By Jonathan Stempel
Friday's moves came as U.S. bank shares suffered a rocky ride, closing mostly lower amid fears that losses from bad loans will soar because of a deep global recession.
The Treasury Department plans to provide funds for 20 to 22 additional lenders as part of its next round of a $250 billion bank recapitalization program. It has already committed half that amount to nine of the nation's largest banks in exchange for preferred shares.
Treasury plans to let banks announce the infusions on their own, rather than release a list of recipients all at once and risk scaring investors who might think banks left off failed to qualify for help, a person familiar with Treasury thinking said.
PNC, First Horizon National Corp
Treasury also is examining how to give help to insurers under its $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program, two people familiar with the deliberations said.
Friday's market carnage was particularly heavy among the biggest names, with shares of JPMorgan Chase & Co
The Standard & Poor's Financials Index <.GSPF> approached a 12-year low, eventually closing down 3.9 percent.
"Credit quality will continue to deteriorate -- mortgage loans, credit card loans, auto loans, student loans, across the board," said Keith Davis, an analyst at Farr, Miller & Washington in Washington, D.C. "Many of these banks are going to be reporting losses for several quarters."
DIFFICULT ENVIRONMENT
Banks worldwide are trying to reduce their balance sheet risk after taking on too many mortgages and complex debt, which no longer have buyers.
Credit losses at most major U.S. lenders are soaring, often to three times or more than year-ago levels. The losses are likely to rise if housing prices fall further, unemployment rises, and the economy deteriorates, causing more retail and business customers to have trouble paying their bills.
National City, a Cleveland-based bank battered by soured mortgage and construction loans in the U.S. Midwest and Florida, agreed to be acquired by PNC in a transaction valuing it at just $2.23 per share, 19 percent below where it closed on Thursday and 94 percent below where it traded in March 2007.
"This is a difficult environment," James Rohr, chief executive of Pittsburgh-based PNC, said on a conference call. "The economy has been deteriorating quarter by quarter."
National City had lost money in five straight quarters. It joins Bear Stearns Cos, Merrill Lynch & Co
PNC said the purchase would make it the fifth-largest U.S. bank by deposits. The acquisition roughly doubles PNC's size.
In Friday trading, PNC shares closed up 3.5 percent at $58.88, while National City fell 24.7 percent to $2.07.
Among other companies, JPMorgan fell 6.4 percent to $35.43; Citigroup dropped 7.4 percent to $12.14; Bank of America, which is buying Merrill, shed 8.4 percent to $21.07; Goldman ended down 7.5 percent at $100.40; Merrill slid 9.4 percent to $15.86; and Morgan Stanley
CLEANING OUT THE SYSTEM
The selling is "part and parcel of the eventual cleanout" of leverage in the financial system, said Marshall Front, chairman of Front Barnett Associates LLC in Chicago.
"We are aware of hedge funds that are being forced to sell, and banks are forcing customers to bring margins up. Mutual funds are getting large redemptions, and exchange traders are under extreme pressure," he added.
Other banks fared better. Wachovia edged up 0.7 percent at $5.80, and Wells Fargo & Co
Meanwhile, shares of some regional banks that analysts consider relatively healthy, and potential acquirers of weaker rivals, rose. BB&T Corp
Minneapolis-based U.S. Bancorp had looked into buying National City, people familiar with the matter said on Friday.
One of Friday's biggest decliners was Fifth Third Bancorp
The Cincinnati lender also has seen loan losses mount, and been thought to be a takeover target, perhaps for PNC. Goldman Sachs & Co analysts downgraded Fifth Third to "sell" from "neutral," and Fitch Ratings lowered the bank's credit rating.
Fifth Third spokeswoman Debra DeCourcy declined to comment.
(Additional reporting by Paritosh Bansal, Joseph A. Giannone, Juan Lagorio and Dan Wilchins in New York, and Patrick Rucker and Karey Wutkowski in Washington, D.C.; editing by John Wallace/Jeffrey Benkoe/Tim Dobbyn and Carol Bishopric)