Wednesday, July 9, 2008

Indymac Out of Mortgage Business

Monday afternoon, Indymac Bancorp, announced it would exit the mortgage origination business and lay off 4,000 exmployees.  The company stated it was unable to raise additional capital or sell assets and had no choice but to shutter its lending operations.  Indymac claimed that no bids existed or bid/ask spreads were too wide on its mortgages so it was unable to raise cash in that manner.  Tuesday, Indymac agreed to sell its retail mortgage branches to Prospect Mortgage.  The company went on to say that it was facing "elevated levels of deposit withdrawals".
Indymac's decline has not been terribly surprising, given that most of its rivals have either gone bankrupt (New Century, American Home Mortgage,) faced near-death (Thornburg) or were forced into a merger (Countrywide.)  What this news triggers should be more fear about what risks remain on the balance sheets of all US mortgages lenders.  If Indymac couldn't sell assets because no bids existed for the mortgages, what does this portend for Washington Mutual and Wachovia, who are stuck with multi-billion dollar portfolios of option arms?  What about Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac?  The issue aggravating the market is not whether Fannie and Freddie will need to raise $75 billion due to an accounting change.  It is whether Fannie and Freddie's assets will deteriorate markedly due to surging defaults.  Do they have adequate capital to cushion against unprecedented levels of stress on their portfolios?  With banks and lenders going belly up at every turn, it's no wonder that the market is starting to panic.  After all, the Fed can't bailout everyone.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

I used to work for IMac and am sorry that they have fallen prey to a tough market.

Thank you for your blog. I read it each day and enjoy your comments and humor. I've learned much about the financial markets through your blog and appreciate the time you take to post the latest goings on.

I agree with you and share concern about the mortgage and banking industry. I too hope the Fed is preparing or has prepared a plan for the potential fallout.

Oscar said...

I'm not sure if you meant it this way, but certainly IndyMac wasn't "preyed" on by the market. At best, IMB was swept up by shareholder sentiment demanding that they keep up with the CFCs and LEHs and TMAs, but that still doesn't make them a victim. Without a doubt, they destroyed themselves by incurring imprudent risks at imprudent prices. Just because everybody was doing it doesn't make it okay.

This economy has much more very painful deleveraging to endure, but it is the only medicine that can save the patient.

K10 said...

Duke - I appreciate the comments. I enjoy writing the blog and always like feedback.