Term Sheet

The latest on private equity, M&A, deals and movements — from Wall Street to Silicon Valley

Chris Flowers: Europe will help us buy banks

March 1, 2012: 2:56 PM ET

Eyeing European banks

Will European governments give away the banks?

Chris Flowers doesn't make too many speeches, and certainly not in countries where he had invested in a pair of local financial institutions that later required government bailouts. But there he was at the podium in Berlin this morning, as a keynote speaker for the SuperReturn International conference.

The private equity investor's primary message was that European governments will eventually assist in the sales of their troubled banks. Just like the U.S. did after the 2008 financial crisis, and Japan did nearly a decade earlier. In both of those cases, Flowers was a major player -- helping to acquire IndyMac in 2008 and helping to acquire Long-Term Credit Bank of Japan (renamed Shinsei Bank) in 2000.

"Governments resist doing this... It's like the phases of coming to terms with illness, the denial and ultimately acceptance," Flowers said. "European governments... have to do this."

The basics of such deals are that private equity firms like J.C. Flowers & Co. acquire the bank, while the national government assumes all, or part, of the bank's risky loan portfolio. If the loans aren't repaid, most of the loss is taken by the government. If they do get repaid, private equity reaps the benefits. It's basically a "heads we win, tails you lose" scenario -- well, so long as "we" are the private equity folks.

Flowers did note, however, that the European situation is a bit different than it was in either the U.S. or Japan. First, there is sovereign risk in Europe -- particularly in countries like Greece, Italy, Portugal and Spain. Related to this are some liquidity concerns, which didn't really exist in the U.S. or Japan. Finally, Europe features a multi-national financial regulatory body in Brussels that is full of competing interests.

But, for Flowers, these are challenges to be overcome. He said that he's maintaining an unusually high level of "dry powder" in his firm's $2.3 billion private equity fund, so as to be able to buy when the time is right: "If things end up being okay, then there will be lots of buying opportunities. But if the euro breaks up, everything is going to be a lot cheaper."

Get Dan's daily email newsletter on deals and deal-makers: GetTermSheet.com

Join the Conversation
About This Author
Dan Primack
Dan Primack
Senior Editor, Fortune

Dan Primack joined Fortune.com in September 2010 to cover deals and dealmakers, from Wall Street to Sand Hill Road. Previously, Dan was an editor-at-large with Thomson Reuters, where he launched both peHUB.com and the peHUB Wire email service. In a past journalistic life, Dan ran a community paper in Roxbury, Massachusetts. He currently lives just outside of Boston.

Email a Tip | @danprimack | RSS
Featured Newsletters

Every morning, discover the companies, deals and trends in tech that are moving markets and making headlines.

Receive Fortune's newsletter on all the deals that matter, from Wall Street to Sand Hill Road. SUBSCRIBE

Covering the digital giants of Silicon Valley and beyond, an in-depth look at enterprise companies, and the startups disrupting them. Emailed twice weekly.

Anne Fisher answers career-related questions and offers helpful advice for business professionals.

Company Price Change % Change
Bank of America Corp... 6.92 -0.07 -0.93%
Dell Inc 12.40 -2.68 -17.77%
Ford Motor Co 10.30 0.12 1.13%
Intel Corp 25.23 -0.80 -3.07%
Microsoft Corp 28.92 -0.84 -2.82%
Data as of 2:08pm ET
Index Last Change % Change
Dow 12,356.63 -146.18 -1.17%
Nasdaq 2,811.22 -27.86 -0.98%
S&P 500 1,302.29 -14.34 -1.09%
Treasuries 1.72 -0.07 -4.02%
Data as of 2:23pm ET
Most Popular
Investors sue Facebook, Morgan Stanley
 
HP prepares to announce mass layoffs
 
Facebook stock finally posts gains
 
Regulators eye Morgan Stanley's pre-Facebook IPO actions
 
Tech sell-off, Greece worries hit stocks
 
Powered by WordPress.com VIP.