Thursday, December 13, 2007
Washington Mutual (NYSE:WM) shares fell again today after the company announced new measures aimed at curbing subprime and credit losses while preserving liquidity. The measures include widespread job cuts, a dividend cut, and more preferred shares to raise capital. Many are now questioning whether the company will be able to pull itself out of the mess with Banc of America Securities cutting its rating to "sell" with a $13 target.

WaMu announced that it would be cutting 3,000 jobs to cut its costs and issue $2.9 billion in convertible preferred stock to boost its capital. Meanwhile, shareholders will only be receiving 15 cents instead of 56 cents per share in dividends as the company works to set aside an additional $1.6 billion to cover loan losses in the fourth quarter. And with no end to the subprime and credit mess in sight, there is no saying whether or not there will be additional writedowns.

Many analysts have suggested that WaMu could lose as much as $2.54 per share in the fourth quarter of this year and $1.01 per share in 2008. Meanwhile, options in the company continue to trade at record volatility as shares come close to hitting their eleven-year lows. The company is hoping that the lack of liquidity in the credit markets will resolve itself soon as there is limited funding to go around to the various banks looking to raise loss provisions.

So, when will this problem end? Well, subprime and credit market concerns are only growing after many are concerned that coordinated efforts by central banks in North America and Europe to relieve the gridlock in the credit markets will fail. This lack of confidence stemmed from record borrowing costs in euros, signaling that the plan by the Federal Reserve and European central banks to inject funds into the financial system wasn't lowering borrowing costs and boosting lending. This is a problem...

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12/13/2007 7:33:57 PM UTC  #    Comments [0]  |  Trackback