Merrill gains on WSJ report of $5 bn Temasek infusion

The New York-based firm, reeling from the biggest loss in its 93-year history, would join Citigroup, Morgan Stanley and UBS in tapping a sovereign wealth fund for capital.


WASHINGTON: Merrill Lynch rose in German trading after the Wall Street Journal reported that the world’s biggest brokerage firm may receive a cash infusion of as much as $5 billion from Singapore’s state-owned Temasek Holdings. Merrill climbed 3.3%, the biggest gain in more than two weeks, to $56.32.

The New York-based firm, reeling from the biggest loss in its 93-year history, would join Citigroup, Morgan Stanley and UBS in tapping a sovereign wealth fund for capital. Temasek’s board has given preliminary approval for the investment, the Journal said, citing people it didn’t identify.

Government funds “are making use of the crisis to buy some of these banks on the cheap,” said Nicholas Yeo, who helps oversee more than $40 billion in Asian equities at Aberdeen Asset Management in Hong Kong. “Whether they’re buying cheaply enough is hard to say.”

Merrill has declined 19% in New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) composite trading since the company announced $8.4 billion of writedowns on mortgage-related investments and corporate loans on October 24, and then ousted chief executive officer Stan O’Neal.

The company, now led by former NYSE Euronext CEO John Thain, may disclose an additional $8.6 billion of writedowns for the fourth quarter, estimates David Trone, a New York-based analyst at Fox-Pitt Kelton Cochrane Caronia Waller.

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Rob Stewart, a Hong Kong-based spokesman for Merrill, declined to comment. Officials at Temasek, the biggest shareholder of Standard Chartered and DBS Group Holdings, also declined comment. Merrill is a passive, minority investor in Bloomberg, the parent of Bloomberg News.

Set up in 1974 to run state assets, Temasek now has more than $100 billion of investments, including controlling stakes in seven of Singapore’s 10 biggest publicly traded companies. It holds 28% of DBS, Singapore’s largest bank.

Temasek, owned by Singapore’s finance ministry, has notched up an 18% average annual return since its inception. It raised more than $800 million in the past month selling part of its stakes in China Construction Bank and Bank of China, the nation’s second- and third-largest lenders.

Governments in the Middle East and Asia have agreed to invest about $25 billion in Wall Street firms since banks began to disclose subprime losses. Citigroup, the biggest US bank by assets, said on November 27 that Abu Dhabi would invest $7.5 billion in the New York-based company.

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State-controlled China Investment is buying an almost 10% stake in New York-based Morgan Stanley for $5 billion after the second-biggest US securities firm reported a loss of $9.4 billion from mortgage-related holdings on December 19. Government of Singapore Investment, along with an unidentified Middle-Eastern investor, agreed this month to inject 13 billion Swiss francs ($11.2 billion) into Zurich-based UBS, the biggest Swiss bank.

The government fund manager, known as GIC, manages more than $100 billion of the nation’s foreign reserves. Investments by sovereign funds may give some respite to banking stocks battered by more than $80 billion of credit-related losses at the world’s biggest financial institutions.

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“These things tend to be good signs for the market,” said Masafumi Oshiden, a Tokyo-based fund manager at BlackRock Japan, whose parent company manages $1.1 trillion. The investments help “take away the fears and concerns, and lack of clarity going forward, so generally, it’s positive.”


Bear Stearns, the securities firm that helped trigger the collapse of the subprime market, struck an agreement in October with China’s government-controlled Citic Securities for a $1 billion cross-investment. The New York-based company announced a $1.9 billion writedown on mortgage losses on Wednesday, sending the firm to its first quarterly loss since it went public in 1985.

Government agencies “may feel there are bargains out there,” said David Cohen, an economist at Action Economics in Singapore. “They can write big checks and these banks appreciate that.” Merrill has slumped 42% in NYSE trading this year, reducing the market value to $46.7 billion.
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