Business World

Merrill would consider Bloomberg, BlackRock sales

Merrill Lynch (MER.N: Quote, Profile, Research) CEO John Thain said that the world’s largest brokerage would consider selling its stakes in news and financial data company Bloomberg and money manager BlackRock (BLK.N: Quote, Profile, Research) if it needed more capital.

Speaking on a conference call, Thain said that he sees Merrill Lynch as “well capitalized,” but added that the company last year considered selling its roughly $13 billion stake in BlackRock or its roughly $5 billion to $6 billion stake in Bloomberg.

Thain has never before said that Merrill Lynch would consider selling its stake in Bloomberg or BlackRock, and his willingness to shed some of the firm’s strongest assets signal how difficult capital raising has become for investment banks.

“We will…figure out what makes the most economic sense for us, if we need to raise capital,” Thain said.

Merrill Lynch raised more than $12 billion from a series of large outside investors, including sovereign funds such as Singapore’s Temasek Holdings and the Kuwait Investment Authority, in December and January how to get a free credit report. Those capital raises came as the bank recorded more than $30 billion of writedowns in recent quarters.

The company’s shares have fallen by about a third since that last round of capital raising, which would make issuing equity more expensive than it had been.

But another factor would also make issuing common shares costly for Merrill: investors who gave money to Merrill in December and January must receive extra compensation if Merrill raises additional capital at too low a price.

An analyst estimated that if Merrill wanted to raise $1 billion of new capital by issuing stock, it would have to raise a total of $2.7 billion because of the compensation for prior investors. 

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Dieser Beitrag wurde am Thursday, 12. June 2008 um 17:20 Uhr veröffentlicht und wurde unter der Kategorie finance abgelegt. Du kannst die Kommentare zu diesen Eintrag durch den RSS-Feed verfolgen.

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