Origination/Lending
GMAC Confirms Discussions on Commercial Bank
By
PAUL JACKSON
October 30, 2008 9:10 AM CST
GMAC Financial Services is in formal discussions with federal regulatory authorities regarding a potential shift into bank holding company status under the Bank Holding Company Act of 1956, the ailing financial services giant confirmed Wednesday morning.
HousingWire covered news of GMAC’s pending transition on Wednesday, which would give the auto and mortgage financier direct access to taxpayer funding under the U.S. Treasury’s Troubled Asset Relief Program, or TARP.
Executives at GMAC also said the company — should it become a commercial bank — would look to raise what was characterized in a press statement as “significant” additional capital, and would look to make a private offer that would exchange existing debt for “a reduce principal amount of new indebtedness.” No further details on the pending exchange offer were provided on Wednesday, but the extra capital would be required to move GMAC to a level consistent with regulatory standards for commercial banks.
“The benefits of this type of restructuring would allow us to put additional capital and liquidity resources immediately to work in financing consumers and automotive dealers,” said GMAC CEO Alvaro de Molina.
The plan involves a complex GM-Chrysler merger discussion that would give Cerberus a much larger stake than its current 51 percent in GMAC, allowing the lender to convert to a commercial banking charter, according to previous media reports.
While much of the discussion around GMAC has thus far centered on the financial company’s auto financing arm and lobbying by Detroit around the importance of saving the U.S. auto industry, the firm also owns troubled residential mortgage lender Residential Capital, LLC — so a conversion to a bank holding company would allow ResCap to tap into TARP funding, as well. On Sept. 3, ResCap cut 60 percent of its workforce and exited wholesale mortgage banking amid continuing struggles, leaving it with only a small correspondent and direct lending channel to fund future originations.
ResCap reported a net loss of $1.86 billion for the second quarter at the end of July; the loss came after a massive $60 billion refinancing package earlier in the quarter had saved it from likely bankruptcy. That package saw debtholders agree to modified terms, as well.
The Treasury has already marked $250 billion in TARP funds as capital injections for approved commercial banks; the capital needs at GMAC alone would use up a good chunk of the remaining funds, HW’s source said. In other words, as we’ve heard from sources since the TARP was first announced, $700 billion isn’t nearly enough.
Write to Paul Jackson at paul.jackson@housingwire.com.
recent stories by department
Origination/Lending
Secondary Market/Investors
Get your HW Fix
Join nearly 10,000 bold subscribers who already get our daily email delivered to their inbox -- it's free, and a great way to ensure you don't miss something.
Events
2009 Dec 09 -- 2009 Dec 10
RMBS: Assessing Value and Risk
This two-day course in New York City will equip market participants with the knowledge and skills to evaluate prime, Alt-A and subprime RMBS portfolios in order to assess their value and understand inherent risks. For more information, visit www.fitchratings.com.
2010 Jan 13 -- 2010 Jan 14
2010 Collection Technology Summit
The Collection Technology Summit is the first industry event to focus solely on collections and its associated technologies and continues to draw top executives from the nation's most prominent institutions. The Collection Technology Summit, where innovation happens. For more information, visit www.collectiontechnology.net
Print This Article







