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With all the talk about Temasek losing all our money, I'm surprised no one bothered to post this. Guess its not a stupid move after all
SINGAPORE (AFP) — Singapore's Temasek Holdings could walk away with a profit from its stake in investment bank Merrill Lynch despite the Wall Street firm's battering by a housing crisis, economists said Tuesday.
"It still might work out well from their perspective," said David Cohen, of global research house Action Economics.
Bank of America announced Monday it was paying 50 billion US dollars in stock for Merrill Lynch, whose biggest shareholder is Singapore's state-linked Temasek.
If Temasek decides to sell its stake, it could gain 1.5 billion dollars, according to an estimate by Ilian Mihov, an economics professor at graduate business school INSEAD in Singapore.
Since December, Temasek has invested billions of dollars in Merrill, whose shares tumbled about 78 percent over the past year on fears of widening losses from a meltdown in the subprime, or higher-risk, mortgage sector and a global credit squeeze.
Temasek's initial investment, covering 4.9 billion US dollars, came with a requirement that if Merrill raised more capital within 12 months at a price lower than the 48 dollars per share Temasek initially paid, it would be compensated for the difference.
That proviso kicked in for a subsequent Temasek investment into Merrill in July. The fund put that 2.5 billion dollars compensation back into the bank along with another 900 million US dollars.
Dow Jones Newswires reported that the protection measures effectively halved the purchase price to around 24 dollars per share.
Bank of America's deal offers Merrill around 29 dollars a share, compared with Friday's closing price of 17.05 dollars.
If Temasek sells to Bank of America, the Singaporean firm "could walk away with a profit, at least from the July commitment," Cohen said.
Mihov estimated the potential return for Temasek at about 20 percent. "So that's a very good return in these turbulent times," he said, adding it is not certain that Temasek will cash in its Merrill shares. Instead, they could be exchanged for Bank of America shares if Temasek sees long-term value in the bank.
"There are arguments on both sides," Mihov said.
Dow Jones Newswires, citing unnamed sources, reported Monday that Temasek was holding a meeting to discuss what to do.
"The investment team is meeting now. Their decision on how to handle the Bank of America shares will depend on how they view the long-term prospects of the bank," a source said. "Temasek always looks at the long term."
A Temasek spokesman told AFP it is too early to comment on the Bank of America deal.
The Singaporean firm holds 13 to 14 percent of Merrill.
Temasek reported a record profit of 18.2 billion Singapore dollars (12.7 billion US) in the year to March. It has controlling stakes in major regional firms and is one of two Singapore government investment vehicles, along with the Government of Singapore Investment Corporation (GIC).
GIC has invested billions into Swiss bank UBS and US banking giant Citigroup, both of which are victims of the supbrime crisis.
http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5i2utZN9Et0f-U1kZR8zBMw51evaA