks to acquire Seattle-based WaMu, a person
briefed on the matter said Sept. 12.
``You're going to buy Washington Mutual, if it's bought, for its
retail deposit franchise,'' Howard Shapiro, a Fox-Pitt Kelton
Cochran Waller analyst who rates WaMu ``outperform,'' told
Bloomberg Radio. Branches in California, Florida, Texas and New
York ``are all very attractive'' for a suitor, he said.
S&P acknowledged that WaMu's deposit base is stable, saying in
its statement about the downgrade yesterday that the company has
enough liquidity to meet all fixed obligations through 2010. ``The
bank is operating with adequate capital positions from a regulatory
perspective and has demonstrated funding resilience as the deposit
franchise has remained stable,'' S&P said.
`Happy Thoughts'
Investors have soured on WaMu on concern mounting losses from
subprime and option adjustable-rate mortgages may force the bank to
raise more capital, diluting existing holders' stakes. WaMu said
last week that retail deposits are unchanged from a year earlier,
down 4.4 percent from June, and that the bank has plenty of cash to
operate as it works through losses.
``This is a great time to build a company,'' Fishman said in a
Sept. 8 interview.
WaMu's main regulator, the Office of Thrift Supervision, is
watching the situation. ``We're aware of the situation and we are
monitoring it closely,'' OTS spokesman Bill Ruberry said today in a
telephone interview.
WaMu management is trying to reassure employees.
``Think Happy Thoughts,'' Bob Bjorklund, an executive in the bank's
Capital Strategies department, told staff in an e- mail on Sept.
12, the Seattle Times reported. ``It's going to be ugly out there
today and over the next several weeks, but when in doubt, repeat
after me: ``$50 billion dollars.''
CD Rates
The plunge in WaMu's stock price will make it harder for the
company to raise fresh capital, a step the lender says it doesn't
need to take because it has that $50 billion on hand. Still,
analysts including Bert Ely, president of Ely & Co. in
Alexandria, Virginia, have said WaMu may be forced to sell branches
in New York and Chicago.
WaMu's sliding stock price may prompt concern by customers that the
bank is in trouble, said Sean Egan, president of Egan- Jones
Ratings Co. in Haverford, Pennsylvania.
``Anyone who picks up the paper can see WaMu has lost more than 80
percent of its market capitalization over the past year,'' Egan
said. ``Rest assured, depositors are looking at that and growing
anxious.''
WaMu uses money that consumers deposit in savings accounts and
certificates of deposit to lend to other customers, primarily for
mortgages. At the end of June, WaMu customers had 42.4 million
accounts, almost all with less than the federally insured maximum
of $100,000, according to data from the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corp.
To attract deposits, WaMu offers higher CD rates than competitors.
The bank offers a 4.25 percent eight-month CD online. Bank of
America pays 3.2 percent for a seven-month term. Wells Fargo &
Co.'s rates on five- and nine-month CDs are less than 3
percent.
The deposits may not be enough to save WaMu because of the prospect
for losses on subprime loans, said Donald Putnam, managing partner
at Grail Partners LLC in San Francisco. WaMu expects up to $19
billion in losses over the next 2 1/2 years.
Fishman remains confident.
``I only have five or six complex risks that I have to manage,'' he
said in a Sept. 8 interview. ``Another guy's got 400 complex risks,
like derivatives books in Belgium and God knows what all.''
To contact the reporters on this story: Ari Levy in San Francisco
at alevy5@bloomberg.net
Last Updated: September 16, 2008 16:09 EDT
schrieb am 17.09.08 11:22:11
die Lehmann Brothers-Pleite hat natürlich auch alle anderen Banken
betroffen, ganz klar. WaMu ebenso. Aber die Situation einer WaMu
ist nicht wirklich schlechter als die vieler anderen Gro0ßbanken in
Amerika, im Gegenteil sie ist sogar in erster Linie aufgrund des
Filialnetzes sogar noch besser...
Trotzdem wurde WaMu extrem abgestraft über 95% tiefer als vor der
BEGINN DER KRISE.
Das Interesse von JP MOrgan ist also verständlich, eine Bank mit
riesigem Privatkundengeschäft mit einem extrem weit verzweigtem
Filialnetz zum Spottpreis, weil die Bank sich selbst in
Schwierigkeiten gebracht hat.
Ein klares Zeichen für eine bevorstehende Übernahme ist der Weggang
vom langjährigen CEO Killinger, der noch Anfang des Jahres das
$8-Dollar je Aktie Angebot von JP Morgan abgelehnt hatte.
Neuer CEO Alan Fishman wird im Gegensatz zu Killinger mehr und
intensiver mit JP Morgan verhandeln, denn er hat auch schon bei
seinen vorherigen Stationen als Chef Übernahmen -und oder Fusionen
von bzw, mit anderen Banken auf die Beine gestellt.
Die Frage ist nun was ist JP Morgan bereit vieleicht noch mehr zu
zahlen als $8 und wie würde der Kurs reagieren?
Es kommt auf die Modalitäten der Übernahmen an, aber sollte es
ähnlich wie bei Bank of America und Merril Lynch laufen sehe ich
selbst bei einem $10 Angebot je Aktie keine Kurse über $5...
Aber auch mit diesen $5 wäre ich persönlich zufriden, da ich
ausgestoppt wurde beim Crash letzte Woche (20% Verlust) und neu
rein bin bei 1.31 Euro...
Allen anderen Viel Glück
schaut mal wie Ambac abging von ihrem Tiefsstand vor ein paar
Monaten...
schrieb am 17.09.08 11:27:37
Kleiner Hinweis:
BID: 2.30 USD 5:21:27 ASK: 2.55 USD 05:26:16
schrieb am 17.09.08 11:44:29
RT :
Börsenplatz: Frankfurt
letzter Kurs: 1,790 EUR vom 17.09.2008, 11:41:31
D. IST ERST DER ANFANG...
Beitrag zu dieser Diskussion schreiben