Homestreet is merging with California-based Mechanics Bank, moving on after a prior engagement fell through.
Those companies announced that transaction last January and amended it in April to secure regulatory approvals, which never came. In a conference call Monday afternoon, Mechanics Bank chairman Carl B. Webb said the new deal was “highly discussed and highly vetted” with regulators.
The merger is expected to be completed in the third quarter this year. Homestreet shareholders are expected to own around 8.3% of the combined company, while the remaining 91.7% will be held by existing Mechanics shareholders. Dallas-based private equity firm Ford Financial Fund will own approximately 74.3% of the combined business, Monday’s press release said.
The $8 billion-asset Homestreet is reeling from
“They are very aware of that, and we have discussed our plans to reduce that concentration over time,” said Webb, noting the concentration should
Mechanics, based in Walnut Creek east of the San Francisco Bay, counts 112 branches and over $16 billion in assets. Executives highlighted the bank’s strengthened West Coast presence in adding Homestreet’s 56 branches up and down the coast.
The new board will include a Homestreet director to be named later. Mark Mason, Homestreet’s chairman, president and CEO, will stay on in a consulting role, according to a press release.
“The combined company will have a strong branch footprint and deposit market share in the best markets in the west, strong core deposit funding, a well-diversified, conservatively underwritten loan portfolio and a growing wealth management and trust business,” he said in a press release.
Homestreet was
Mechanics, founded in 1905,
Homestreet’s stock rose nearly 25% to $11.62 per share as of late Monday afternoon, following the early morning announcement.
Mechanics got legal counsel from Wachtell, Rosen and Katz while JPMorgan served as financial advisor. Homestreet got legal counsel from Sullivan and Cromwell LLP, and Keefe, Bruyette and Woods was its financial advisor.