Washington Federal

Washington Federal, Inc.
Public
Traded as NASDAQ: WAFD
S&P 400 Component
Industry Finance, Investments, and Insurance
Headquarters Seattle, Washington, United States
Key people
Roy Whitehead (CEO)
Products Commercial and Consumer banking, Investment banking, Insurance, Mortgage
Website washingtonfederal.com

Washington Federal (NASDAQ: WAFD) is a Washington Corporation headquartered in Seattle, Washington. The Company is a bank holding company that conducts its operations through a federally insured national bank subsidiary, Washington Federal, National Association ("Bank").

Founded on April 24, 1917, as Ballard Savings and Loan, it kept the name of Bothell's Washington Federal Savings and Loan after merging with it in 1958. WFSL demutualized in 1982, and the present holding company structure was adopted in 1995.

History

Mergers and acquisitions

Mergers and acquisitions since 2000

On May 20, 2003, Washington Federal announced its planned acquisition of the four-branch, Seattle-based United Savings and Loan Bank. United Savings, founded on July 6, 1960, by Robert and Ruth J. Chinn, was the first Asian American-owned savings and loan in the United States. The completion of the sale was announced that September. The reported purchase price was $65 million.

WAFED acquired First Mutual Bank of Bellevue, WA. First Mutual Bank had vast experience in making commercial real estate loans, and operates a wholesale residential department with an emphasis in residential construction lending. This transaction closed in the first quarter of 2008. It is believed that this acquisition would give WAFED a commercial lending ability to complement its residential real estate lending.

On January 11, 2010, Washington Federal acquired the 18-branch, Bellingham-based Horizon Bank. Horizon Bank was seized by state regulators after the bank failed with assets of 1.3 billion dollars and deposits of 1.2 billion. Horizon Bank was the first bank that regulators shut down in 2010. Washington Federal was able to purchase these assets at a discounted cost due to the number of risky loans on Horizon Bank's books. This transaction can ultimately cost the FDIC 536 million dollars, almost 50% of the bank's assets. Many of the assets were tied to speculative loans for commercial real estate purchased during the height of the real estate bubble in 2006. When this bubble collapsed, many of these risky loans lost their value. Washington Federal has agreed to absorb 20% of these losses with the remainder being covered by the FDIC. These costs can be reduced as the economy recovers due to rising commercial real estate values. If this occurs the losses by the FDIC would be significantly reduced.

Washington Federal stocks dropped 5.9% on the announcement of this deal due to share holder expectations that a larger acquisition deal would have occurred.

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