AP Government shuts
down mortgage lender IndyMac
Saturday July 12, 7:21 am ET
By Alex Veiga, AP Business Writer
Office of Thrift
Supervision steps in and closes IndyMac Bank; FDIC takes
over operations
LOS ANGELES (AP) --
IndyMac Bank's assets were seized by federal regulators on
Friday after the mortgage lender succumbed to the pressures
of tighter credit, tumbling home prices and rising
foreclosures.
The bank is the
largest regulated thrift to fail and the second largest
financial institution to close in
U.S. history, regulators said.
The Office of Thrift
Supervision said it transferred IndyMac's operations to the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation because it did not
think the lender could meet its depositors' demands.
IndyMac customers with
funds in the bank were limited to taking out money via
automated teller machines over the weekend, debit card
transactions or checks, regulators said.
Other bank services,
such as online banking and phone banking were scheduled to
be made available on Monday.
"This institution
failed today due to a liquidity crisis," OTS Director John
Reich said.
The lender's failure
came the same day that financial markets plunged when
investors tried to gauge whether the government would have
to save mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
Shares of Fannie and
Freddie dropped to 17-year lows before the stocks recovered
somewhat. Wall Street is growing more convinced that the
government will have to bail out the country's biggest
mortgage financiers, whose failure could deal a tremendous
blow to the already staggering economy.
The FDIC estimated
that its takeover of IndyMac would cost between $4 billion
and $8 billion.
IndyMac's collapse is
second only to that of Continental Illinois National Bank,
which had nearly $40 billion in assets when it failed in
1984, according to the FDIC.
News of the takeover
distressed Alan Sands, who showed up at the company's
headquarters in Pasadena, Calif., to find out when he could
withdraw his funds.
"Hopefully the FDIC
insurance will take care of it," said Sands, of El Monte,
Calif. "I'm also kind of kicking myself for not taking care
of this sooner, sooner as in the last couple of days."
A couple of dozen
customers could be seen outside the building, reading fliers
handed out by FDIC staff. The agency set up a toll-free
number for bank customers to call.
IndyMac Bancorp Inc.,
the holding company for IndyMac Bank, has been struggling to
raise capital as the housing slump deepens.
IndyMac had $32.01
billion in assets as of March 31.
A spokesman for the
lender referred media queries to the FDIC.
The banking regulator
said it closed IndyMac after customers began a run on the
lender following the June 26 release of a letter by Sen.
Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., urging several bank regulatory
agencies that they take steps to prevent IndyMac's collapse.
In the 11 days that
followed the letter's release, depositors took out more than
$1.3 billion, regulators said.
In a statement Friday,
Schumer said IndyMac's failure was due to long-standing
practices by the bank, not recent events.
"If OTS had done its
job as regulator and not let IndyMac's poor and loose
lending practices continue, we wouldn't be where we are
today," Schumer said. "Instead of pointing false fingers of
blame, OTS should start doing its job to prevent future
IndyMacs."
The FDIC planned to
reopen the bank on Monday as IndyMac Federal Bank, FSB.
Deposits are insured
up to $100,000 per depositor.
As of March 31,
IndyMac had total deposits of $19.06 billion.
Some 10,000 depositors
had funds in excess of the insured limit, for a total of $1
billion in potentially uninsured funds, the FDIC said.
Customers with
uninsured deposits could begin making appointments to file a
claim with the FDIC on Monday. The agency said it would pay
unsecured depositors an advance dividend equal to half of
the uninsured amount.
During a conference
call with reporters, FDIC Chairman Sheila C. Bair said the
agency would cover all insured deposits and then try to
recover its costs by selling IndyMac's assets.
"We anticipate trying
to market the institution as a whole bank," Bair said. "How
much money we derive from that will depend on who gets paid
what."
Holders of unsecured
IndyMac debt may not fully recover their investment, Bair
said.
"Generally if a
creditor is secured, they are at the top of the claims
priority," she said. "If they are unsecured, they're pretty
low on the claims priority and probably will take some type
of haircut with this, but we have not had a chance to do a
thorough analysis to know ... how extensive those losses
will be."
IndyMac spent the last
two weeks trying to reassure customers that it was not near
default.
On Monday, IndyMac
announced it had stopped accepting new loan submissions and
planned to slash 3,800 jobs, or more than half of its work
force -- the largest employee cuts in company history.
In the letter to
shareholders, IndyMac Chairman and Chief Executive Michael
W. Perry said the drastic measures were made in conjunction
with banking regulators to improve the company's financial
footing and "meet our mutual goal of keeping Indymac safe
and sound through this crisis period."
The plan was supposed
to generate roughly $5 billion to $10 billion per year of
new loans backed by government-sponsored mortgage companies,
Perry said at the time.
But the run on its
deposits ultimately short-circuited the strategy, prompting
regulators to take action Friday.
Associated Press
writer Raquel Maria Dillon in Pasadena contributed to this
report.
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