The regional bank holding company that owns Santa Barbara Bank & Trust is selling itself to Union Bank for $1.5 billion, according the federal documents released today, less than two years after a Texas billionaire bailed the parent company out.
On March 9, Santa Barbara-based Pacific Capital Bancorp entered in to a merger agreement with Delaware-based with UnionBanCal Corp., known as UBC. The agreement says a corporation, formed in Delaware as a wholly owned subsidiary of UBC, will merge with and into Pacific Capital.
Some details are yet to be worked out; however, it appears the big fish is swallowing the smaller Santa Barbara-based company in a deal that could be closed within the next nine months. Pacific Capital owns five other banks up and down the Central Coast.
According to a Security and Exchange Commission filing, each outstanding share of Pacific Capital’s common stock will be converted into the right to receive $46 per share in cash, without interest.
When the merger was announced, there were outstanding warrants to purchase 15,120 shares of Pacific Capital’s common stock held by the U.S. Treasury Department. That refers to the more than $180 million in TARP, or Troubled Asset Recovery, funds Pacific Capital took from the 2008 federal bank bailout.
When Texas billionaire banker Gerald Ford pumped in $500 million to further shore up Pacific Capital in 2010, the Treasury Department agreed to allow his company to pay back only about two-thirds of the federal bailout money.
Back in the dark days of 2008 when Pacific Capital reported multimillion-dollar losses, it laid off more than 325 of its 1,664 full-time employees and cut retiree benefits as loan losses mounted. The company has since hired back most of those workers.
Just last month, Pacific Capital reported net income of $12.3 million for the three-month period that ended December 31, compared with $20.5 million for the three-month period that ended September 30, 2011.
That brought the company’s total net income to $96.3 million since Ford bailed out the region’s largest bank holding company on August 31, 2010. Pacific Capital’s net income for the entire 2011 totaled $70.5 million.
The company is “operating from a position of strength and stability,” Webb said in a January 31 news release. Obviously, that made it a good buy for Union Bank.
The South Coast Biz Blog is a roundup of business news in the Santa Barbara area and is written by Ray Estrada, restrada_2001@yahoo.com, who has covered business in the region for numerous publications over the past couple decades. See more at independent.com/biz and southcoastbizblog.


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"When Texas billionaire banker Gerald Ford pumped in $500 million to further shore up Pacific Capital in 2010, the Treasury Department agreed to allow his company to pay back only about two-thirds of the federal bailout money."
Our tax dollars at work.
Georgy (anonymous profile)
March 12, 2012 at 12:28 p.m. (Suggest removal)
No mention of all the jobs that are being lost now because of this "merger..?!!!" Some "community" bank this turned out to be!!!! Shame on you SBBT owners!!!!!! What a sell out!
sbmom78 (anonymous profile)
March 12, 2012 at 2:43 p.m. (Suggest removal)
And this is good for the customers how?
John_Adams (anonymous profile)
March 13, 2012 at 8:05 a.m. (Suggest removal)
I am writing a story about the SBBT acquisition today. If you are a former employee or someone who was/is otherwise involved with SBBT, feel free to contact me. brandonATindependent.com or call the paper.
sbmom78--According to George Leis, Pres and CEO of SBBT, and Time Wennes from Union at the press conference yesterday, decisions on job cuts have not been made yet.
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brandon (Brandon Fastman)
March 13, 2012 at 9:09 a.m. (Suggest removal)
I guess I will have to find a new bank after so many years with the local Santa Barbara Bank. Before that I was with Santa Barbara Savings and Loan... until the Bank of America (I call it Bank of Atrocities) bought them out.
At that time, BofA was supporting the Apartheid Regime in South Africa. And their board in Guatemala was running death squads there. Nice corporation.
Not sure what these big corporations are thinking when they buy local banks and almost everyone closes their accounts as a result.
sbrobert (anonymous profile)
March 13, 2012 at 10:53 a.m. (Suggest removal)
1. Mr Ford put his $$$ here because that's what he does, that's his business. This was one of his best deals - triple return in a very short time.
2. The shareholders, not the Bank, voted for this sale. On the other hand, Mr Ford already owned 51% of the stock.
3. This is what usually happens: customer-facing employees will keep their jobs so the customers will feel good. The back office employees will be let go as Union centralizes these operations that are already in place within their company.
4. It still sucks. The 100-1 reverse stock split left most of us holding a lot of nothing. If you have any shares left, sell them now while the stock is at $45/share & get out.
summer (anonymous profile)
March 14, 2012 at 8:49 a.m. (Suggest removal)
At a City Council meeting last night in Ojai, there was a motion to pass a city resolution rejecting corporate personhood, and calling for a constitutional amendment that corporations are not people and money is not speech.
Council member Sue Horgan was the only one to vote "no" on this resolution.
Sue Horgan has been working for banks for at least twenty years, including for Union Bank in Los Angeles. She currently works for Santa Barbara Bank and Trust, about to be bought out by Union Bank.
I believe that her close ties to the banks, and the fact that corporations that she works for benefit from personhood, affected her decision to vote no rejecting corporate personhood. In doing so, she was representing the corporations she works for, and not the people of the city of ojai.
http://www.facebook.com/RecallOjaiCit...
OccupyMiraMonte (anonymous profile)
March 14, 2012 at 3:08 p.m. (Suggest removal)
I hope there is an investigative journalist out there that will look at what happened to the original stock holders as Mr. Ford walks away dbl'g his money.
Tomc (anonymous profile)
March 16, 2012 at 11:24 a.m. (Suggest removal)