Monday, December 24, 2007
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Merrill Lynch (NYSE:MER) shares led the financials higher today after the company announced that it had sold its commercial finance unit and raised $6.2 billion through a private placement to Temasek and Davis. The move comes after the firm announced record writedowns amid a credit crunch and subprime crisis that wrecked havoc on its asset backed securities. The firm is widely expected to face more writedowns, but these events give investors new hope that a bottom may be near.

General Electric purchased Merrill’s commercial finance unit, which will enable the firm to redeploy approximately $1.3 billion in capital. The sale includes the firm’s corporate finance, equipment finance, franchise, energy and healthcare finance units, but not the commercial real estate finance unit. The deal will add more than $10 billion in assets and $5 billion in other commitments to GE Capital Commercial Finance’s businesses, which currently stands at around $260 billion.

Meanwhile, Temasek Holdings purchased $5 billion of newly issued Merrill stock at a price of $48 per share through a private placement of newly issued common stock. Davis Selected Advisors also purchased another $1.2 billion at an unknown price per share. Some investors are upset that the company was willing to dilute their stake at a price of just $48 per share, but it is likely that the two investors had a chance to take a look at the company’s books and felt that that was a fair price given future writedowns. Regardless, the firm now has increased liquidity and more investors.

In the end, both of these are great news for Merrill Lynch shareholders as it provides the company with greater liquidity while also showing at least some confidence in the company’s stocks. Combined, these factors make MER a stock worth watching!

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12/24/2007 3:38:18 PM UTC  #    Comments [0]  |  Trackback
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