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Philip Scipio
FROM THE ARCHIVE: 10 years ago this week
THE FINANCIAL CRISIS
From October 25 2008 issue
Thain installs allies
Reflecting not only Bank of
America’s desire to retain Merrill
Lynch talent once it has completed
its acquisition of the broker-dealer,
but also the lack of overlap with
current BofA executives, senior
Merrill staff are already dominating
the investment banking structure of
the combined firms.
With former Merrill CEO John
Thain having been confirmed earlier
as president of the combined firms’
banking activities, last week saw Greg
Fleming and Tom Montag installed
at the top of the investment banking
and markets businesses.
Fleming, former president and
COO of Merrill Lynch, will head the
global corporate and investment
bank. Montag, who signed a
lucrative package last year to head
global sales and trading at Merrill,
will head global markets, which
includes sales, trading and research.
Wachovia’s Golden misstep
Expectations were not high for
Wachovia’s third-quarter results,
but the commercial bank last week
managed to record an eye-popping
loss of US$23.89bn – one of the
largest in history.
It is likely to be the last earnings
report from Wachovia before it is
acquired by Wells Fargo. The report
highlights some of the wrong turns
the North Carolina firm took –
most notably, the 2006 purchase
of mortgage-lender Golden West
Financial – before the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation had
to intervene and eventually bring
about the bank’s sale.
Argentina seizes pensions
The Kirchner administration justified
the nationalisation of pension funds
last week as yet another government
intervention during a time of crisis,
similar to what is being done in the
US and Europe. But such talk failed
to convince investors, who widely
believed the underlying motive was
control of pension fund assets and
flows to cover financing gaps.
“The perception of the market
is that this is a play on the part of
the government to get that money.
It is as simple as that,” said Dario
Pedrajo, senior portfolio manager
at Kapax Investment Advisers.
The takeover has also negatively
impacted on the country’s local
debt capital market, which, for
the first time in years, was finally
showing signs of life and promising
to become one of the few bright
spots on the planet.
Up to eight corporates were
looking to come to market, with
more names prospecting behind the
scenes. But local bankers now believe
the government has effectively
torpedoed any such hopes of a local
debt capital market recovery – the
first since the country was plunged
into a financial crisis in 2001 and
2002 and ended up defaulting.