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Why WaMu's failure doesn't matter

Posted Sep 26 2008, 06:54 AM by Douglas McIntyre
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Washington Mutual failed yesterday and most of its assets where sold to JP Morgan. The price was $1.8 billion. JPM will have to write down $31 billion in bad loans, but, since Jamie Dimon is now the king of the banking world, he should be able to raise the capital to cover that. In the meantime, he has picked up $307 billion in assets.

According to The Wall Street Journal, "The deal will vault J.P. Morgan into first place in nationwide deposits and greatly expand its franchise." The people who get drawn-and-quartered in the process are the WaMu bondholders and those who own the common stock. Washington Mutual shares were at over $36 a year ago. Now, they are worth nothing. About $50 billion in market cap has been destroyed.

The failure, the biggest in U.S. history, does not mean much. Depositors are protected. The beating shareholders take is no different than any other when a large company fails. The system worked well. A healthier firm got the pieces of the failed firm on the cheap. JP Morgan will be the better for the deal and when the financial markets recover, the purchase of WaMu's assets may look like the deal of the century.

The collapse of WaMu was similar to what happened at Lehman. Outside firms including Nomura got some tremendous financial property for next to nothing. The Japanese company had the capital to do what Lehman could not. The assets which Nomura bought may be temporarily impaired, but the stronger company can wait that out

Physicists claim that energy is never lost. It simply changes from one form to another. The current banking process may show that capital acts in roughly the same way, at least over long time periods.

The purchase of WaMu's assets again raises the issue of whether the government bailout of the financial system is necessary. Private capital has picked up the pieces of several bank and brokerage failures and the process has happened with speed and efficiency. Capital is available if the deals are good enough.

WaMu failed and, except for a relatively small number of shareholders and employees, no one should care.

Top Stocks blogger Douglas A. McIntyre is an editor at 24/7 Wall St.

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Comments

 

I disagree that capital never disappears.  Consider a half-finished house, in which a builder invested $50,000 before financial troubles forced a halt to construction.  That house will deteriorate over time, and the $50,000 will largely disappear.

Not care!! Are you kidding? What happens to the limo driver who carried the executives to and from work? What does the pilot of the company jet do when the families aren't traveling to their vacation homes in Aspen or the Bahamas? How does the guy who carried money to congressmen and senators make ends meet ? And what's to become of the poor legislaters who have lost that source of income ? And the board of directors who earned a couple hundred grand a year for meetiong once a month to look after the interest of the shareholder, will the golden parachuts they receive be enough ? Not care!!

I have a morgage with wamu what will happen to it.

Your mortgage will simply be paid to Chase from now on. They'll send you a "welcome letter".

Keith, in simplest terms...nothing.

You signed a contract that will be honored, now by JPMorgan.  Your mortgage contract does not constitute share of ownership in the formwer wamu....thankfully.

Nothing will really happen to your Wamu mortgage from your point of view. It will still exist, so keep paying it at the address they have told you to pay it.  All that you really need to know is that at some point in the near future, "Wamu" will be called "Chase."  So be on the look out for notices telling you what name to use on the check and where to send the check.  But make sure to keep paying!

I feel bad for all of my former-coworkers (many of whom are still good friends) who lost a lot when the stock became worthless.

I wonder what Kerry Killinger feels like, what with being in charge of the largest bank failure in history. And ruining loyal employees' retirements.

Wonder what's going to happen to WaMu Tower (not actually owned by WaMu) and WaMu Center in Seattle?

I'll tell you what will happen, you'll get a big, fat,long one up your backside.  George Carlin is right. A few elitest people plan and carry out the screwing of Americans everywhere.  Didn't JPMorgan buy out Bear Stearns last year.  They are doing the same thing that happened in 1929.  Things look like they are going to go to something like the Euro.

Google Zeitgeist.  It'll open your eyes.

WaMu customer service went from great to pitiful over the last couple of years. I think it was when they started running those ads about being different from other banks. (yah right!) I ceased being a customer two years ago when I went to close a savings (???) account that had only $25 left in it and was told they had taken it as a fee!!!...on a savings account!!! Good riddance.

my thoughts are with all the other Former WaMulian's today, as well - I'm thankfully now employed at a safe and secure community bank but I'm foundly remembering the days of WaMu's hay-day under Kerry Killinger.  And don't forget, Kerry was pulled out a couple weeks ago and replaced with a Alan Fishman - Kerry walked out pretty clean. Today, I will pull my WaMu t-shirts from the rag bin and probably can get my pension money back by selling them on eBay!

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