Steven Mnuchin leads $1 billion attempt to rescue NYCB

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New York Community Bank (NYCB) made a dramatic attempt to regain investor confidence by announcing a new CEO and a $1 billion infusion from a group that includes former Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin.

The moves on Wednesday came after the stock of the $114 billion lender fell as much as 45% following a report that NYCB was on the hunt for investors willing to buy stock in the company.

After the $1 billion deal was announced, the stock rebounded as much as 18%. It closed the day up more than 7%.

The firms that lined up to provide the infusion include Liberty Strategic Capital, a firm founded by Mnuchin in 2021, as well as Hudson Bay Capital, Reverence Capital Partners, and Citadel Global Equities.

They and some bank managers will purchase common and convertible-preferred stock, effectively taking control of the Hicksville, N.Y.-based company.

The deal also comes with a new change at the top. Former Comptroller of the Currency Joseph Otting will become NYCB's new CEO, the third person to hold that title in just the last few weeks.

The transaction is scheduled to close by March 11 and is still subject to regulatory approvals.

Steven Mnuchin, founder of Liberty Strategic Capital and former Treasury secretary. (David Swanson/REUTERS) · (REUTERS / Reuters)

"In evaluating this investment, we were mindful of the bank's credit risk profile," Mnuchin said in a press release. His firm is expected to contribute $450 million, more than the other investors.

"With the over $1 billion of capital invested in the bank, we believe we now have sufficient capital should reserves need to be increased in the future to be consistent with or above the coverage ratio of NYCB's large bank peers."

Mnuchin, who served as Treasury secretary under President Donald Trump and previously was a Goldman Sachs partner, has past experience with another troubled bank.

IndyMac was a prominent bank failure during the 2008 financial crisis. (Nick Ut/AP Photo) · (ASSOCIATED PRESS)

In 2009, he was part of an investor group that acquired California mortgage lender IndyMac Bank for roughly $1.5 billion after it had been seized by the federal government during the 2008 financial crisis.

He and the group renamed that lender OneWest and hired Otting to help turn it around. OneWest was eventually sold to CIT Bank for more than $3 billion, and Otting later served as acting Comptroller of the Currency during the Trump administration.

This new rescue of NYCB comes with several changes to NYCB's leadership. Otting, in becoming CEO, replaces Alessandro DiNello, who had been acting as the bank’s true boss since Feb. 6 and officially became CEO last week following the exit of longtime CEO Thomas Cangemi.

DiNello will become non-executive chair on a smaller nine-person board that includes a number of new faces, including Mnuchin, Otting, Allen Puwalski from Hudson Bay, and Milton Berlinski from Reverence Capital.