National City Corp.

National City Corporation
Former type Public (NYSE:NCC)[1]
Industry Super regional banks
Fate Acquired by PNC Financial Services
Founded 1845
Defunct 2008
Headquarters Cleveland, Ohio, USA
Products commercial and retail banking, mortgage financing and servicing, consumer finance and asset management

National City Corporation was a regional bank holding company based in Cleveland, Ohio, USA, founded in 1845; it was once one of the ten largest banks in America in terms of deposits, mortgages and home equity lines of credit. Subsidiary National City Mortgage is credited for doing the first mortgage in America. The company operated through an extensive banking network primarily in Ohio, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Michigan, Missouri, Pennsylvania, Florida, and Wisconsin, and also served customers in selected markets nationally. Its core businesses included commercial and retail banking, mortgage financing and servicing, consumer finance, and asset management. The bank reached out to customers primarily through mass advertising and offered comprehensive banking services online. In its last years, the company was commonly known in the media by the abbreviated NatCity,[2][3] with its investment banking arm even bearing the official name NatCity Investments.[4]

In 2007, National City Corp. ranked number 188 on the Fortune 500 list, and 9th in terms of revenue in the U.S. commercial banking industry with total assets of about $140 billion.

PNC Financial Services announced October 24, 2008, its purchase of National City for about $5.2 billion in stock with funds from the U.S. Treasury. At the time of the acquisition, National City had been the 7th largest bank in the United States,[5] two spots ahead of acquirer PNC. The deal was finalized on December 31, 2008, and the National City name was retired on June 14, 2010.

Contents

Regulatory scrutiny

The Wall Street Journal reported on June 6, 2008, that National City Corp. had entered into a memorandum of understanding with federal regulators, effectively putting the bank on probation. Terms of the confidential agreement, entered into a month earlier with the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (which regulates nationally chartered banks), were not known.[6]

On June 10, 2008, National City Corp. confirmed that it had reached agreements with regulators "regarding capital levels, risk-management practices and other aspects of its business." The company stated that there had been no material developments in these areas since these memorandums of understanding were signed in April and May 2008.[7]

History

National City Bank was founded on May 17, 1845, when a group of Cleveland businessmen pooled $50,000 to organize the City Bank of Cleveland, the first bank opened under the Ohio Bank Act of 1845 in a small town with no gas, electricity, public waterworks, or railroad.[8] Reuben Sheldon and Theodoric C. Severance, formerly of the Fireman's Insurance Company, organized The City Bank of Cleveland. The city's only bank at the time, opened its doors to the public at No. 52 Superior Street.[9]

Recent transactions

National City went on an acquisition spree from 2004 through 2008, headed by its $2.1 billion purchase of Cincinnati-based Provident Financial Group. Provident Financial Group's banking arm, Provident Bank, specialized in warehouse lending facilities whereby it extended commercial credit lines to mortgage banking firms so that the mortgage banking firms could make loans to their customers and either keep those loans or sell them in the seondary market to GSEs or other institutional investors.After the acquisition, National City renamed the division National City Warehouse Resources.The warehouse lending division was a profit center and did not contribute to the Bank's downfall.In addition, in 2005, National City acquired Allegiant Bancorp to secure a presence in the St. Louis, MO market. In 2006, they acquired Fidelity Bankshares Inc. for an estimated $1 billion dollar deal that was half cash, half stock. The bank also acquired Harbor Florida Bancshares Inc. through a $1.1 billion stock deal, with both acquired banks located in Florida; these acquisitions gave National City $7.4 billion of assets and 94 branches in Florida.

On the other side of the ledger, National City sold to Bank of America its 83% stake in National Processing Company, which earns fees from processing merchant credit card transactions. The sale of San Jose, California based First Franklin origination franchise and related servicing platform to Merrill Lynch & Co. was completed on December 30, 2006 for $1.3 billion.

In May 2007, National City announced the purchase of MAF Bancorp Inc., the holding company for MidAmerica Bank. As of June 30, 2006, MidAmerica Bank had the 9th-ranked market share in the Chicago-Naperville-Joliet Metropolitan Statistical Area at 2.18%. Following the merger using the same dataset, the combined National City and MidAmerica Banks were expected to rank 4th in the Chicago market with a market share of 3.96% and deposits of more than $10 billion.[10]

Strategic changes and subsequent downfall

In the late 1990s, under former CEO David Daberko, National City began a strategy to increase the yields on it assets. In 1999, the company purchased First Franklin Financial Corp., a large subprime mortgage lender. Instead of selling the loans, as most mortgage companies do, National City retained many of the loans to enhance its net interest spreads. It also aggressively originated loans brought to the company by third-party mortgage brokers, as well as originating a large number of home equity loans. The amount of residential mortgage loans grew rapidly and came to exceed the level of commercial loans. By 2003, National City was the sixth-largest mortgage lender in the country. The company did sell its First Franklin Financial subsidiary in December 2006, but retained a large volume of loans that had been originated by the subsidiary. Management failed to recognize the extent of problems in the subprime market and did not take sufficient aggressive actions to reduce its real estate mortgage portfolio. National City subsequently made several other strategic mistakes, including buying back $3 billion of its stock in early 2007, thereby reducing its level of capital, and expanding into the Florida market in late 2006, just before the real estate market there went into a severe decline. As the subprime mortgage market began going into free fall in mid-2007 and continued into 2008, loan losses mounted. In the third quarter of 2007, the company suffered a net loss of $19 million. By the second quarter of 2008, the company had a net loss of $1.8 billion.[11][12]

Takeover by PNC

On October 9, 2008, The Wall Street Journal ran an article citing unnamed sources indicating that National City was in talks with several other banks for a possible sale. The article named Pittsburgh-based PNC Financial Services, Toronto-based Scotiabank, and Minneapolis-based U.S. Bancorp as the leading contenders. A spokesperson for National City declined to comment on the report.[13][14] On October 24, 2008 PNC announced that it had finalized a purchase agreement for National City.

The acquisition was a stock purchase transaction completed before the end of 2008. National City will be merged into PNC, and the National City brand is to eventually be dissolved.[15][16] The deal was approved by shareholders of both banks on December 23, 2008.

The deal made PNC the largest bank in Pennsylvania, Ohio, and Kentucky, as well as the second largest bank in Maryland and Indiana. It greatly expanded PNC's presence in the Midwest as well as entering the Florida market. Pittsburgh, Louisville, Kentucky, and Cincinnati were the only three markets before the acquisition deal that both banks had a major presence in.

In the case of Pittsburgh, the two banks had significant overlap to the point it would pose antitrust issues in Western Pennsylvania, since both banks had the top two market shares in the Pittsburgh region.[17] As a result, the United States Department of Justice required PNC to sell off 50 National City branches in the Pittsburgh area and 11 more branches in and around Erie to competitors.[18] On April 7, 2009, PNC reached a deal with Buffalo-based First Niagara Bank to buy 57 of the branches,[19] and officially took over those branches on September 8 after the signs were changed over from National City during Labor Day Weekend.[20] The branches not purchased by First Niagara were the four in Crawford County, Pennsylvania that PNC had to divest; of those four, one branch in Titusville was sold to Emclaire Financial Group[21] while the other three (one in Conneaut Lake, the other two in Meadville, including the branch inside Wal-Mart) were sold to Marquette Savings Bank.[22] Although employees at the branches being sold off were retained, there were still heavy layoffs at National City's headquarters in Cleveland.

The National City name, as expected, lasted well into 2009 since it would take PNC some time to integrate the two banks together.[23] Despite the branch closures and the sale of others to First Niagara, PNC still ended up with a 46% market share in Pittsburgh,[24] over three and a half times the market share of second-place Citizens Financial Group with 13%.[19] PNC began to convert the National City branches that were not sold off or closed on November 7, 2009,[25] starting with Pennsylvania (where the two had the most overlap), Florida, and the Youngstown & Steubenville, Ohio regions.[24] The conversion of National City to PNC was completed in June 2010, in the following phases:[26]

Combined PNC and National City Facts[33]

Historical timeline[34]

From pioneer times to the Great Depression

Grows throughout much of Ohio

Becomes interstate bank

The final years: a banking conglomerate

Merger with PNC and last actions as independent bank

References

  1. ^ http://nccstock.com/
  2. ^ http://www.wkyc.com/video/default.aspx?playerId=newsmaker&maven_playlistId=87da15935a90222c7a4a61fb968c8b00cd945787&maven_referrer=mrss&maven_referralPlaylistId=87da15935a90222c7a4a61fb968c8b00cd945787&maven_referralObject=902996792
  3. ^ http://rds.yahoo.com/_ylt=A0geu5SXNdNKEUIAA4JXNyoA;_ylu=X3oDMTE3dHQ0aXUzBHNlYwNzcgRwb3MDOARjb2xvA2FjMgR2dGlkA0Y5MTlfNzIEaXQDMQ--/SIG=1e93h45e4/EXP=1255442199/**http%3a//rdre1.yahoo.com/click%3fu=http%3a//feedpoint.net/r/redir.jsp%253Fengine%253DINK%2526pcid%253D586926%2526fid%253D1520317%2526url%253D8vOqlbKq1Wr0HP0nSxmdB2VMr0jhgkSY45MI4R41xTslarRlTJTVZOz0YZ1B1TsKVaZ2Za8i1-vhhzT-S0C7n7u0-A%253D%253D%26y=04F164E4DB078C7D41%26i=482%26c=33406%26q=02%255ESSHPM%255BL7Q~k%255Cvkf6%26e=utf-8%26r=7%26d=wow~Metro-en-us%26n=D6I4G7GK379KL2D0%26s=13%26t=%26m=4AD33597%26x=05CA896C889927FCF44EAC6819E4B2FB2B
  4. ^ https://accounts.natcity.com/Summary.asp
  5. ^ http://blog.cleveland.com/business/2008/10/national_city_moves_up_to_7th.html
  6. ^ National City under U.S. regulatory scrutiny: report, Rueters, June 6, 2008
  7. ^ National City confirms agreements with regulators, MarketWatch.com, June 10, 2008
  8. ^ National City 150th Celebration Book Team: National City – 150 Years, 1995
  9. ^ http://www.answers.com/topic/national-city-corp National City Corp.: Information from Answers.com
  10. ^ http://www2.fdic.gov/sod/sodMarketBank.asp?barItem=2 FDIC, Deposit Market Share – Pro Forma HHI Report Selection
  11. ^ http://www.crainscleveland.com/article/20080317/FREE/590006312/1099
  12. ^ http://blog.cleveland.com/pdextra/2008/04/national_city_corp_went_from.html
  13. ^ Pittsburgh Post-Gazette National City stock jumps on rumors of sale
  14. ^ http://blog.cleveland.com/business/2008/11/pncnational_city_bank_deal_dra.html
  15. ^ Pittsburgh Post-Gazette PNC acquiring National City
  16. ^ kdka.com PNC Financial Services To Buy National City
  17. ^ http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/07252/815602-28.stm
  18. ^ http://www.usdoj.gov/opa/documents/branches-divested.pdf
  19. ^ a b http://kdka.com/business/PNC.First.Niagara.2.978660.html
  20. ^ a b c http://kdka.com/consumer/first.niagara.switchover.2.1170342.html
  21. ^ http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601208&sid=afGesS_sXPd4
  22. ^ http://www.marquettesavings.com/MarquetteAcquisitionRelease040709.pdf
  23. ^ http://kdka.com/business/National.City.PNC.2.894007.html
  24. ^ a b http://post-gazette.com/pg/09303/1009385-28.stm
  25. ^ http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/09248/995688-28.stm
  26. ^ http://www.welcometopnc.com/docs/first_phase_successfully_completed.html
  27. ^ http://www.kentucky.com/103/story/1121523.html
  28. ^ http://www.dispatch.com/live/content/business/stories/2009/11/13/PNC_Branding.ART_ART_11-13-09_A10_O1FLEH2.html?type=rss&cat=&sid=101
  29. ^ http://www.crainscleveland.com/article/20100219/FREE/100219800
  30. ^ http://www.crainscleveland.com/article/20091105/FREE/911049959/1099/RSS01&rssfeed=RSS01
  31. ^ http://jobmag.com/news/2010/0301/1000016021070.htm
  32. ^ http://www.chicagobusiness.com/cgi-bin/news.pl?id=36114&seenIt=1
  33. ^ http://www.welcometopnc.com/docs/PNC_WelcomePackage.pdf
  34. ^ http://blog.cleveland.com/pdextra/2008/04/national_city_through_163_year.html
  35. ^ http://blogs.financialcontent.com/financial_stock_news/2008/12/national-city-faces-shareholde.html
  36. ^ http://finance.yahoo.com/news/Farmers-National-Bank-of-bw-1460591361.html?x=0&.v=1
  37. ^ http://www.meadvilletribune.com/local/local_story_233144822.html

External links