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BNC Mortgage Managers Offer to Buy Company for $47 Million

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Wall Street may not appreciate BNC Mortgage Corp., but its managers figure they know a good deal when they see it.

An investment group led by top BNC managers is offering to pay about $47 million, or $10 a share, for the Irvine lender, which specializes in making residential loans to borrowers with poor credit.

The price represents a 35% premium over the company’s stock price before the deal was announced. But it’s a bargain compared with the $9.50 a share that investors paid in the 1998 initial public offering.

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Further, based on the recent sales of similar mortgage lenders, BNC is selling at a substantial discount. For example, Long Beach Financial Corp. in Orange was acquired last year by Washington Mutual for about $350 million, or more than three times the company’s book value.

Applying a similar multiple to BNC’s book value would suggest a value of more than $90 million.

Finally, BNC is still sitting on loads of cash that it raised--and hasn’t spent--when it went public. The company has about $30 million on its books, which, subtracted from the purchase price, makes the management-led offer even cheaper.

BNC President Kelly Monahan defended the buyout offer, noting that the company had hired an outside auditor to ensure that shareholders were getting a good price.

“If someone else wants to come in, there is room for a superior offer,” Monahan said.

Under the terms of the deal, any bidder would be required to pay a $2-million breakup fee.

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Edmund Sanders covers financial institutions and fraud for The Times. He can be reached at (714) 966-5811 and at edmund.sanders@latimes.com.

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