Monday, January 21, 2008

U.K. to Back Northern Rock Debt in Plan to Spur Sale

(Bloomberg) -- The U.K. government, struggling to find a buyer for Northern Rock Plc, said it will guarantee a sale of bonds backed by the bank's home loans and gave bidders two weeks to come forward with proposals.

The mortgages, consumer loans and some investment-grade securities of the Newcastle, England-based bank would be packaged as debt and sold to investors, the Treasury said today. Bids based on the new funding plan must be submitted by Feb. 4.

Northern Rock rose as much as 55 percent in London trading on speculation the proposal will revive interest among potential buyers such as Richard Branson's Virgin Group Ltd. Northern Rock sparked the first run on a U.K. bank in a century when it sought aid from the Bank of England in September. Borrowings have since swollen to about 24 billion pounds ($47 billion), hampering a sale and forcing the government to consider nationalization.

``It seems a very reasonable solution for Northern Rock,'' said Simon Maughan, an analyst at MF Global Securities Ltd. in London who has a ``neutral'' rating on the stock. ``The problem comes when the competition cries foul.''

Northern Rock rose 21.75 pence, or 34 percent, to 86.25 pence by 12:35 p.m., valuing the bank at 363 million pounds.

Brown, Darling

U.K. Prime Minister Gordon Brown and Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling have been accused of ``dithering'' by opposition lawmakers for failing to prevent the run on Northern Rock. The U.K. regulatory framework, designed while Brown was running the Treasury, hampered the central bank's ability to head off the bank run, lawmakers, economists and the Bank of England's governor, Mervyn King, have said.

Brown's government has also been criticized for not making a decision earlier on the future of the bank. Darling will make a statement today on the plan and possibilities for a private sale.

``It's precisely because Gordon Brown and Alistair Darling couldn't make a decision that we are looking at public subsidy for five years to come, with no guarantee the government is going to get its money back,'' George Osborne, who speaks on finance for Britain's Conservative Party, said in an interview on BBC Radio 4's Today program.

Northern Rock, a formerly customer-owned building society whose roots date to 1850, is the U.K.'s third-biggest mortgage lender. The company, which sold shares in 1997, has 76 branches and relied mainly on money markets to finance mortgage lending.

The bank sought the government's help after the U.S. subprime mortgage crash rattled credit markets, choking off its financing. The government guaranteed the bank's customer deposits and will also back the bond sale.

Weighing Options

Northern Rock is weighing private solutions, including a bid by Virgin and a reorganization plan of its own. At the same time, concern has grown the bank may have to be nationalized as bidders struggle to secure financing to repay the Bank of England debt.

Northern Rock welcomed the authorities' preference ``to reach agreement on a private sector solution for the company,'' the bank said in a statement today. The lender said it would work with bidders and the government to develop their proposals and its own standalone plan.

A sale will have to be agreed upon in time to enable a restructuring plan to be submitted for approval to the European Union by March 17, the government said. Pending approval by the EU, the Bank of England's loans would be repaid under the plan, which was devised by Goldman Sachs Group Inc.
 

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