Las Vegas Review-Journal

BB&T, Suntrust merger to create sixth-largest retail bank in U.S.

- By Ken Sweet The Associated Press

NEW YORK — Southern banking giants BB&T and Suntrust announced they would merge in a $66 billion deal, the first big bank merger since the chaos of the 2008 financial crisis. The deal would create yet another financial titan in the U.S.

The combined company will be the sixth-largest retail bank in the country, putting BB&T and Suntrust in the ranks of other megabanks like Jpmorgan Chase, Bank of America and Wells Fargo.

The banks said Thursday that the combined company will have $442 billion in assets, $301 billion in loans and $324 billion in deposits serving more than 10 million households. The two banks’ market share will make them a formidable presence in the South, particular­ly in growing parts of the country like Atlanta and Nashville, Tennessee. The companies operate banks from Pennsylvan­ia to Florida, and as far west as Texas.

Big bank mergers had been nonexisten­t after the financial crisis, when a flurry of government-directed mergers created a handful of megabanks. Wells Fargo merged with Wachovia, Jpmorgan acquired Bear Stearns and Washington Mutual and Bank of America purchased Merrill Lynch. Most bank mergers stopped after the crisis because the banks had to clean up their balance sheets, and the regulatory environmen­t under the Obama administra­tion made mergers more difficult.

Since that time, the gap between the size of the big Wall Street banks and the regional banks like BB&T, Suntrust, PNC Bank, FifthThird and others has only widened. The only bank with the size and scale of the new merged Bb&t-suntrust would be Minneapoli­s-based U.S. Bank, which has a large presence in the Midwest and Rocky Mountains. But even U.S. Bank with $456 billion in assets is dwarfed by the next largest institutio­n, Citigroup, which has more than $1.4 trillion in assets.

The Trump administra­tion is taking a much softer stance on bank regulation­s, and has appointed dozens of new business-friendly policymake­rs into critical positions at the nation’s bank regulators. Further, Congress passed a law last yeartoease­someofthe rules put into place under the Dodd-frank Act after the financial crisis.

“The regulatory environmen­t is much easier for something of this size to happen,” said Brian Klock, an analyst with KBW.

Klock said he believes that with attention of the SunTrust-bb&t deal, as well as the easier regulatory environmen­t, more large bank mergers may be coming.

Under the terms of the deal, Suntrust shareholde­rs will receive 1.295 shares of BB&T for each share they own. BB&T shareholde­rs will own about 57 percent of the combined company and Suntrust shareholde­rs will own the rest — creating roughly a merger of equals. The new merged bank will have a new name, the companies said, and will be headquarte­red in Charlotte, North Carolina.

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