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IndyMac sale approved
Sat, Jan 03, 2009
AFP

WASHINGTON - THE US government said on Friday it had approved the sale of bankrupt California bank IndyMac to investment group IMB Management Holdings for about US$13.9 billion (S$20.3 billion).

The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) said it had signed a letter of intent on Wednesday to sell IndyMac Bank, which it seized in July when the bank collapsed under the weight of a bank run by depositors panicked about its viability.

The bank had been under pressure from a cash crunch amid the subprime mortgage crisis and the collapse of the housing market.

The FDIC said it had agreed to sell IndyMac to IMB HoldCo, a thrift holding company controlled by IMB Holdings.

IMB HoldCo is owned by a consortium of private equity investors led by Mr Steven Mnuchin of Dune Capital Management, the FDIC said in a statement.

Mr Mnuchin will be chairman and chief executive of IMB HoldCo.

The consortium includes J.C. Flowers & Co, Paulson & Co, and MSD Capital, a private investment firm created to exclusively manage the capital of Dell computer founder Michael Dell and his family.

IndyMac was among the 25 US banks that failed in 2008 and, with US$32 billion in deposits, was the second-largest bank bankruptcy after Washington Mutual, acquired by JPMorgan Chase.

The new bank, dubbed New IndyMac, is headquartered in Pasadena, California, and has US$6.5 billion in deposits and 33 branches in the Los Angeles area.

Upon completion of the transaction, expected in late January or early February, the consortium will make a cash injection of US$1.3 billion into the bank.

The FDIC estimated the cost of resolving the bank's failure at between US$8.5 and US$9.4 billion. -- AFP

 
 
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