Stock Pick for Tomorrow – Bank of America (BAC)
Watch out for Bank of America (BAC) tomorrow. Federal regulators have agreed to let Bank of America pay back the $45 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) loan it received last year.
BAC is using their available cash and will sell $18.8 billion worth of securities to repay the government bailout funds. The news has been received positively by the investors as BAC gained 2.17% in after-hours trading.
More on the story from other sources:
The New York Times:
Less than a year after grasping two multibillion-dollar bailouts from Washington, a resurgent Bank of America announced on Wednesday that it would repay all of its federal aid, underscoring the banking industry’s swift recovery from the gravest financial crisis since the Depression.
Despite continuing problems with its loans to struggling homeowners and consumers, Bank of America plans to return the $45 billion in aid that it received at the height of the financial panic — a step that, only months ago, would have been almost unimaginable.
But like many other big banks, Bank of America is once again making money, in large part through Wall Street businesses like trading stocks and bonds, rather than by making loans. Its recovery, while many ordinary Americans are still struggling, is an important milestone in the government’s yearlong effort to stabilize the nation’s financial industry.
Associated Press:
Bank of America Corp. said Wednesday it plans to repay its $45 billion in government bailout funds in the next few days, a move that will help the troubled bank recruit a new CEO.
The bank said in a statement it would use available cash and raise $18.8 billion in capital to repay the money, which it received during the height of the credit crisis last year and after its purchase of Merrill Lynch & Co. earlier this year.
Bank of America has been searching for a successor to CEO Ken Lewis since the bank announced in late September that he planned to retire on Dec. 31. But the bank, burdened with government restrictions and close oversight after accepting the Troubled Asset Relief Program funds, has so far been unable to sign a new chief executive.
“It removes the stigma that we’ve had as a company,” spokesman Bob Stickler said of the planned repayment. “We become more attractive to a CEO candidate. Whether that means we get somebody external is impossible to say.”
The bank has said it was considering candidates from inside and outside the company. Stickler said a decision is expected “in the near future.”
Investors were relieved by the news, and sent Bank of America stock up 3.3 percent in after-hours trading.
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