Weather Afternoon: 9°c Sunny spells Tonight: 5°c Partly Cloudy Night

Business

Bradford & Bingley
White knight: B&B shares rose on news that the FSA was seeking a purchaser

B&B lifted by new hopes of takeover

Nick Goodway
22 Sep 2008


Fears were growing for the independent future of Bradford & Bingley today as it appeared unlikely that there would be an immediate rescue bid for the £400 million buy-to-let lender.

B&B shares jumped 3 ¼p to 31p — a rise of 12% — amid reports that the Financial Services Authority is looking for white knight bidder to take it over.

Santander, the owner of Abbey and recent buyer of Alliance & Leicester, ING, the Dutch insurer that runs online bank ING Direct, and National Australia Bank, which owns Clydesdale and Yorkshire banks, all seemed to rule themselves out as bidders last night.

The City regulator sounded out the three institutions after B&B's credit ratings were cut last week and in the wake of the £12billion rescue of Britain's biggest mortgage lender HBOS by Lloyds TSB.

B&B insisted it was not in take­over talks: "We are not talking to any bank. Our funding is solid and we are well capitalised."

Shares in the bank have fallen from a peak of 524 ½p in May 2006 losing almost 90% of their value.

The former building society floated in late 2000 when 2.7million former members were given an average of 250 shares each. It still has more than 800,000 small shareholders.

The bank had to rebase its £400million rights issue twice this summer and ending with a take-up of 27% of the shares. That left the rump to be taken up by the underwriters and five rival High Street banks. The rights issue was at 55p, almost twice the current share price.

Following the nationalisation of Northern Rock and takeovers of Alliance & Leicester and HBOS, B&B is the last remaining former building society left on the stock market.

More than 85% of the bank's mortgage lending is in the buy-to-let or self-certified markets that are not only seen as riskier but which have also dried up as the credit crunch has extended into consumer spending.

B&B recruited former Alliance & Leicester boss Richard Pym as its new chief executive last month after Steve Crawshaw quit for health reasons ahead of the rights issue.

Many analysts believe Pym's main task is to prepare the bank for sale.

Reader views (0)

 Add your view

No comments have so far been submitted.


Add your comment

 

Terms and conditions Make text area bigger You have  characters left.

We welcome your opinions. This is a public forum. Libellous and abusive comments are not allowed. Please read our House Rules.

For information about privacy and cookies please read our Privacy Policy.


 

 

  • Moody's threat to Europe's banks sparks fury in City Euro problem graph Moody's has sent shockwaves through the global banking system and sparked fury in the City, as the ratings agency threatened to slash the...
  • Bank's China bond call Peter Sands One of London's most senior bankers is calling on the government to issue a renminbi-denominated bond as part of a charm offensive to boost...
  • Seven Olympus bosses held over £1bn fraud Olympus "After going to hell and back this is a day to remember," said fired Olympus boss and whistle-blower Michael Woodford after seven executives...
  • Spain pays for rating cut Struggling Spain has managed to prise another €4 billion (£3.3 billion) from jittery bond markets today but was forced to pay more for the privilege
  • Kingfisher bonus time as targets are smashed B&Q Ian Cheshire, B&Q owner Kingfisher's chief executive, and his top team are set for bumper payouts after smashing its bonus scheme's targets
  • Greek impasse hits euro Greek protesters European stock markets were jittery and the euro has dropped to its lowest level in four weeks as the brinksmanship between Greece and its...
  • PPR thrives as luxury brands remain strong Handbag Add £1000 python skin Gucci handbags to the list of things that remain popular despite the economic gloom
  • BAE set to axe more jobs as profits go into retreat BAE BAE Systems has raised the prospect of further job cuts as Britain's biggest manufacturer announced a disappointing set of results for 2011...
  • Reed Elsevier sees growth despite tough economy Anglo-Dutch publishing and events group Reed Elsevier reported a rise in full year profit and said it expected to generate more revenue and profit growth in 2012
  • Frothy profits at Heineken Beer The economy might be in dire straits but Brits still love a pint down the pub
  •  
    Market Roundup
    WEDNESDAY UPDATE

    Barclaycard's exit leaves CPP with an identity crisis

    Bye bye Barclaycard. Nearly a year since the FSA started investigating CPP over its sales techniques, the identity theft protection firm touched a new, all-time low today after admitting it was losing one of its most high-profile clients

    More