Debt1
Bradford & Bingley signs mortgage deal

Bradford & Bingley signs mortgage deal

Wednesday 24th September 2008

Buy-to-let mortgage lender Bradford & Bingley (B&B) has signed a £750 million mortgage deal that should support it through the current banking crisis.

The bank has agreed a deal with GMAC-RFC to renegotiate terms of a 'mortgage forward sale agreement'.

The original deal saw B&B buy £1.75 billion worth of mortgage assets from GMAC-RFC. This has now been revised to £500 million of loans to be acquired in the final three months of 2008 and between £225 million and £250 million worth of assets to be taken in the first quarter of 2009.

A statement from the firms said: "Both businesses have agreed to revise the terms of this agreement to their mutual benefit."

B&B has been under increasing pressure of late during the current banking crisis – with rumours of the Financial Services Authority (FSA) sounding out competitors in a bid to secure a deal akin to the HBOS/Lloyds TSB merger.

Investors had lost confidence in the lender after the property downturn and credit crunch hit its buy-to-let heavy business model.

Investors were also critical of B&B following its bungled share issue earlier in the year as it tried to garner more capital from shareholders.

An initial share issue was shelved and repriced when a US private equity stepped in to buy a tranche of the firm. However, when the US backers turned away, the share issue had to be repackaged for a third time.

In the end there was only 28 per cent take-up of the shares, leaving B&B's underwriters holding a 20 per cent stake in the firm.

B&B also came under pressure yesterday when ratings agency Fitch downgraded its credit rating.

ADNFCR-1783-ID-18794128-ADNFCR

Related News

One in five backs windfall tax - 24/09/08
The government has come under renewed pressure to introduce a windfall tax on energy companies as new research revealed one in five Britons backed such a move
EU mobile charges may be slashed further - 23/09/08
Text messages across the European Union are set to become cheaper next year if plans to slash mobile charges go through in July
Builders merchant Wolseley sees profits fall 77% - 22/09/08
Builders merchant Wolseley has seen a profit slump of 77 per cent and expects jobs to be lost
US stocks soar on 'unprecedented' plan - 19/09/08
The Dow Jones industrial average leapt 400 points in early trading after George Bush announced a plan to rescue banks from the financial crisis
HBOS 'low offer' could be rejected - 19/09/08
Plans to merge Lloyds TSB and HBOS could yet be scuppered by shareholders, it has been claimed

<< Back To News Listings

News Article Search

Quick Apply








Yes No


I accept the Privacy Policy