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Fears that financial contagion could tear across the banking sector have prompted leading shareholders in Bradford & Bingley to line up behind its £400 million cash-call.
Leading institutional fund managers said yesterday that any losses they might suffer on their investment in B&B's rights issue would be dwarfed by their exposure to a potential collapse across the sector if the bank were allowed to fail.
One shareholder described its role as akin to “an old-fashioned central bank rescue” co-ordinated by the Financial Services Authority, the City's chief regulator.
He said: “There is a big risk of contagion. We are in a different scenario than we were two weeks ago. The bank has been downgraded. It needs to be supported and that is what we are doing.”
Hector Sants, the FSA's chief executive, is known to have taken personal responsibility for ensuring that B&B's capital-raising does not descend into disaster.
Another shareholder said that buying B&B's shares at above the market price would be worthwhile if it saved Britain from the kind of stock market volatility brought on by the near-collapse of Northern Rock, the mortgage bank that is now in state ownership.
He said that supporting the UK's financial services sector was the “moral” thing to do: “Any problem with the B&B rights issue would send the whole stock market into a panic and hit the tracker funds and that's something that the big fund managers are taking into consideration.”
Legal & General and Standard Life have committed to spending about £50 million each subscribing to B&B's rights issue even as the bank's share price plumbs levels not seen since it was demutualised in 2000.
M&G and Insight Investment have agreed to put up almost £25 million apiece, taking the total commitment from the bank's biggest four shareholders to almost £150 million. They will subscribe for new shares in B&B at 55p each.
The bank's shares tumbled almost a fifth yesterday, to 34p, meaning that leading shareholders face a prospective paper loss of almost £60 million.
Shareholders will be joined by six high street lenders, which have guaranteed to subscribe a further £150 million.
HSBC, Lloyds TSB, HBOS, Barclays, Royal Bank of Scotland and Abbey will each end up with an immediately unprofitable slice of B&B.
The two banks underwriting the cash-call, Citigroup and UBS, could end up with as much as £105 million in unsold shares sitting on their books, depending on take-up from other institutions and retail shareholders.
City sources familiar with the underwriting agreements said that shareholders had signed irrevocable commitments to take part. One said: “The rights issue will happen; that is not in doubt no matter what happens to the share price.”
B&B customers expressed concern yesterday. Outside one B&B branch in the City, a 60-year-old stockbroker said that he was worried, but not frantic. “I am concerned with the shares. It is not quite Northern Rock, but it doesn't look good,” he said.
“I have just asked the manager what the feeling is internally and she told me the rights issue would go ahead. If I had a large amount of money in the bank, I would transfer it just for peace of mind.”
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I am a BB shareholder who would rather lose all my investment than see a 'rescue'. The market is the market.: I made a bad call. With the recent whinging (N-rock etc) I am increasingly convinced of the need to divide society into citizens adult enough to own property and subjects who need caring for
Eric Skelton, Cardiff, Wales
When Northern Rock and B&B made a profit in the past, those so called very hard working directors received millions in bonuses. How about now? Do they lose any money? The city I have seen is a gravy train fully supported by the like minded FSA. The city needs saving from itself.
sinan, London, UK
Contagion in stock market terms is to be welcomed as it signals a bottom not a disaster.
leslie watsson, Cardiff, uk
Why is short selling allowed in any financial institution where the government guarantees the funds? Certainly there will be long and loud protests by those profiting from short selling but the stability of the banking system and the flow on to pension funds is much, much more important.
Stuart, Wessex,
300 characters isnt enough room to make a proper comment on stories like this.
Dave, Stroud,
Time to move one's money me thinks.
Morvan, Saulieu, France
Like lemmings they all run over the edge of the cliff together.
Evan Owen, Harlech, Gwynedd
Oh, its morally right to save the bank is it - since when did these corporations stop worrying about a profit - this a load of rubbish - they have been forced into this action and could not care less about the wider economy - otherwise why dont they reduce mortgage rates.
dan, warwick, england
Protect depositors by guaranteeing their savings, but otherwise no special assistance should be offered to B&B, least of all another taxpayers' bailout. Savers with any sense will in any case withdraw their funds and place in a suitable mutual asap.
Paul, Coventry,
Why oh why would an investor act in an irrational manner ? well , to use a modern expression, the 'dirty little secret 'is that their, that is our, actions are not irrational. Let the tiddlers beware.
wpo, warsaw, n.y.
Do its liabilities exceed its assets ??? Time for some "due-diligence" methinks.
Looks like there's some serious arm-twisting going on behind the scenes. I'd like to know what threats have been issued to persuade all these bankers to suddenly become loss-making white-knights.
Pedro, Stratford,
Moral hazard appears to be something only talked about but not actually experienced by banks. Banks have behaved irresponsibly for years leaving us all in the mess we are now in. Depositors should be protected but otherwise let them fail. Other companies fail when badly managed, why not banks?
Simon, London, UK
No option then but to take the bank into public ownership like the NR.How many more?
stephen hulton, eure, france