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Reuters
Accredited Home says survival in doubt
Thursday August 2, 12:08 pm ET
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Accredited Home Lenders Holding Co. (NasdaqGS:LEND - News), a subprime mortgage lender in the process of being sold, said on Thursday its ability to survive was in doubt, sending its shares down by about half.
In its delayed 2006 annual report filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, Accredited said because of adverse conditions in the subprime mortgage industry, it could not give assurance that it would continue to operate as a "going concern."
Accredited shares plunged $4.01, or 48.8 percent, to $4.20 in late morning trading on the Nasdaq.
The decline put the shares well below the $15.10 level that private equity firm Lone Star agreed two months ago to pay for San Diego-based Accredited. That transaction valued Accredited at $400 million.
"It's not going to be $15.10," said Theodore Kovaleff, a senior bank and thrift analyst at Sky Capital LLC in New York. "My expectation is there will be a renegotiation of the merger, for a price much closer to the market price now."
Accredited spokesman Rick Howe did not immediately return a call seeking comment. Ed Trissel, a spokesman for Lone Star, declined to comment.
Like many rivals, Accredited has struggled with rising losses and mounting defaults among subprime borrowers, who have weaker credit histories.
Accredited Home says survival in doubt
Thursday August 2, 12:08 pm ET
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Accredited Home Lenders Holding Co. (NasdaqGS:LEND - News), a subprime mortgage lender in the process of being sold, said on Thursday its ability to survive was in doubt, sending its shares down by about half.
In its delayed 2006 annual report filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, Accredited said because of adverse conditions in the subprime mortgage industry, it could not give assurance that it would continue to operate as a "going concern."
Accredited shares plunged $4.01, or 48.8 percent, to $4.20 in late morning trading on the Nasdaq.
The decline put the shares well below the $15.10 level that private equity firm Lone Star agreed two months ago to pay for San Diego-based Accredited. That transaction valued Accredited at $400 million.
"It's not going to be $15.10," said Theodore Kovaleff, a senior bank and thrift analyst at Sky Capital LLC in New York. "My expectation is there will be a renegotiation of the merger, for a price much closer to the market price now."
Accredited spokesman Rick Howe did not immediately return a call seeking comment. Ed Trissel, a spokesman for Lone Star, declined to comment.
Like many rivals, Accredited has struggled with rising losses and mounting defaults among subprime borrowers, who have weaker credit histories.