In a stunning move this morning, Reuters reports that the Bank of England is bailing out England's Northern Rock plc (LSE: NRK), which had the biggest share of the UK new mortgage market in the first half of 2007.
The strange thing about this bailout -- in the form of an unspecified emergency loan from England's version of the U.S. Federal Reserve -- is that Northern Rock forecasts a profit for 2007. Specifically, it now expects 2007 pretax profit $1.1 billion, albeit 23% below analysts' current consensus forecast.
Given this expected profit, why would Northern Rock need a bailout? The mortgage company depends on wholesale financing as the source of cash to lend out to borrowers. And given the weak state of the market for buying packages of mortgages it and its peers originate, it appears that Northern Rock faced a short-term liquidity crisis. The funds it's receiving are at a higher, penalty, interest rate.
NRK shares, already down 50% in 2007, plunged a further 20% in early trade. If there's anyone who knows how wide and deep the problems lie in the shaky global financial network built on mortgage-backed securities, they're not saying.
Peter Cohan is president of Peter S. Cohan & Associates, a management consulting and venture capital firm. He also teaches management at Babson College and edits The Cohan Letter.










