CHICAGO, Jan. 5, 2011 /PRNewswire/ -- Zacks.com Analyst
Blog features: Bank of America Corporation (NYSE: BAC),
Freddie Mac (OTC Bulletin Board: FMCC), Federal National
Mortgage Association or Fannie Mae (OTC Bulletin Board:
FNMA), JPMorgan Chase & Co. (NYSE: JPM) and Fujifilm
Holdings Corporation (Pink Sheets: FUJIY).
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Here are highlights from Tuesday's Analyst Blog:
BofA Settles Loan Repurchase Line
On Monday, Bank of America Corporation (NYSE:
BAC) agreed to pay $2.62 billion
to Freddie Mac (OTC: FMCC) and Federal
National Mortgage Association or Fannie
Mae (OTC: FNMA). This will resolve the repurchase or "put
back" claims related to certain residential mortgage loans sold to
these Government Sponsored Entities (GSEs) by Countrywide Financial
Corporation. Countrywide was acquired by BofA for approximately
$4 billion in 2008.
BofA had been facing significant problems in its balance sheet
since its acquisition of Countrywide. Though the settlement of
residential mortgage loans sold by Countrywide will help the
company improve its financials in the long run, higher provisions
will mar the near-term results.
According to BofA's declaration, the settlement deal
includes:
- The payment of $1.28 billion to
Freddie Mac for settling 787,000 loans claims (current and future)
sold by Countrywide through 2008.
- The payment of $1.34 billion
(after applying credits to an agreed upon settlement amount of
$1.52 billion) to Fannie Mae to
resolve repurchase claims on 12,045 Countrywide loans (with
approximately $2.7 billion of unpaid
principal balance) and resolve other specific claims on 5,760
Countrywide loans (nearly $1.3
billion of unpaid principal balance).
However, BofA commented that the agreement excludes loans
contained in private label securitizations, loan servicing
obligations and other contractual obligations. In addition, the
settlement claim deal does not cover $600
million buyback demand from Freddie Mac and loans covered by
the deal that turn out to be fraudulent or violated fair lending
laws.
BofA also stated that it will make a provision of $3 billion in the fourth quarter of 2010,
including the amount to be paid to two GSEs and an additional
$2 billion for potential compensation
claims in future. The reserves for such claims totaled nearly
$4.4 billion as of September 30, 2010.
During the third quarter 2010 earnings release, BofA had stated
that it had received approximately $8.7
billion repurchase claims on $910
billion in mortgage-backed securities (MBS) sold to these
two GSEs during the housing boom.
The put back problem started from the housing boom when the
lenders (banks), who originated loans, sold them to Freddie Mac and
Fannie Mae or to private investors as MBS. However, when the
housing bubble burst, a large number of these loans and MBS turned
bad. And recently, Freddie Mac, Fannie Mae and other investors are
asking banks to repurchase these loans at the original value.
BofA is not the only bank exposed to such repurchase claims.
Many other large banks and financial institutions are being forced
to repurchase troubled home loans. On December 27, 2010, Ally Financial had entered
into a deal with Federal National Mortgage Association to pay
$462 million to settle put back
claims over the mortgages sold by its subsidiary, General Motors
Acceptance Corporation (GMAC) Mortgage LCC. Similarly, in November
2010, JPMorgan Chase & Co. (NYSE: JPM) had
announced that it is setting aside $1
billion to repurchase toxic loans originated by Washington
Mutual.
Though BofA is poised to benefit from its large scale
operations, prudent capital management and non-core asset shedding,
concerns related to inconsistent credit quality and the negative
impact of the new financial reform law and the CARD Act continue to
linger.
We expect BofA's provisions to settle future repurchase claims
to weigh on its fourth quarter 2010 results, which is expected to
be announced on January 21, 2011.
Currently, BofA's shares maintain a Zacks #3 Rank, which
translates into a short-term Hold rating. Also considering the
company's fundamentals, we have a long-term Neutral recommendation
on the stock.
Fujifilm Concludes Share Buyback
Fujifilm Holdings Corporation (OTC: FUJIY) recently
completed its buyback of 7.0 million shares for a total amount of
20 billion yen (US$246.3 million) instead of the initial
announcement of 7.5 million shares.
Fujifilm is planning to invest a total of 110 billion yen (US$1.2
billion) in fiscal 2011 to enhance production in order to
meet increasing demand, particularly in the emerging economies.
Fujifilm had a capital expenditure of 24.0 billion yen (US$286.8
million) in the second quarter of fiscal 2011, up 20.6% from
19.9 billion yen (US$221.2 million) in the year-ago quarter.
Free cash flow reduced to 24.7 billion
yen in the first half of 2011 (US$277.4 million) from 119.9 billion yen (US$1.3
billion) during the first half of 2010 to meet working
capital requirements. Total debt increased to 309.7 billion yen (US$3.7
billion) from 288.1 billion
yen (US$3.2 billion) at the
end of the same period of the previous year. Cash & cash
equivalents dropped to 418.4 billion
yen (US$5.0 billion) from
435.8 billion yen (US$4.8 billion) in the first half of fiscal
2010.
For fiscal 2011, management expects revenues of approximately
2,300 billion yen (US$25.6 billion) and operating income before
restructuring and other charges of 170
billion yen (US$1.9 billion),
with restructuring charges of approximately 25 billion yen (US$277.8
million). Operating income after restructuring and other
charges is expected to reach around $120
billion (US$1.3 billion).
Exchange rate is assumed to be 90 yen
per US Dollar.
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