Imperial Corp. of America: Hit with bad...
- Share via
Imperial Corp. of America: Hit with bad consumer loans and write-downs of its junk bond portfolio, the parent of San Diego-based Imperial Savings of California on Tuesday reported a $34-million loss for its second quarter.
ICA announced earlier that it was anticipating the loss and planned to reduce assets by $2 billion to conform with tough new capital-adequacy standards included in the $166-billion S & L rescue bill approaching passage by Congress.
The loss, in contrast with a profit of $10.4 million in last year’s second quarter, was caused mainly by $56.6 million in loan-loss provisions. Those included $25.9 million for anticipated consumer loan losses, including its fraud-ridden auto-loan portfolio purchased from Grand Wilshire of Glendora, a bankrupt finance company.
Also in the second quarter, Imperial took a $27.9-million write-down of its corporate bond portfolio, including a $22-million write-off on junk bonds issued by Integrated Resources, a troubled financial services company whose credit worthiness was recently downgraded. ICA said last month that the current value of its total junk bond portfolio is 8% less than its $1.35-billion cost.
Making up 12% of its $11.9 billion in assets, Imperial’s junk bond portfolio is the second largest in the country in percentage of assets.
Imperial is shrinking its assets as part of a plan to boost capital to the 3% tangible net capital minimum required by the proposed S&L; bail-out bill. Imperial’s current tangible capital is only 1.32% of assets. Last month, Imperial announced plans to sell both its bank credit card and auto-lease divisions, moves that combined would cut assets by $675 million.
Imperial President Kenneth Thygerson resigned last month and was replaced by board member Allan Tessler.
More to Read
Inside the business of entertainment
The Wide Shot brings you news, analysis and insights on everything from streaming wars to production — and what it all means for the future.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.