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Monday, September 15, 2008

The Tragic Fall of Merrill Lynch

When I was a stock broker in the late 1990's Merrill Lynch was one of a select few of investment firms along with Goldman Sachs, Paine Webber, Morgan Stanley, and a few others that made up the gold standard of investment firms. Today, their existence was put to a merciful end when Bank of America agreed to buy it out.

Bank of America on Monday began adding another slice to its growing financialservices empire, buying Merrill Lynch in a $50 billion deal that would create a bank offering everything from fixed-income trading to credit card lending.

It will rival Citigroup Inc., the biggest U.S. bank in terms of assets.

Bank of America Corp. said early Monday it would acquire Merrill Lynch in an all-stock transaction worth about $50 billion that should lift the uncertainty shrouding Merrill since the start of the credit crisis over a year ago.

A few weeks ago, we knew trouble was brewing when Merrill dumped billions worth of mortgages at an obscenely low price.

Merrill has agreed to sell $30.6 billion of its repackaged debt, known as collateralized debt obligations — generally suspect and subprime mortgages — for 22 cents on the dollar. Private equity fund Lone Star Funds is the buyer.

So, how did this once financial giant suffer such a monumental fall? The story of Merrill Lynch's downfall is embedded in one of the worst acquisition strategies in the history of mergers and acquisitions. In September of 2006, Merrill Lynch bought up First Franklin..

Merrill Lynch (NYSE: MER) today announced an agreement to acquire the First
Franklin mortgage origination franchise and related servicing platform from National City Corporation (NYSE: NCC). Under terms of the agreement, Merrill Lynch will pay a $1.3 billion purchase price for San Jose, Calif.-based First Franklin Financial Corporation, and affiliated business units National City Home Loan Services, Inc., and NationPoint.

First Franklin is one of the nation's leading originators of non-prime residential mortgage loans through a wholesale network. Lake Forest, Calif.-based NationPoint is engaged in online direct-to-consumer mortgage lending. First Franklin and NationPoint together originated more than $29 billion in loans in 2005. Home Loan Services, headquartered in Pittsburgh, together with Merrill Lynch's existing Beaverton, Ore.-based Wilshire Credit Corporation servicing platform, will have a total servicing portfolio of approximately $70 billion.

"These leading mortgage origination and servicing franchises will add scale to our platform and create meaningful synergies with our securitization and trading operations," said Dow Kim, president of Merrill Lynch's Global Markets & Investment Banking Group. "This transaction accelerates our vertical integration in mortgages, complementing the three other acquisitions we have made in this area and enhancing our ability to drive growth and returns. We look forward to working with the experienced teams at these companies to serve their clients and leverage our broad range of mortgage products and services."

What sounded like a good idea, and clearly from this story it did, turned out to be an unmitigated disaster. First Franklin was one of the giants of the sub prime industry. At the time, sub prime was still in period of boom. At about the same time, Merrill Lynch also took exposure in UK sub prime mortgage company Freedom Mortgage. In fact, Merrill Lynch made acquisitions in no less than four different four sub prime companies. Suddenly, sub prime, which the company had limited if any exposure to for nearly one hundred years, became their huge bet. It took no more than six months for the sub prime industry to tank. Merrill Lynch, which paid top dollar for First Franklin et al, was now suddenly stuck with billions worth of loans that weren't performing. (in other words people weren't paying them back)

Suddenly, these multi billion dollar acquisition became an albatross around the necks of Merrill Lynch. Suddenly, this multi billion dollar financial services company became at the mercy of a business that it made a full court press into not but a year earlier. In fact, the solvency of the entire company became threatened almost exclusively because it held onto billions of non performing loans. These loans were put on their books courtesy of their acquisition of First Franklin, Freedom, and others within the last couple years. It was this very pack mentality that ultimately cost Merrill Lynch. The rest of the financial services market appeared to be making money hand over fist in sub prime mortgages. The powers that be at Merrill Lynch wanted a piece. Suddenly, they were in a business in which they had no expertise, and the acquisitions that they made only a couple years earlier, ultimately lead to its downfall.

9 comments:

Anonymous said...

WILL THIS EFFECT HOMEOWNER WHO HAVE LOANS W/FIRST FRANKLIN? I'M VERY WORRIED ABOUT THIS I WAS NOT AWARE THAT MERRILL LYNCH HAS MY LOAN NOW WHAT DO THAT MEAN FOR ME IF YOU HAVE A ANSWER PLEASE LET ME KNOW.

mike volpe said...

Good news, bad news. The bad news is that you are still responsible for making your mortgage payment. Since Merrill was bought out by BofA, that means you will now be under the umbrella of BofA. I doubt anything will actually change for you though it is possible that checks will need to be sent to a different location. I would call the toll free number for more details.

Anonymous said...

So can we stop blaming mortgage brokers for this??

mike volpe said...

Only those that are naive or with an agenda blame the mortgage broker for all of this.

Anonymous said...

The culprit directly responsible for Merrill Lynch's destruction is CHRIS RICCIARDI. He single handedly orchestrated the relentless push to make Merrill number one in CDO's. The CDO king cost Merrill over 40 Billion in write downs. Unbelievable. He should be prosecuted like Ken Lay.

Ricciardi is now the CEO of Cohen & Company and has the cajones to write Sec. Paulson an open letter suggesting a way out of a debacle that he participated in creating by reactivating the securitization business immediately.

Is this thing on? Is anyone listening?

Anonymous said...

Having a loan from First Franklin before it was bought from National City Bank, later sold to ML and now part of Bank Of America I could now see that these people in banking sure have messed up a lot.
The loans from First Franklin are still serviced by Home Loan Services in PA.
Regarding the structures of these loans, the investors were insane to think that an ordinary worker could afford a 2/28 going up 3 percentage points or $350 plus on the first adjustment with high debt/income ratios. With the housing industry in a shambles and people stuck into these loans, not able to refinance, it is no wonder ML faced troubles.
I'm paying the loan at the higher rate from initial reset for the first six months and have a percentage drop for the second 6 month period. For the third reset period the loan went up only .125%. The 6 month LIBOR is heading down currently but who can tell what the rates will be on each 6 month period.
There are going to be many defaults with these loan conditions. If you are an investor with these securities it is best to rework these loans into fixed, sustainable instruments instead of counting on REOwards. There is no way these loans could be paid back if the LIBOR escalated to conditions which surpass the availability of funds from those with the loans, BofA should consider reworking these loan conditons.

mike volpe said...

Not that this is an excuse, but the sub prime market made those loans with the idea that these folks would be out within two years. This was a perfectly reasonable plan as long as property values were going up.

Anonymous said...

Granted if the housing market did not tank, the initial 6.875% fixed for two years was fairly manageable.
Our intent was to refinance after the pre-payment penalty expired.
The conditions after the 2 years is undesirable.

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