sv3za
As filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on
December 2, 2008
Registration No. 333-154181
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
Washington, D.C.
20549
Pre-effective Amendment No. 1
to
Form S-3
REGISTRATION
STATEMENT
UNDER
THE SECURITIES ACT OF
1933
IRWIN FINANCIAL
CORPORATION
(Exact Name of Registrant as
Specified in Charter)
|
|
|
Indiana
|
|
35-1286807
|
(State or other jurisdiction
of
incorporation or organization)
|
|
(IRS Employer Identification
Number)
|
500 WASHINGTON STREET
COLUMBUS, IN 47201
(812) 376-1909
(Address, Including Zip Code,
and Telephone Number,
Including Area Code, of
Registrants Principal Executive Offices)
STEVEN R. SCHULTZ
FIRST VICE PRESIDENT
AND GENERAL COUNSEL
500 WASHINGTON STREET
COLUMBUS, IN 47201
(812) 376-1891
(Name, Address, Including Zip
Code, and Telephone Number,
Including Area Code, of Agent
for Service)
Copies to:
H. Rodgin Cohen, Esq.
Jay Clayton, Esq.
Sullivan & Cromwell LLP
125 Broad Street
New York, New York 10004
(212) 558-4000
Approximate date of commencement of proposed sale to the
public: As soon as practicable after the
effective date of the registration statement.
If the only securities being registered on this Form are being
offered pursuant to dividend or interest reinvestment plans,
please check the following
box. o
If any of the securities being registered on this Form are to be
offered on a delayed or continuous basis pursuant to
Rule 415 under the Securities Act of 1933, other than
securities offered only in connection with dividend or interest
reinvestment plans, check the following
box. þ
If this Form is filed to register additional securities for an
offering pursuant to Rule 462(b) under the Securities Act,
please check the following box and list the Securities Act
registration statement number of the earlier effective
registration statement for the same
offering. o
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a large
accelerated filer, an accelerated filer, a non-accelerated
filer, or a smaller reporting company. See the definitions of
large accelerated filer, accelerated
filer and smaller reporting company in Rule
12b-2 of the
Exchange Act. (Check one):
|
|
|
|
Large
accelerated
filer o
|
Accelerated
filer þ
|
Non-accelerated
filer o
|
Smaller
reporting
company o
|
(Do not check if a smaller reporting company)
The
information in this prospectus is not complete and may be
changed. This prospectus is not an offer to sell these
securities and it is not soliciting an offer to buy these
securities in any state where the offer or sale is not
permitted.
|
SUBJECT TO COMPLETION, DATED
DECEMBER 2, 2008
PROSPECTUS
IRWIN
FINANCIAL CORPORATION
COMMON SHARES
Subscription Rights to Purchase up to
Common Shares at $ per
Share
We are distributing, at no charge, to holders of our common
shares non-transferable subscription rights to purchase up
to
of our common shares. We refer to this offering as the
rights offer. In the rights offer, you will receive
one subscription right for each full common share owned at
5:00 p.m., New York time,
on ,
2008, the record date.
Each subscription right will entitle you to
purchase
of our common shares at a subscription price of
$ per full share, which we refer
to as the basic subscription privilege. If you fully exercise
your basic subscription privilege and other shareholders do not
fully exercise their basic subscription privileges, you will be
entitled to exercise an over-subscription privilege to purchase
a portion of the unsubscribed common shares at the same
subscription price of $ per full
share, subject to proration and subject, further, to reduction
by us in certain circumstances.
To the extent you properly exercise your over-subscription
privilege for an amount of shares that exceeds the number of the
unsubscribed shares available to you, any excess subscription
payments received by the subscription agent will be returned
promptly, without interest or penalty.
The subscription rights will expire if they are not exercised by
5:00 p.m., New York time,
on ,
2008, unless we extend the rights offer period, but in no event
will the rights offer be extended by more than 30 days.
There is no minimum subscription requirement in the rights
offer. However, our board of directors reserves the right to
cancel the rights offer for any reason. In the event the rights
offer is cancelled, all subscription payments received by the
subscription agent will be returned promptly, without interest
or penalty.
We have separately entered into standby purchase agreements with
certain investors, pursuant to which, subject to conditions,
these investors have severally agreed to acquire from us, at the
same subscription price offered to shareholders, any common
shares that are not subscribed for pursuant to the exercise of
basic subscription privileges or
over-subscription
privileges. We also have commitments to exercise rights from our
directors and two existing shareholders who are not directors.
The amount of standby commitments and commitments to exercise
rights is $37 million, including the amount to be purchased
by members of the Miller family in connection with their
commitments to first exercise rights with respect to their
current shareholdings.
The rights offer is a highly important component of our
ongoing restructuring plan and is intended to (1) help
achieve the objectives set forth in written agreements that we
entered into with our bank regulators on October 10, 2008,
(2) allow us to maintain our capital ratios above the
levels that we have agreed upon with our bank regulators,
(3) provide existing shareholders the opportunity to limit
ownership dilution and (4) position our holding company and
bank subsidiaries to return to profitability and respond to
future business and financing needs and opportunities. We can
provide no assurance that our holding company and our bank
subsidiaries will remain within all regulatory capital
requirements or in compliance with the terms of the written
agreements during the period a purchaser of our common shares
will own such shares. The failure to satisfy regulatory capital
requirements or to comply with the terms of the written
agreements could result in significant enforcement actions
against us including a regulatory takeover of our bank
subsidiaries.
YOU SHOULD CAREFULLY CONSIDER WHETHER TO EXERCISE YOUR
SUBSCRIPTION RIGHTS PRIOR TO THE EXPIRATION OF THE RIGHTS OFFER.
ALL EXERCISES OF SUBSCRIPTION RIGHTS ARE IRREVOCABLE. PURCHASE
OF OUR COMMON SHARES INVOLVES A HIGH DEGREE OF RISK. YOU SHOULD
READ RISK FACTORS BEGINNING ON PAGE 13.
Our outstanding common shares currently are, and we expect that
the common shares to be issued in the rights offer will be,
listed for trading on the New York Stock Exchange (the
NYSE) under the symbol IFC. The last
sale price of our common shares on December 1, 2008 was
$1.70.
This is not an underwritten offering. Our common shares are
being offered directly by us without the services of an
underwriter or selling agent. We have engaged Stifel,
Nicolaus & Company, Incorporated as our financial and
marketing advisor in connection with the rights offer. Stifel,
Nicolaus is not obligated to purchase any of the common shares
that are being offered for sale.
These securities are not deposits, savings accounts or
other obligations of any bank and are not insured or guaranteed
by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation or any other
government agency. Neither the Securities and Exchange
Commission, the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve, the
Office of Thrift Supervision, the Indiana Department of
Financial Institutions nor any state securities regulator has
approved or disapproved of these securities or determined if
this prospectus us accurate or complete. Any representation to
the contrary is a criminal offense.
,
2008
SPECIAL
NOTE REGARDING FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS
Certain statements contained in this prospectus constitute
forward-looking statements within the meaning of
Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933 and
Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. We
intend such forward-looking statements to be covered by the safe
harbor provisions for forward-looking statements contained in
the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, and are
including this statement for purposes of invoking these safe
harbor provisions. You can identify these statements from our
use of the words plan, forecast,
estimate, project, believe,
intend, anticipate, expect,
target, is likely, will, and
similar expressions. These forward-looking statements may
include, among other things:
|
|
|
|
|
statements and assumptions relating to financial performance;
|
|
|
|
statements relating to the anticipated effects on results of
operations or financial condition from recent or future
developments or events;
|
|
|
|
statements relating to our business and growth strategies and
our regulatory capital levels;
|
|
|
|
|
|
the expected timing for completion of the transactions described
herein;
|
|
|
|
|
|
the expected effect of the restructuring and this offering on
the Corporations balance sheet, profitability, liquidity,
and capital ratios;
|
|
|
|
|
|
statements relating to our participation in the
U.S. Treasury Departments Capital Purchase Program
and its potential effect on our regulatory capital
levels; and
|
|
|
|
|
|
any other statements, projections or assumptions that are not
historical facts.
|
We qualify any forward-looking statements entirely by these and
the following cautionary factors:
Actual future results may differ materially from our
forward-looking statements and we qualify all forward-looking
statements by various risks and uncertainties we face, as well
as the assumptions underlying the statements, including the
following, cautionary factors: difficulties in raising capital
through this rights offer and in effectuating a recapitalization
through a proposed exchange of trust preferred securities for
common shares, including the failure of shareholders to
participate in the rights offer, or the failure to satisfy the
conditions that require the standby purchasers to purchase
common shares; difficulties in completing the transactions for
the disposition of our home equity business including selling or
otherwise reducing risk associated with home equity loans on our
balance sheet, or the completion of due diligence satisfactory
to potential purchasers; failure to obtain any necessary
regulatory approvals, third-party consents or bondholder
consents for any dispositions or other transactions; satisfying
conditions necessary to release purchase price proceeds from
escrow; obtaining the desired tax treatment for any
dispositions; potential deterioration or effects of general or
regional economic conditions, particularly in sectors relating
to real estate
and/or
mortgage lending, small business lending, and franchise
restaurants finance; participation or lack of participation in
governmental programs implemented under the Emergency Economic
Stabilization Act of 2008, including without limitation the
Troubled Asset Relief Program and the Capital Purchase Program,
and the impact of such programs and related regulations on us
and on national and local economic and financial markets and
conditions; fluctuations in housing prices; potential effects
related to the companys decision to suspend the payment of
dividends on its common, preferred and trust preferred
securities; potential changes in direction, volatility and
relative movement (basis risk) of interest rates, which may
affect consumer demand for our products and the management and
success of our interest rate risk management strategies;
staffing fluctuations in response to product demand or the
implementation of corporate strategies that affect our work
force; the relative profitability of our lending and deposit
operations; the valuation and management of our portfolios,
including the use of external and internal modeling assumptions
we embed in the valuation of those portfolios and
short-term
swings in the valuation of such portfolios; borrowers
refinancing opportunities, which may affect the prepayment
assumptions used in our valuation estimates and which may affect
loan demand; unanticipated deterioration in the credit quality
or collectability of our loan and lease assets, including
higher-than-expected increases in non-performing assets or
charge-offs; deterioration resulting from the effects of natural
disasters; levels of future repurchases of residential mortgage,
home
ii
equity, or other loans or leases due to alleged violations of
representations and warranties we made when selling these loans
and leases to the secondary market or in securitizations;
unanticipated deterioration or changes in estimates of the
carrying value of our other assets, including securities;
difficulties in delivering products to the secondary market as
planned; difficulties in expanding our business; difficulty in
obtaining or retaining deposit or other funding sources as
needed, including the loss of public fund deposits should our
state-chartered bank subsidiary become less than
well-capitalized, and other constraints resulting from
regulatory actions; competition from other financial service
providers for experienced managers as well as for customers;
changes in the value of our lines of business, subsidiaries, or
companies in which we invest; changes in variable compensation
plans related to the performance and valuation of lines of
business where we tie compensation systems to line-of-business
performance; unanticipated lawsuits or outcomes in litigation;
legislative or regulatory changes, including changes in laws,
rules or regulations that affect tax, consumer or commercial
lending, corporate governance and disclosure requirements, and
other laws, rules or regulations affecting the rights and
responsibilities of our holding company, state-chartered bank or
federal savings bank subsidiaries; regulatory actions that
impact our holding company, bank or thrift, including the
written agreement the company and its state-chartered bank
subsidiary, Irwin Union Bank and Trust Company, entered
into with the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago and the Indiana
Department of Financial Institutions on October 10, 2008,
and the written agreement the companys federal savings
bank subsidiary, Irwin Union Bank, F.S.B., entered into with the
Office of Thrift Supervision on the same day; changes in the
interpretation and application of regulatory capital or other
rules; the availability of resources to address changes in laws,
rules or regulations or to respond to regulatory actions;
changes in applicable accounting policies or principles or their
application to our businesses or final audit adjustments,
including additional guidance and interpretation on accounting
issues and details of the implementation of new accounting
methods; the final disposition of our remaining assets and
obligations relating to the lines of business we have exited or
are exiting, including the mortgage banking segment, small
ticket commercial leasing segment and home equity segment; or
governmental changes in monetary or fiscal policies.
In addition, our past results of operations are not necessarily
indicative of our future results. We discuss these and other
uncertainties in the Risk Factors section of this
prospectus beginning on page 13 and in Irwins Annual
Report on
Form 10-K
for the year ended December 31, 2007 and
Form 10-Q
for the quarter ended September 30, 2008, as well as in any
future filings we may make that may be incorporated by reference
herein. For information on the documents we are incorporating by
reference and how to obtain a copy, please see Where You
Can Find More Information in this prospectus. We undertake
no obligation to update publicly any of these statements in
light of future events, except as required in subsequent reports
we file with the Securities and Exchange Commission
(SEC).
iii
QUESTIONS
AND ANSWERS RELATING TO THE RIGHTS OFFER
What is
the rights offer?
We are distributing, at no charge, to holders of our common
shares non-transferable subscription rights to purchase our
common shares. You will receive one subscription right for each
common share you owned as of 5:00 p.m., New York time,
on ,
2008, the record date. Each subscription right will entitle the
holder to a basic subscription privilege and an
over-subscription privilege.
What is
the basic subscription privilege?
The basic subscription privilege of each subscription right
gives our shareholders the opportunity to
purchase
of our common shares at a subscription price of
$ per full share. For example, if
you owned 100 of our common shares as of 5:00 p.m., New
York time, on the record date, you would receive subscription
rights and would have the right to
purchase
common shares (rounded down
to shares,
with the total subscription payment being adjusted accordingly,
as discussed below) for $ per full
share (or a total payment of $ )
with your basic subscription privilege. You may exercise the
basic subscription privilege with respect to any number of
shares subject to your subscription rights, or you may choose
not to exercise any subscription rights at all.
If you hold shares evidenced by one or more Irwin Financial
Corporation share certificates, the number of rights you may
exercise pursuant to your basic subscription privilege is
indicated on the enclosed rights certificate. If you hold your
shares in the name of a broker, dealer, custodian bank or other
nominee who uses the services of the Depository
Trust Company (DTC), DTC will issue one subscription right
to the nominee for each common share you own at the record date.
The basic subscription privilege of each subscription right can
then be used to
purchase
common shares for $ per full
share. See What should I do if I want to
participate in the rights offer, but my shares are held in the
name of my broker, dealer, custodian bank or other
nominees?
Fractional common shares resulting from the exercise of the
basic subscription privilege will be eliminated by rounding down
to the nearest whole share, with the total subscription payment
being adjusted accordingly. Any excess subscription payments
received by the subscription agent will be returned promptly,
without interest or penalty.
If you hold our common shares through the Irwin Financial
Corporation Employees Savings Plan or the Irwin Mortgage
Corporation Retirement and Profit Sharing Plan (the Irwin
401k Plans), you will be able to exercise your basic
subscription privilege with respect to such shares, but you will
not have the opportunity to participate in the over-subscription
privilege with respect to such shares, as further described
below. Instructions for participating in the rights offer as a
holder of common shares through the Irwin 401k Plans are
described below under the heading What should
I do if I want to participate in the rights offer, but my shares
are held in an Irwin 401k Plan?
What is
the over-subscription privilege?
In the event that you purchase all of the common shares
available to you pursuant to your basic subscription privilege,
you may also choose to purchase any portion of our common shares
that are not purchased by our other shareholders through the
exercise of their basic subscription privileges. You should
indicate on your rights certificate how many additional shares
you would like to purchase pursuant to your over-subscription
privilege. Limitations on the amount of common shares that may
be subscribed for pursuant to your over-subscription privilege
are described below under the heading Are
there any limits on the number of shares I may purchase in the
rights offer or own as a result of the rights offer?
If sufficient common shares are available, we will seek to honor
your over-subscription request in full. If, however,
over-subscription requests exceed the number of common shares
available, we will allocate the available common shares pro rata
among the shareholders exercising the over-subscription
privilege in proportion to the number of common shares owned by
such shareholder on the record date, relative to the
1
number of shares owned on the record date by all shareholders
exercising the over-subscription privilege. If this pro rata
allocation results in any shareholder receiving a greater number
of common shares than the shareholder subscribed for pursuant to
the exercise of the over-subscription privilege, then such
shareholder will be allocated only that number of shares for
which the shareholder oversubscribed, and the remaining common
shares will be allocated among all other shareholders exercising
the over-subscription privilege on the same pro rata basis
described above. The proration process will be repeated until
all common shares have been allocated.
In order to properly exercise your over-subscription privilege,
you must deliver the subscription payment related to your
over-subscription privilege prior to the expiration of the
rights offer. Because we will not know the total number of
unsubscribed shares prior to the expiration of the rights offer,
if you wish to maximize the number of shares you purchase
pursuant to your over-subscription privilege, you will need to
deliver payment in an amount equal to the aggregate subscription
price for the maximum number of our common shares that may be
available to you (i.e., for the maximum number of common
shares available to you, assuming you exercise all of your basic
subscription privilege and are allotted the full amount of your
over-subscription. See The Rights Offer
Over-Subscription Privilege.
Fractional common shares resulting from the exercise of the
over-subscription privilege will be eliminated by rounding down
to the nearest whole share, with the total subscription payment
being adjusted accordingly. Any excess subscription payments
received by the subscription agent will be returned promptly,
without interest or penalty.
If you hold our common shares through either of the Irwin 401k
Plans, you will be able to exercise your basic subscription
privilege with respect to such shares, but you will not have the
opportunity to participate in the over-subscription privilege
with respect to such shares. Instructions for participating in
the rights offer as a holder of common shares through the Irwin
401k Plans are described below under the heading
What should I do if I want to participate in
the rights offer, but my shares are held in an Irwin 401k
Plan?
Are there
any limits on the number of shares I may purchase in the rights
offer or own as a result of the rights offer?
We will not issue common shares pursuant to the exercise of
basic subscription privileges or oversubscription privileges, or
to any shareholder or standby purchaser who, in our sole
opinion, could be required to obtain prior clearance or approval
from or submit a notice to any state or federal bank regulatory
authority to acquire, own or control such shares if, as
of ,
2008, such clearance or approval has not been obtained
and/or any
applicable waiting period has not expired. If we elect not to
issue shares in such a case, the unissued shares will become
available to satisfy over-subscriptions by other shareholders
pursuant to their over-subscription privilege and will
thereafter be available to standby purchasers. In addition, if
you hold our common shares solely through either of the Irwin
401k Plans, you will not have the opportunity to participate in
the over-subscription privilege in respect of those shares.
What is
the role of the standby purchasers in this offering?
In connection with the rights offer, we have separately entered
into standby purchase agreements with Cummins Inc., William I.
Miller (our chairman and chief executive officer), Catherine G.
Miller (a sister of William I. Miller),
Elizabeth G. Miller (a sister of William I. Miller),
Rodman Moorhead (a retired partner at Warburg Pincus LLP), Henry
B. Schacht (a former chief executive officer of Cummins Inc. and
Lucent Inc.), and John L. Vogelstein (a former vice chairman of
Warburg Pincus LLP) pursuant to which these investors have
severally agreed to acquire from us, at the same subscription
price offered to shareholders, any common shares that are not
subscribed for pursuant to the exercise of basic subscription
privileges or over-subscription privileges, subject to a maximum
amount set forth in each investors standby purchase
agreement. In addition, William I. Miller, our chairman and
chief executive officer and two of his sisters, Catherine G.
Miller and Elizabeth G. Miller, have irrevocably committed to
exercise basic subscription privileges in respect of shares they
own outright. The standby purchasers will purchase no more than
$37 million of common shares in the aggregate, including
the amount purchased by the Miller family in connection with
their commitments to first exercise rights with respect to
2
their current shareholdings. We and our financial advisor are
continuing to seek additional standby commitments. See The
Right Offer Standby Commitments.
Are there
any conditions to the standby commitments?
The standby purchases are subject to a number of conditions,
including conditions relating to satisfactory approvals from our
banking regulators. If any of the conditions is not satisfied,
the standby purchasers will not be required to purchase any
shares. Cummins Inc., John L. Vogelstein and Rodman Moorhead are
not required to purchase common shares if (i) the Federal
Reserve Bank of Chicago and the Indiana Department of Financial
Institutions determine that our holding company and Irwin Union
Bank and Trust Company will not remain
well-capitalized in light of foreseeable capital
requirements and that our capital plan, including the rights
offer, will not be satisfactory, (ii) they reasonably
believe that they will be deemed to control (within
the meaning of the Bank Holding Company Act of 1956, as amended,
or the Change in Bank Control Act, as amended) our holding
company or (iii) any consents or approvals required to be
obtained from any governmental authority in connection with the
purchase of shares pursuant to the standby commitments have not
been obtained or any applicable waiting periods or appeal
periods have not yet expired.
In addition to these conditions, (i) John L. Vogelstein and
Rodman Moorhead are not required to purchase common shares if
the subscription price set by our board of directors is equal to
or greater than the market price of our common shares as
calculated by the volume weighted average trading price on the
20 days preceding the date on which the rights offer is
priced and (ii) Cummins Inc. is not required to purchase
common shares if our holding company has not taken all required
actions to increase the size of our board by one director so
that a designee of Cummins Inc. may be elected or appointed to
the board in the future if Cummins so proposes. Even if we
satisfy all these conditions, Cummins Inc.s commitment may
be reduced such that it will not own more than 19.9% of our
common shares upon closing of the rights offer. See The
Rights Offer Standby Commitments.
Are the
standby purchasers receiving any compensation for the standby
commitments?
No. The standby purchasers are not receiving compensation for
their standby commitments.
What
agreements do we have with the standby purchasers?
Each standby purchaser executed a non-disclosure agreement and
accordingly gained access to certain nonpublic information about
us and participated in discussions with our management. They
performed a due diligence review of Irwin Financial Corporation
and subsequently negotiated and executed standby purchase
agreements. Any purchases will be made for investment purposes
and not with a view toward resale. However, under the terms of
the standby purchase agreements, we have agreed to provide
customary registration rights to the standby purchasers.
How many
shares will the standby purchasers own after the rights
offer?
The number of shares that will be purchased by the standby
purchasers can only be determined upon the completion of the
rights offer. The number of shares will be determined by
reference to a formula that provides that the standby purchasers
will purchase all the common shares that could have been but
were not subscribed for in the rights offer, up to a maximum
number of shares set forth in each investors standby
purchase agreement. The maximum number of shares that a standby
purchaser will purchase may vary depending on the standby
purchaser and cannot be determined until the completion of the
rights offer. If the rights offer is fully subscribed by
shareholders through the exercise of basic subscription
privileges or over-subscription privileges, the standby
purchasers will not purchase any of our shares pursuant to their
standby purchase agreements.
3
Is the
board of directors participating in the rights offer and has our
board made a recommendation to our shareholders regarding the
rights offer?
In addition to William I. Millers commitment to exercise
rights relating to shares he currently holds outright and his
additional standby commitment, each of the companys
directors has irrevocably committed to exercise rights received
in the offering. Eight of the nine independent directors have
made this election with respect to the full amount of his or her
basic subscription privilege. Any such purchases will be made
for investment purposes and not with a view toward resale.
Although each of our directors is investing his or her own money
in the rights offer, our board of directors is making no
recommendation regarding your exercise of the subscription
rights. Shareholders, including our directors, who exercise
subscription rights risk investment loss on new money invested.
We cannot assure you that the market price for our common shares
will be above the subscription price or that anyone purchasing
shares at the subscription price will be able to sell those
shares in the future at the same price or a higher price. You
are urged to make your decision based on your own assessment of
our business and the rights offer. Please see Risk
Factors for a discussion of some of the risks involved in
investing in our common shares.
Why are
we conducting the rights offer?
We are in the process of a strategic restructuring to refocus
our holding company and its bank and thrift subsidiaries on
serving small businesses and the communities in which we operate
in order to return to profitability in the rapidly evolving
U.S. banking industry. Raising our capital levels is an
important component of our restructuring plan. We have decided
to conduct the rights offer to enhance our capital and give
existing shareholders the opportunity to limit ownership
dilution. On October 10, 2008, our holding company and our
state-chartered subsidiary bank Irwin Union Bank and
Trust Company, entered into a written agreement with the
Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago and the Indiana Department of
Financial Institutions. On the same day, our federal savings
bank subsidiary Irwin Union Bank, F.S.B., entered into a written
agreement with the Office of Thrift Supervision. Both
agreements, require, among other things, that our holding
company and our bank subsidiaries prepare a capital plan that
will ensure that our holding company and our bank subsidiaries
maintain sufficient capital to comply with regulatory capital
guidelines and to address the volume of our adversely affected
assets, concentrations of credit, adequacy of our allowance for
loan and lease losses, planned growth and anticipated levels of
retained earnings. We believe that the rights offer will allow
us to continue to maintain our capital ratios above the levels
that we have agreed upon with our bank regulators, accomplish
the other objectives we and our bank regulators have set forth
in the written agreements, and position our holding company and
bank subsidiaries to return to profitability and respond to
future business and financing needs and opportunities.
Are we
pursuing other initiatives to improve our capital
position?
We are considering undertaking exchange offers whereby a portion
of our trust preferred securities will be exchanged for our
common shares concurrently with the completion of this rights
offer. If the exchange offers are completed, the capital that is
attributable to the trust preferred securities to be exchanged
will be reclassified to Tier 1, instead of its current
Tier 2 capital classification, thereby strengthening our
capital levels. In addition, the exchange offers will reduce our
continuing obligation to pay or accrue quarterly interest
payments on the trust preferred securities that will be
exchanged. At this time, we are unable to determine if, or how
much of, the trust preferred securities will be exchanged for
our common shares. See How many common shares
will be outstanding after the rights offer?
How was
the $ per full share subscription
price for the rights offer determined?
Our board of directors will form a pricing committee to
determine the subscription price. The pricing committee will
consider a number of factors, including the price at which our
shareholders might be willing to participate in the rights
offer, historical and current trading prices for our common
shares, the need for capital, and the desire to provide an
opportunity to our shareholders to participate in the rights
offer on a pro rata basis. In conjunction with its review of
these factors, our board of directors is currently reviewing our
history
4
and prospects, including our past and present earnings, our
prospects for future earnings, our current financial condition
and regulatory status, and a range of discounts to market value
represented by the subscription prices in various prior rights
offers of public companies. The subscription price will not
necessarily be related to our book value, net worth or any other
established criteria of value and may or may not be considered
the fair value of our common shares to be offered in the rights
offer. The Company cannot give any assurance that our common
shares will trade at or above the subscription price in any
given time period.
Am I
required to exercise all of the subscription rights I receive in
the rights offer?
No. You may exercise any number of your subscription rights, or
you may choose not to exercise any subscription rights. However,
if you choose not to exercise your basic subscription privilege
in full, the relative percentage of our common shares that you
own will decrease, and your voting and other rights will be
diluted. In addition, if you do not exercise your basic
subscription privilege in full, you will not be entitled to
participate in the over-subscription privilege. See
How many common shares will be outstanding
after the rights offer?
How soon
must I act to exercise my subscription rights?
If you received a rights certificate and elect to exercise any
or all of your subscription rights, the subscription agent must
receive your completed and signed rights certificate and payment
prior to the expiration of the rights offer, which
is ,
2008, at 5:00 p.m., New York time. If you hold your shares
in the name of a custodian bank, broker, dealer or other
nominee, your custodian bank, broker, dealer or other nominee
may establish a deadline prior to 5:00 p.m. New York
time,
on ,
2008 by which you must provide it with your instructions to
exercise your subscription rights and pay for your shares.
If you hold our common shares through either of the Irwin 401k
Plans, you may exercise your basic subscription privilege (but
not any over-subscription privilege) by following the
instructions described below under the heading
What should I do if I want to participate in
the rights offer, but my shares are held in an Irwin 401k
Plan?
Our board of directors may, in its discretion, extend the rights
offer one or more times, but in no event will the rights offer
be extended by more than 30 days. Our board of directors
may cancel the rights offer at any time. In the event that the
rights offer is cancelled, all subscription payments received
will be returned promptly, without interest or penalty.
Notwithstanding the deadline for other shareholders set forth in
this prospectus, if you hold common shares through either of the
Irwin 401k Plans and do not exercise all of the subscription
rights credited to your accounts before 4:00 p.m. New
York time
on ,
2008, your subscription rights will expire.
Although we will make reasonable attempts to provide this
prospectus to holders of subscription rights, the rights offer
and all subscription rights will expire at 5:00 p.m., New
York time
on ,
2008 (unless extended), whether or not we have been able to
locate each person entitled to subscription rights. Although we
have the option of extending the expiration of the rights offer,
we currently do not intend to do so.
May I
transfer my subscription rights?
No. You may not sell, transfer or assign your subscription
rights to anyone. Subscription rights will not be listed for
trading on the New York Stock Exchange or any other stock
exchange or market or on the OTC Bulletin Board. Rights
certificates may only be completed by the shareholder who
receives the certificate.
Are we
requiring a minimum subscription to complete the rights
offer?
There is no minimum subscription requirement in the rights
offer. However, our board of directors reserves the right to
cancel the rights offer for any reason, including if we do not
receive aggregate subscriptions that we believe will satisfy the
capital plans set forth in the written agreements with our bank
regulators. See Why are we conducting the
rights offer?
Can our
board of directors extend, cancel or amend the rights
offer?
Yes. We have the option to extend the rights offer and the
period for exercising your subscription rights, although we do
not presently intend to do so. In the event that our board of
directors decides to extend the rights offer, in no event will
the rights offer be extended by more than 30 days. Our
board of directors may
5
cancel the rights offer at any time for any reason. In the
event that the rights offer is cancelled, all subscription
payments received by the subscription agent will be returned
promptly, without interest or penalty. The board of directors
reserves the right to amend or modify the terms of the rights
offer.
What will
happen if I choose not to exercise my subscription
rights?
Shareholders who do not exercise their subscription rights will
lose any value that may be represented by the rights. If you do
not exercise any subscription rights, the number of our common
shares you own will not change. Due to the fact that shares will
be purchased by other shareholders and the standby purchasers
pursuant to their obligations under the standby purchase
agreements, your percentage ownership of our company will be
diluted after the completion of the rights offer, unless you
exercise your basic subscription privilege.
In addition, we are contemplating offering the holders of a
portion of our trust preferred securities the opportunity to
exchange their trust preferred shares for common shares. If we
complete this exchange offer, additional common shares will be
issued to the holders of the trust preferred shares. As a result
of the exchange offer, the ownership interests and voting
interests of all existing shareholders, even those that fully
participate in the rights offer and the standby purchasers, will
be substantially diluted. We cannot determine the amount of
dilution at this time. See How many common
shares will be outstanding after the rights offer?
How do I
exercise my subscription rights if I own shares in certificate
form?
If you hold shares evidenced by one or more Irwin Financial
Corporation share certificates and you wish to participate in
the rights offer, you must take the following steps:
|
|
|
|
|
deliver payment to the subscription agent; and
|
|
|
|
|
|
deliver your properly completed and signed rights certificate,
and any other subscription documents, to the subscription agent.
|
Please follow the payment and delivery instructions accompanying
the rights certificate. Do not deliver documents to Irwin
Financial Corporation. You are solely responsible for completing
delivery to the subscription agent of your subscription
documents, rights certificate and payment. We urge you to allow
sufficient time for delivery of your subscription materials to
the subscription agent so that they are received by the
subscription agent by 5:00 p.m. New York time,
on ,
2008.
If you send a payment that is insufficient to purchase the
number of shares you requested, or if the number of shares you
requested is not specified in the forms, the payment received
will be applied to exercise your subscription rights to the full
extent possible based on the amount of the payment received,
subject to the availability of shares under the
over-subscription privilege and the elimination of fractional
shares. Any excess subscription payments received by the
subscription agent will be returned promptly, without interest
or penalty, following the expiration of the rights offer.
What form
of payment is required to purchase our common shares?
As described in the instructions accompanying the rights
certificate, payments submitted to the subscription agent must
be made in full United States currency, in immediately available
funds, by:
|
|
|
|
|
certified bank check or bank draft payable to Irwin Financial
Corporation, drawn upon a United States bank;
|
|
|
|
|
|
postal, telegraphic or express money order payable to Irwin
Financial Corporation; or
|
|
|
|
|
|
wire transfer of immediately available funds to the account
maintained by the subscription agent.
|
You may not remit personal checks of any type.
6
What
should I do if I want to participate in the rights offer, but my
shares are held in the name of my broker, dealer, custodian bank
or other nominee?
If you hold your common shares in the name of a broker, dealer,
custodian bank or other nominee, then your broker, dealer,
custodian bank or other nominee is the record holder of the
shares you own. You will not receive a rights certificate. The
record holder must exercise the subscription rights on your
behalf for the common shares you wish to purchase.
If you wish to purchase our common shares through the rights
offer, please promptly contact your broker, dealer, custodian
bank or other nominee as record holder of your shares. We will
ask your record holder to notify you of the rights offer.
However, if you are not contacted by your broker, dealer,
custodian bank or other nominee, you should promptly initiate
contact with that intermediary. Your broker, dealer, custodian
bank or other nominee may establish a deadline prior to the
5:00 p.m. New York time
on ,
2008, which we established as the expiration date of the rights
offer.
What
should I do if I want to participate in the rights offer, but my
shares are held in an Irwin 401k Plan?
If you hold our common shares through one of the Irwin 401k
Plans, you may exercise your basic subscription privilege with
respect to those common shares that you hold through an Irwin
401k Plan (but not the oversubscription privilege) by electing
what percentage (if any) of your subscription rights you would
like to exercise and then communicating your election to
Fidelity Management Trust Company (Fidelity),
the trustee and record keeper for each of the Irwin 401k Plans,
in a timely manner using the specific election procedures
prescribed in the materials that will be provided to you. Any
election directing the exercise of subscription rights must be
received by Fidelity not later than 4:00 p.m. New York
time
on ,
2008, or else it will be too late and will not be effective.
This is a special deadline that applies to participants in the
Irwin 401k Plans (notwithstanding the different deadline set
forth in this prospectus for shareholders generally), and any
subscription rights credited to your Irwin 401k Plan accounts
will expire unless they are properly exercised by this special
deadline for participants in the Irwin 401k Plans.
If you are a participant in an Irwin 401k Plan, you will be able
to exercise your basic subscription privilege with respect to
share you hold through an Irwin 401k Plan, but you will not have
the opportunity to participate in the over-subscription
privilege with respect to such shares, which is available to
shareholders generally.
When will
I receive my new shares?
If you purchase shares in the rights offer by submitting a
rights certificate and payment, we will mail you a share
certificate as soon as practicable after the completion of the
rights offer. One share certificate will be generated for each
rights certificate processed. Until your share certificate is
received, you may not be able to sell the common shares acquired
in the rights offer. If your shares as of the record date were
held by a custodian bank, broker, dealer or other nominee, and
you participate in the rights offer, you will not receive share
certificates for your new shares. Your custodian bank, broker,
dealer or other nominee will be credited with the shares of
common stock you purchase in the rights offer as soon as
practicable after the completion of the rights offer.
After I
send in my payment and rights certificate, may I cancel my
exercise of subscription rights?
No. All exercises of subscription rights are irrevocable, even
if you later learn information that you consider to be
unfavorable to the exercise of your subscription rights. You
should not exercise your subscription rights unless you are
certain that you wish to purchase our common shares at a
subscription price of $ per full
share.
7
How many
common shares will be outstanding after the rights
offer?
As
of ,
2008, of
our common shares were issued and outstanding. Assuming no other
transactions by us involving our common shares, and no options
for our common shares are exercised, prior to the expiration of
the rights offer, if the rights offer is fully subscribed
through the exercise of the subscription rights
and/or the
standby purchasers acquire all of the common shares not
purchased by the holders of subscription rights before the
expiration of the rights offer, then an
additional of
our common shares will be issued and outstanding after the
closing of the rights offer, for a total
of
common shares outstanding. As a result of the rights offer, the
ownership interests and voting interests of the existing
shareholders that do not fully exercise their basic subscription
privileges will be diluted.
In addition, we are contemplating offering the holders of a
portion of our trust preferred securities the opportunity to
exchange their trust preferred shares for common shares. If we
complete the trust preferred exchange offer, additional common
shares will be issued to holders of the trust preferred shares.
As a result of the exchange offer, the ownership interests and
voting interests of all existing shareholders, even those that
fully participate in the rights offer, and the standby
purchasers, will be substantially diluted. We cannot determine
the amount of dilution at this time.
How much
money will the company receive from the rights offer?
Assuming all the common shares offered are sold, we expect that
the net proceeds from the rights offer will be approximately
$ million. We intend to use
the proceeds of the rights offer for general corporate purposes,
including to (i) continue to maintain our capital ratios
above the levels that we have agreed upon with our bank
regulators, (ii) accomplish the other objectives we and our
bank regulators have set forth in the written agreements, and
(iii) position our holding company and bank subsidiaries to
return to profitability and respond to future business and
financing needs and opportunities.
Are there
risks in exercising my subscription rights?
Yes. The exercise of your subscription rights involves risks.
Exercising your subscription rights involves the purchase of
additional common shares and should be considered as carefully
as you would consider any other equity investment. Among other
things, you should carefully consider the risks described under
the headings Risk Factors in this prospectus and the
documents incorporated by reference in this prospectus.
If the
rights offer is not completed, will my subscription payment be
refunded to me?
Yes. The subscription agent will hold all funds it receives in a
segregated bank account until completion of the rights offer. If
the rights offer is not completed, all subscription payments
received by the subscription agent will be returned promptly,
without interest or penalty. If you own shares in street
name, it may take longer for you to receive payment
because the subscription agent will return payments through the
record holder of your shares.
How do I
exercise my subscription rights if I live outside the United
States?
We will not mail this prospectus or the rights certificates to
shareholders whose addresses are outside the United States or
who have an army post office or foreign post office address. The
subscription agent will hold the rights certificates for their
account. To exercise subscription rights, our foreign
shareholders must notify the subscription agent and timely
follow the procedures described in Rights
Offer Foreign Shareholders.
What fees
or charges apply if I purchase the common shares?
We are not charging any fee or sales commission to issue
subscription rights to you or to issue shares to you if you
exercise your subscription rights. If you exercise your
subscription rights through your broker, dealer, custodian bank
or other nominee, you are responsible for paying any fees your
nominee may charge you. If you hold our common shares through
either of the Irwin 401k Plans and you exercise your basic
8
subscription privilege in respect of such shares through
Fidelity, you are responsible for paying any fees that Fidelity
may charge you.
What are
the material U.S. federal income tax consequences of exercising
my subscription rights?
For U.S. federal income tax purposes, you should not
recognize income or loss in connection with the receipt or
exercise of subscription rights in the rights offer. You should
consult your tax advisor as to your particular tax consequences
resulting from the rights offer. For a more detailed discussion,
see Material U.S. Federal Income Tax
Considerations.
To whom
should I send my forms and payment?
If you received a rights certificate with this prospectus and
wish to purchase shares during the rights offer, you should send
your properly completed and signed rights certificate, any other
subscription documents and payment by hand delivery, first class
mail or courier service to the subscription agent at:
|
|
|
By Mail:
|
|
By Hand or Overnight Courier:
|
The Colbent Corporation
Irwin Financial Corporation Rights Offer
|
|
The Colbent Corporation
Irwin Financial Corporation Rights Offer
|
Att: Corporate Actions
P.O. Box 859208
Braintree, MA
02185-9208
|
|
Att: Corporate Actions
161 Bay State Drive
Braintree, MA 02184
|
You are solely responsible for completing delivery to the
subscription agent of your subscription materials. The
subscription materials are to be received by the subscription
agent on or prior to 5:00 p.m., New York time, on , 2008.
We urge you to allow sufficient time for delivery of your
subscription materials to the subscription agent.
If you hold our common shares through either of the Irwin 401k
Plans, you may exercise your basic subscription privilege (but
not any over-subscription privilege) by following the
instructions described above under the heading
What should I do if I want to participate in
the rights offer, but my shares are held in an Irwin 401k
Plan?
Whom
should I contact if I have other questions?
If you have any questions about the rights offer or wish to
request another copy of a document, please contact D.F.
King & Co., Inc., the information agent for the rights
offer, toll-free at
(800) 735-3591.
Banks and brokerage firms please call collect at
(212) 269-5550.
9
SUMMARY
The
Rights Offer
The following summary describes the principal terms of the
rights offer, but is not intended to be complete. See the
information under the heading The Rights Offer in
this prospectus for a more detailed description of the terms and
conditions of the rights offer.
|
|
|
Securities Offered |
|
We are distributing to you, at no
charge, non-transferable
subscription right for each of our common shares that you owned
as of 5:00 p.m., New York time, on the record date, either
as a holder of record or, in the case of shares held of record
by brokers, dealers, custodian banks or other nominees on your
behalf, as a beneficial owner of such shares. Although the
actual amount will depend on participation in the rights offer,
we expect the gross proceeds from the rights offer and the
transactions contemplated by the standby purchase agreements to
be approximately $50 million. |
|
|
|
Basic Subscription Privilege |
|
The basic subscription privilege of each subscription right will
entitle you to
purchase
of our common shares at a subscription price of
$ per full share. |
|
|
|
Over-Subscription Privilege |
|
In the event that you purchase all of the common shares
available to you pursuant to your basic subscription privilege,
you may also choose to subscribe for our common shares that are
not purchased by our shareholders through the exercise of their
basic subscription privileges. You may subscribe for common
shares pursuant to your over-subscription privilege, subject to
proration of available shares and the purchase and ownership
limitations described below under the heading Limitation
on the Purchase of Shares. |
|
|
|
Limitation on the Purchase of Shares |
|
We will not issue common shares pursuant to the exercise of
basic subscription privileges or over-subscription privileges,
or to any shareholder or standby purchaser who, in our sole
opinion, could be required to obtain prior clearance or approval
from or submit a notice to any state or federal bank regulatory
authority to acquire, own or control such shares if, as
of ,
2008, such clearance or approval has not been obtained and/or
any applicable waiting period has not expired. Those who hold
our common shares solely through an Irwin 401k Plan will
not have the opportunity to participate in the over-subscription
privilege in respect of those shares. |
|
|
|
Subscription Price |
|
$ per full share. To be effective,
any payment related to the exercise of a subscription right must
clear prior to the expiration of the rights offer. |
|
|
|
Record Date |
|
5:00 p.m., New York time,
on ,
2008. |
|
Expiration of the Rights Offer |
|
5:00 p.m., New York time,
on ,
2008. |
|
|
|
Use of Proceeds |
|
We intend to use the proceeds of the rights offer for general
corporate purposes, including to (i) continue to maintain
our capital ratios above the levels that we have agreed upon
with our bank regulators, (ii) accomplish the other
objectives we and our bank regulators have set forth in the
written agreements, and (iii) position our holding company
and bank subsidiaries to return to profitability and respond to
future business and financing needs and opportunities. |
10
|
|
|
Non-Transferability of Rights |
|
The subscription rights may not be sold, transferred or assigned
and will not be listed for trading on the New York Stock
Exchange or on any other stock exchange or market or on the OTC
Bulletin Board. |
|
|
|
Standby Purchase Agreements |
|
In connection with the rights offer, we have entered into
standby purchase agreements pursuant to which the purchasers
have severally agreed to acquire from us, at the same
subscription price offered to shareholders, any common shares
that are not subscribed for pursuant to the exercise of basic
subscription privileges or over-subscription privileges, up to a
maximum number of shares set forth in each investors
standby purchase agreement. Please see The Rights
Offer Standby Commitments and Plan of
Distribution for further information about the Standby
Purchase Agreements. |
|
Standby Purchasers |
|
Cummins Inc. ($25 million commitment)
|
|
|
|
|
|
William I. Miller, Catherine G. Miller, Elizabeth G.
Miller, Rodman Moorhead, Henry B. Schacht, and John L.
Vogelstein ($12 million aggregate commitment, including
irrevocable commitments to exercise all rights received as
shareholders)
|
|
|
|
|
|
The commitment of each of the standby purchasers is subject to
certain conditions that must be satisfied prior to completion of
the rights offer. |
|
|
|
Personal Participation of Directors |
|
Each director has made an irrevocable commitment to exercise his
or her own basic subscription rights personally (and with
respect to eight of nine independent directors, this commitment
is for the full amount of his or her rights received). Our board
of directors is making no recommendation regarding your exercise
of the subscription rights. You are urged to make your decision
based on your own assessment of our business and the rights
offer. Please see Risk Factors for a discussion of
some of the risks involved in investing in our common shares. |
|
|
|
No Revocation |
|
All exercises of subscription rights are irrevocable, even if
you later learn information that you consider to be unfavorable
to the exercise of your subscription rights. You should not
exercise your subscription rights unless you are certain that
you wish to purchase additional common shares at a subscription
price of $ per full share. |
|
|
|
Material U.S. Federal Income Tax Considerations |
|
For U.S. federal income tax purposes, you should not recognize
income or loss upon receipt or exercise of a subscription right.
You should consult your own tax advisor as to the tax
consequences to you of the receipt, exercise or lapse of the
subscription rights in light of your particular circumstances. |
|
|
|
Extension, Cancellation and Amendment |
|
We have the option to extend the rights offer and the period for
exercising your subscription rights, although we do not
presently intend to do so. In the event that our board of
directors decides to extend the rights offer, in no event will
the rights offer be extended by more than 30 days. Our
board of directors may cancel the rights offer at any time for
any reason. In the event that the rights offer is cancelled, all
subscription payments received by the subscription |
11
|
|
|
|
|
agent will be returned promptly, without interest or penalty.
We also reserve the right to amend or modify the terms of the
rights offer. |
|
|
|
Procedures for Exercising Rights |
|
To exercise your subscription rights, you must take the
following steps: |
|
|
|
If you are a registered holder of our common shares,
you may deliver payment and a properly completed rights
certificate to the subscription agent before 5:00 p.m., New
York time, on , 2008. You may deliver the documents and payments
by mail or commercial carrier. If regular mail is used for this
purpose, we recommend using registered mail, properly insured,
with return receipt requested.
|
|
|
|
If you are a beneficial owner of shares that are
registered in the name of a broker, dealer, custodian bank or
other nominee, or if you would rather an institution conduct the
transaction on your behalf, you should instruct your broker,
dealer, custodian bank or other nominee or to exercise your
subscription rights on your behalf and deliver all documents and
payments before 5:00 p.m., New York time,
on ,
2008.
|
|
|
|
|
|
If you hold our common shares through one of the
Irwin 401k Plans, you may exercise your basic subscription
privilege (but not the over-subscription privilege) with respect
to such shares by completing the Plan Participant Election
Form provided to you by Fidelity, the trustee and record
keeper for each of the Irwin 401k Plans, to implement your
decision. Any Plan Participant Election Form directing the
exercise of subscription rights must be received by Fidelity not
later than 4:00 p.m. New York time
on ,
2008.
|
|
|
|
Subscription Agent |
|
The Colbent Corporation |
|
|
|
Information Agent |
|
D.F. King & Co., Inc. |
|
|
|
Shares Outstanding Before the Rights Offer
|
|
of
our common shares were outstanding as
of ,
2008. |
|
Shares Outstanding After Completion of the Rights Offer
|
|
Assuming no outstanding options for our common shares are
exercised prior to the expiration of the rights offer and the
full $ million is subscribed for,
we expect
approximately
common shares will be outstanding immediately after completion
of the rights offer but before giving effect to the exchange of
common shares for trust preferred securities, which could
potentially occur concurrently with the completion of the rights
offer. |
|
Fees and Expenses |
|
We will pay the fees and expenses related to the rights offer. |
|
NYSE Ticker Symbol |
|
Our common shares are currently listed for trading on the NYSE
under the ticker symbol IFC. |
Before purchasing the securities being offered, you should
carefully consider the Risk Factors beginning on
page 13.
12
RISK
FACTORS
An investment in our securities involves a high degree of
risk. You should carefully consider the risks described below,
together with the other information included or incorporated by
reference in this prospectus and the risks that we have
highlighted in other sections of this prospectus, before making
an investment decision. The risks described below are not the
only risks we face. There could be risks and uncertainties not
presently known to us or that we currently deem immaterial that
also may impair our business operations. If any of the following
risks actually occurs, our business, results of operations and
financial condition could suffer. In that event, the trading
price of our common shares could decline, and you may lose all
or part of your investment in our common shares. The risks
discussed below include forward-looking statements, and our
actual results may differ substantially from those discussed in
these forward-looking statements.
Risks
Related to the Rights Offer
The
market price of our common shares is volatile and may decline
before or after the subscription rights expire.
The market price of our common shares could be subject to wide
fluctuations in response to numerous factors, some of which are
beyond our control. These factors include, among other things,
actual or anticipated variations in our costs of doing business,
operating results and cash flow, the nature of our earnings and
our competitors earnings, changes in financial estimates
by securities analysts, business conditions in our markets, the
general state of the securities markets and the market for other
financial stocks, changes in capital markets that affect the
perceived or actual availability of capital to companies in our
industry, and governmental legislation or regulation, as well as
general economic and market conditions, such as continued
downturns in our economy and recessions. Please see
Risks Relating to the Capital and Credit
Markets.
Once you exercise your subscription rights, you may not revoke
them. The market price of our common shares could decline after
you elect to exercise your subscription rights. If you exercise
your subscription rights and, afterwards, the public trading
market price of our common shares decreases below the
subscription price, you will have committed to buying our common
shares at a price above the prevailing market price and could
have an immediate unrealized loss. Our common shares are listed
for trading on the NYSE under the ticker symbol IFC,
and the last reported sales price of our common shares on the
NYSE on December 1, 2008, was $1.70 per share. Following
the exercise of your subscription rights it is possible that you
might not be able to sell your common shares at a price equal to
or greater than the subscription price. Until shares are
delivered to you upon completion of the rights offer, you may
not be able to sell our common shares that you purchase in the
rights offer.
Your
ownership interest will be (i) diluted if you do not
exercise your subscription rights and (ii) further diluted
if we complete a proposed exchange offer.
Assuming we sell the full offering amount, the rights offer will
result in our issuance of
approximately
of our common shares. If you choose not to fully exercise your
basic subscription privilege prior to the expiration of the
rights offer, your relative ownership interest in our common
shares will be diluted.
Subscription rights are not transferable and will not be listed
for trading on the New York Stock Exchange or any other stock
exchange or market or on the OTC Bulletin Board, and a
rights certificate may only be completed by the shareholder who
receives the certificate. Unless your subscription rights are
timely and properly exercised, they will automatically expire at
the end of the rights offer period and will have no force or
effect. Shareholders who do not exercise their subscription
rights will lose any value that may be represented by the rights.
If we proceed with the proposed exchange offer, as described
under The Rights Offer Concurrent Exchange
Offers, in which current trust preferred security holders
will receive common shares, your ownership will be diluted
regardless of whether or not you participate in the rights offer.
13
The
subscription price determined for the rights offer is not
necessarily an indication of the fair value of our common
shares.
Our board of directors will form a pricing committee to
determine the subscription price. The pricing committee will
consider a number of factors, including the price at which our
shareholders might be willing to participate in the rights
offer, historical and current trading prices for our common
shares, the need for liquidity and capital, negotiations with
the standby purchasers, and the desire to provide an opportunity
to our shareholders to participate in the rights offer on a pro
rata basis. In conjunction with its review of these factors, our
board of directors is currently reviewing our history and
prospects, including our past and present earnings, our
prospects for future earnings, our current financial condition
and regulatory status, and a range of discounts to market value
represented by the subscription prices in various prior rights
offers of public companies. The subscription price will not
necessarily be related to our book value, net worth or any other
established criteria of value and may or may not be considered
the fair value of our common shares to be offered in the rights
offer. At any given time, including after the rights offer, our
common shares could trade below the subscription price.
Because
our management will have broad discretion over the use of the
net proceeds from the rights offer, you may not agree with how
we use the proceeds, and we may not invest the proceeds
successfully.
While we currently anticipate that we will use the net proceeds
of the rights offer for general corporate purposes, including to
(i) continue to maintain our capital ratios above the
levels that we have agreed upon with our bank regulators,
(ii) accomplish the objectives we and our bank regulators
have set forth in the written agreements, and
(iii) position our holding company and bank subsidiaries to
return to profitability and respond to future business and
financing needs and opportunities, our management will allocate
portions of the proceeds for other purposes. Accordingly, you
will be relying on the judgment of our management with regard to
the use of the proceeds from the rights offer, and you will not
have the opportunity, as part of your investment decision, to
assess whether the proceeds are being used appropriately. It is
possible proceeds will be invested in a way that does not yield
a favorable, or any, return for us. In addition, regardless of
how we invest the proceeds, our ability to return to
profitability depends on a number of additional factors,
including but not limited to deposit levels, loan production,
performance of our loan portfolios, and macro-economic
conditions. If these internal and external factors are not
consistent with our expectations, the rights offer proceeds
alone may not be enough to position us to return to
profitability.
We may
cancel the rights offer at any time, and neither we nor the
subscription agent will have any obligation to you except to
return your exercise payments.
We may, in our sole discretion, decide not to continue with the
rights offer or cancel the rights offer. If the rights offer is
cancelled, all subscription payments received by the
subscription agent will be returned promptly, without interest
or penalty.
The
standby purchase commitments are capped at certain
values
The standby purchasers will purchase any common shares that are
not subscribed for pursuant to the exercise of basic
subscription privileges or over-subscription privileges, subject
to a maximum amount set forth in each investors standby
purchase agreement. Therefore, the number of shares that a
standby purchaser will purchase cannot be determined until the
completion of the rights offer. However, in the aggregate, the
standby purchases will not exceed $37 million (and this
amount may be reduced by conditions in Cummins Inc.s
standby purchase agreement that it shall not be required to
purchase greater than 19.9% of our common shares).
The
standby purchase commitments are subject to a number of
conditions
The standby purchases are subject to conditions. If any standby
purchaser is required to obtain prior clearance or approval for
the purchase of our common shares from any state or federal bank
regulatory authority and if such approval or clearance has not
been obtained by the completion of the rights offer, the standby
14
purchaser is not required to purchase any shares. In addition,
Cummins Inc., John L. Vogelstein and Rodman Moorhead are not
required to purchase common shares if (i) the Federal
Reserve Bank of Chicago and the Indiana Department of Financial
Institutions determine that our holding company and Irwin Union
Bank and Trust Company will not remain
well-capitalized in light of foreseeable capital
requirements and that our capital plan, including the rights
offer, will not be satisfactory, (ii) they reasonably
believe that they will be deemed to control (within
the meaning of the Bank Holding Company Act of 1956, as amended,
or the Change in Bank Control Act, as amended) our holding
company or (iii) any consents or approvals required to be
obtained from any governmental authority in connection with the
purchase of shares pursuant to the standby commitments have not
been obtained or any applicable waiting periods or appeal
periods have not yet expired. In addition to these conditions,
(i) John L. Vogelstein and Rodman Moorhead are not
required to purchase common shares if the subscription price set
by our board of directors is equal to or greater than the market
price of our common shares as calculated by the volume weighted
average trading price on the 20 days preceding the date on
which the rights offer is priced and (ii) Cummins Inc. is
not required to purchase common shares if our holding company
has not taken all required actions to increase the size of our
board by one director so that a designee of Cummins Inc. may be
elected or appointed to the board in the future if Cummins so
proposes. Even if we satisfy all these conditions, Cummins
Inc.s commitment may be reduced such that it will not own
more than 19.9% of our common shares upon closing of the rights
offer. For further information on the standby commitments, see
The Rights Offer The Standby Commitments
and Plan of Distribution.
The
standby purchase commitment of Cummins Inc., the largest standby
purchaser, is capped at 19.9% of our common shares and therefore
could result in less than all of Cummins Inc.s
$25 million standby commitment being taken
up.
The standby purchase agreement with Cummins Inc. provides that
Cummins Inc.s commitment will be $25 million but in
no event will result in Cummins Inc. owning greater than 19.9%
of our common shares upon closing of the rights offer. If
shareholders fully exercise their subscription rights, Cummins
Inc. is not required or entitled to purchase any common shares
pursuant to the standby purchase agreement. However, the maximum
percentage amount may limit Cummins Inc.s $25 million
commitment depending upon a combination of these factors,
including the following: (i) the number of common shares
subscribed for in the offering; (ii) the subscription
price; and (iii) the number of common shares issued in the
proposed exchange offer for trust preferred securities. The
number of shares that Cummins Inc. will be required to purchase
based on the subscription price of
$ per share, assuming that all
shareholders who have not irrevocably committed to exercise
their rights decline to exercise their subscription rights,
is shares,
which would represent
$ million. If we concurrently
close our proposed exchange offers of trust preferred securities
for at least $ , we will have
sufficient common shares outstanding so that Cummins Inc.s
standby commitment may be taken up in full, assuming the other
conditions to its commitment are satisfied.
If you
do not act promptly and follow the subscription instructions,
your exercise of subscription rights may be
rejected.
Shareholders that desire to purchase shares in the rights offer
must act promptly to ensure that all required forms and payments
are actually received by the subscription agent prior to the
expiration of the rights offer at 5:00 p.m., New York time,
on ,
2008. If you fail to complete and sign the required subscription
documents, send an incorrect payment amount or otherwise fail to
follow the subscription procedures that apply to your exercise
in the rights offer, the subscription agent may reject your
subscription or accept it only to the extent of the payment
received. Neither we nor our subscription agent will undertake
to contact you concerning an incomplete or incorrect rights
certificate or other subscription document or payment, nor are
we under any obligation to make corrections. We have the sole
discretion to determine whether a subscription exercise properly
complies with the subscription procedures. If you are a
beneficial owner of shares, you must act promptly to ensure that
your broker, dealer, custodian bank or other nominee acts for
you and submits payment to the subscription agent. We are not
responsible if your broker, dealer, custodian bank or nominee
fails to properly exercise your subscription rights prior to the
expiration of the rights offer. If you hold our common shares
through either of the Irwin 401k Plans, you should carefully
read the Plan Participant
15
Election Form accompanying this prospectus and follow the
procedures set forth in that form within the specified time
period.
The
rights offer does not have a minimum amount of proceeds, and the
standby purchase commitments are subject to conditions, which
means that if you exercise your rights, you may acquire
additional common shares in us when we require additional
capital.
There is no minimum amount of proceeds required to complete the
rights offer, and the standby purchase commitments are subject
to certain conditions. In addition, an exercise of your
subscription rights is irrevocable. Therefore, if you exercise
the basic subscription privilege or the over-subscription
privilege, but we do not raise the desired amount of capital in
this rights offer or we do not satisfy all the conditions for
the standby purchase commitments and the rights offer is not
fully subscribed, you may be investing in a company that
continues to require additional capital. In addition, our
inability to raise a sufficient amount of capital may mean that
we do not have a capital plan that will be satisfactory to the
regulators, which could have a material adverse effect on us.
See also Risks Related to the Capital and
Credit Markets. For further information on the standby
commitments, see The Rights Offer The Standby
Commitments.
Our
ability to use net operating loss carryforwards to offset future
taxable income for U.S. federal income tax purposes may be
limited by the rights offer and other aspects of our capital
plan.
In general, the rules of section 382 of the Internal
Revenue Code apply to limit a corporations ability to
utilize existing net operating loss (NOL)
carryforwards once the corporation experiences an
ownership change. Generally, an ownership change
occurs when there is an increase in the stock ownership by one
or more trackable shareholders of more than 50 percentage
points over the lowest percentage ownership of such shareholder
during a look back period (generally 36 months). Therefore,
the rights offer or, if consummated and closed, the proposed
exchange offer, could result in an ownership change.
Section 382 allows post-change corporations to use
pre-control change NOLs, but limits the amount that may be used
annually to a percentage of the equity value of the corporation
immediately before the change of ownership. Therefore, we may be
limited in our ability to use these NOL carryforwards to offset
future tax liabilities and this may have an adverse effect on
our results of operations.
The
concurrent exchange offers might not close.
We are concurrently considering exchange offers as described
under Questions and Answers Relating to the Rights
Offer Are we pursuing other initiatives to improve
our capital position? Failure to consummate and close
these exchange offers may mean that we do not have a capital
plan that will be satisfactory to the regulators, which could
subject us to prompt corrective action that could include a
regulatory takeover of our bank subsidiaries.
Risks
Related to the Common Shares
The
price of our common shares may fluctuate significantly, and this
may make it difficult for you to resell common shares owned by
you at times or at prices you find attractive.
The price of our common shares on the NYSE constantly changes.
We expect that the market price of our common shares will
continue to fluctuate.
Our stock price may fluctuate as a result of a variety of
factors, some of which are beyond our control. These factors
include:
|
|
|
|
|
quarterly variations in our operating results or the quality of
our assets;
|
|
|
|
operating results that vary from the expectations of management,
securities analysts and investors;
|
|
|
|
changes in expectations as to our future financial performance;
|
|
|
|
|
|
announcements of innovations, new products, strategic
developments, significant contracts, acquisitions, divestitures
and other material events by us or our competitors;
|
16
|
|
|
|
|
the operating and securities price performance of other
companies that investors believe are comparable to us;
|
|
|
|
future sales of our equity or equity-related securities;
|
|
|
|
our past and future dividend practice;
|
|
|
|
our creditworthiness;
|
|
|
|
interest rates;
|
|
|
|
the credit, mortgage and housing markets, the markets for
securities relating to mortgages or housing, and developments
with respect to financial institutions generally;
|
|
|
|
the market for similar securities; and
|
|
|
|
economic, financial, geopolitical, regulatory, congressional or
judicial events that affect us or the financial markets.
|
Accordingly, the common shares that an investor purchases,
whether in this offering or in the secondary market, may trade
at a price lower than that at which they were purchased.
In addition, in recent months, and especially in recent weeks,
the stock market in general has experienced extreme price and
volume fluctuations. This volatility has had a significant
effect on the market price of securities issued by many
companies and particularly those in the financial services and
banking sector, including for reasons unrelated to their
operating performance. These broad market fluctuations may
adversely affect our stock price, notwithstanding our operating
results.
There
may be future sales or other dilution of our equity, which may
adversely affect the market price of our common
shares.
We are not restricted from issuing additional common shares,
including any securities that are convertible into or
exchangeable for, or that represent the right to receive, common
shares, as well as any common shares that may be issued pursuant
to our shareholder rights plan. The market price of our common
shares could decline as a result of sales of our common shares
made after this offering or the perception that such sales could
occur. It could also decline if we issue additional common
shares in connection with a proposed exchange of a portion of
our trust preferred shares for our common shares. At this time,
we are unable to determine whether we will complete an exchange
offer or the number of shares that we will issue in connection
with any exchange offer.
You
may not receive dividends on the common shares.
Holders of our common shares are only entitled to receive such
dividends as our board of directors may declare out of funds
legally available for such payments. On March 3, 2008, we
announced that our board of directors voted to suspend payment
of dividends on our common, preferred and trust preferred
securities. In addition, as a result of the written agreement
that we and Irwin Union Bank and Trust Company entered into
on October 10, 2008, with the Federal Reserve Bank of
Chicago and the Indiana Department of Financial Institutions, we
are not permitted to (1) declare or pay any dividend, or
(2) make any distributions of interest or principal on
subordinated debentures or trust preferred securities, without
the prior written approval of these regulators. As a result we
cannot declare a dividend on our common shares. Although we can
seek to obtain a waiver of this prohibition, the Federal Reserve
Bank of Chicago and the Indiana Department of Financial
Institutions may choose not to grant such a waiver and we would
not expect to be granted a waiver or be released from this
obligation until our financial performance improves
significantly. Therefore, we may not be able to resume payments
of dividends in the future.
17
The
issuance of additional series of our preferred shares could
adversely affect holders of our common shares which may
negatively impact your investment.
Our board of directors is authorized to issue additional classes
or series of preferred shares without any action on the part of
the shareholders. The board of directors also has the power
without shareholder approval, to set the terms of any such
classes or series of preferred shares that may be issued,
including voting rights, dividend rights, and preferences over
our common shares with respect to dividends or upon our
dissolution,
winding-up
and liquidation and other terms. If we issue additional
preferred shares in the future that have a preference over our
common shares with respect to the payment of dividends or upon
our liquidation, dissolution, or winding up, or if we issue
preferred shares with voting rights that dilute the voting power
of our common shares, the rights of holders of our common shares
or the market price of our common shares could be adversely
affected.
We
have regulatory restrictions on our ability to receive dividends
from bank subsidiaries.
Our ability to pay dividends in the future depends predominantly
on our ability to dividend from our state-chartered bank
subsidiary, Irwin Union Bank and Trust Company, to our
holding company, for which prior approval from our regulators
and additional action by our board of directors will be
necessary. As a result of the written agreement that we and
Irwin Union Bank and Trust Company entered into on
October 10, 2008, with the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
and the Indiana Department of Financial Institutions, Irwin
Union Bank and Trust Company is not permitted to
(1) declare or pay any dividend, or (2) make any
distributions of interest or principal on subordinated
debentures or trust preferred securities, without the prior
written approval of these regulators. As a result, Irwin Union
Bank and Trust Company cannot declare a dividend to us.
Although Irwin Union Bank and Trust Company can seek to
obtain a waiver of this prohibition, the Federal Reserve Bank of
Chicago and the Indiana Department of Financial Institutions may
choose not to grant such a waiver and we would not expect to be
granted a waiver or be released from this obligation until our
financial performance improves significantly. Therefore, Irwin
Union Bank and Trust Company may not be able to resume
payments of dividends to our holding company in the future.
Current
levels of market volatility are unprecedented.
The capital and credit markets have been experiencing volatility
and disruption for more than 12 months. In recent weeks,
the volatility and disruption has reached unprecedented levels.
In some cases, the markets have produced downward pressure on
stock prices and credit capacity for certain issuers without
apparent regard to those issuers underlying financial
strength. If the current levels of market disruption and
volatility continue or worsen, we could experience further
adverse effects, which may be material, on our ability to access
capital and on our results of operations.
Our
shareholder rights plan, provisions in our restated articles of
incorporation, our by-laws, and Indiana law may delay or prevent
an acquisition of us by a third party.
Our board of directors has implemented a shareholder rights plan
which, combined with Indiana law, and absent further action by
our board, contains provisions which have certain anti-takeover
effects. While the purpose of these plans is to strengthen the
negotiating position of the board in the event of a hostile
takeover attempt, the overall effects of the plan may be to
render more difficult or discourage a merger, tender offer or
proxy contest, the assumption of control by a holder of a larger
block of our shares and the removal of incumbent directors and
key management. If triggered, the rights will cause substantial
dilution to a person or group that attempts to acquire us
without approval of our board of directors, and under certain
circumstances, the rights beneficially owned by the person or
group may become void. The plan also may have the effect of
limiting the participation of certain shareholders in
transactions such as mergers or tender offers whether or not
such transactions are favored by incumbent directors and key
management. This could discourage proxy contests and may make it
more difficult for you and other shareholders to elect your own
representatives as directors and take other corporate actions.
18
Our by-laws do not permit cumulative voting of shareholders in
the election of directors, allowing the holders of a majority of
our outstanding shares to control the election of all our
directors. We have a staggered board, which means that only
one-third of our board can be replaced by shareholders at any
annual meeting. Directors may not be removed by shareholders.
Our by-laws also provide that only our board of directors, and
not our shareholders, may adopt, alter, amend and repeal our
by-laws.
Indiana law provides several limitations that may discourage
potential acquirers from purchasing our common shares. In
particular, Indiana law prohibits business combinations with a
person who acquires 10% or more of our common shares during the
five-year period after the acquisition of 10% by that person or
entity, unless the acquirer receives prior approval for the
acquisition of the shares or business combination from our board
of directors.
These and other provisions of Indiana law and our governing
documents are intended to provide the board of directors with
the negotiating leverage to achieve a more favorable outcome for
our shareholders in the event of an offer for the company.
However, these same anti-takeover provisions could have the
effect of delaying, deferring or preventing a transaction or a
change in control that might be in the best interest of our
shareholders.
Risks
Related to the Capital and Credit Markets
The
current economic environment poses significant challenges for us
and could adversely affect our financial condition and results
of operations.
We are operating in a highly challenging and uncertain economic
environment, including generally uncertain national conditions
and local conditions in our markets. Financial institutions
continue to be affected by sharp declines in the real estate
market and constrained financial markets. While we are taking
steps to decrease and limit our exposure to residential mortgage
loans, home equity loans and lines of credit, and construction
and land loans, we nonetheless retain significant direct
exposure to the residential and commercial real estate markets
as a result of our holdings of these types of loans, and we are
affected by these events. Our commercial banking line of
business has a substantial portfolio of construction and land
development loans. Continued declines in real estate values,
home sales volumes and financial stress on borrowers as a result
of the uncertain economic environment, including job losses,
could have an adverse effect on our borrowers or their
customers, which could adversely affect our financial condition
and results of operations. The decline in our financial
performance over the last two years, and the reduction in
capital ratios at June 30, 2008 have subjected us to
increased regulatory scrutiny in the current environment. In
addition, a possible national economic recession or further
deterioration in local economic conditions in our markets could
drive losses beyond that which is provided for in our allowance
for loan losses and result in the following other consequences:
loan delinquencies, problem assets, foreclosures and loan
charge-offs may increase; demand for our products and services
may decline; deposits may decrease, which would adversely impact
our liquidity position; and collateral for our loans, especially
real estate, may decline in value, in turn reducing
customers borrowing power, and reducing the value of
assets and collateral associated with our existing loans.
Our
inability to participate in the U.S. Treasury Departments
Capital Purchase Program could have negative adverse effects on
our share price, the rights offer and our future growth
prospects.
In response to the financial crises affecting the banking system
and financial markets, the U.S. Congress adopted the
Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008 (EESA).
The primary feature of the EESA is the establishment of a
troubled asset relief program (TARP), under which
the U.S. Treasury Department (UST) was
authorized to use up to $700 billion to purchase troubled
assets, including mortgage-backed and other securities, from
financial institutions and to make equity investments in banks
(and possibly other financial institutions) through the Capital
Purchase Program (CPP) for the purpose of
stabilizing the financial markets. The UST has focused on the
CPP and not engaged in purchases of troubled assets. Although we
have applied for participation under the CPP, we do not know
whether the UST will approve our application. See Recent
Developments.
19
While we believe the CPP is not essential to our current capital
plan or necessary to enable us to accomplish the objectives we
and our regulators have set forth in the written agreements that
we entered into with our regulators on October 10, 2008, in
the event our application to participate in the CPP is not
approved, we would not have the benefits provided by a
significant increase in our capital, whereas certain of our
competitors may have this capital available to support their
activities. In addition, because of the extensive publicity of
the CPP and certain market perceptions as to the financial
health of institutions that are denied access to the CPP, the
effect on our share price, our ability to raise capital, our
future ability to grow organically, or our liquidity could be
adversely affected.
More generally, we do not know what impact the TARP or the CPP
will have generally on the financial markets, including the
extreme levels of volatility currently being experienced. If the
TARP or the CPP does not have its intended beneficial effect on
the participating financial institutions and the market more
generally, the financial markets could be affected materially
and adversely, which in turn could materially and adversely
affect our business, financial condition and results of
operations.
If we
participate in the Capital Purchase Program your ownership
interest and voting power will be diluted and other rights of
shareholders could be adversely affected.
Based on the standard documentation for the CPP, if we
participate in the CPP, the effects on the rights of our
shareholders will likely include: (i) restrictions on the
payment of dividends to holders of our common shares and
(ii) restrictions on distributions of assets to our
shareholders upon a liquidation or dissolution of our holding
company and until the satisfaction of any liquidation preference
granted to preferred shares issued in connection with the CPP.
In addition, shareholders would suffer dilution of their equity
interest and voting power upon exercise of any warrants granted
to the UST.
Risks
Related to Our Business
We may
be adversely affected by a general deterioration in economic
conditions.
The risks associated with our business become more acute in
periods of a slowing economy or slow growth such as we
experienced in the latter half of 2007 and which has continued
into 2008. Economic declines may be accompanied by a decrease in
demand for consumer and commercial credit and declining real
estate and other asset values. The credit quality of commercial
loans and leases where the activities of the borrower or vendor
are related to housing and other real estate markets may decline
in periods of stress in these industries. Delinquencies,
foreclosures and losses generally increase during economic
slowdowns or periods of slow growth. We expect that our
servicing costs and credit losses will increase during periods
of economic slowdown or slow growth such as the one we are
presently experiencing.
Although we are in the process of exiting our home equity line
of business, we continue to have exposure to losses so long as
we hold a portfolio of loans. As such, a material decline in
real estate values may reduce the ability of borrowers to use
home equity to support borrowings and could increase the
loan-to-value ratios of loans we have previously made, thereby
weakening collateral coverage and increasing the possibility of
a loss in the event of a default. A decline in real estate
values could also materially lower runoff in our existing
portfolio, effectively extending the average life of the loans
in the portfolio (and therefore prolonging the period we are
exposed to losses).
We may
be adversely affected by interest rate changes.
We and our subsidiaries are subject to interest rate risk.
Changes in interest rates will affect the value of loans,
deposits and other interest-sensitive assets and liabilities on
our balance sheet. Our income may be at risk because changes in
interest rates also affect our net interest margin and the value
of assets and derivatives that we sell from time to time or that
are subject to either mark-to-market accounting or
lower-of-cost-or-market accounting, such as loans held for sale,
mortgage servicing rights and derivatives instruments.
Reductions in interest rates expose us to write-downs in the
carrying value of the mortgage servicing and other servicing
assets we hold on our balance sheet. Some of these assets are
recorded at the lower of their
20
cost or market value and a valuation allowance is recorded for
any impairment. Decreasing interest rates often lead to
increased prepayments in the underlying loans, which requires
that we write down the carrying value of these servicing assets.
The change in value of these assets, if improperly hedged or
mismanaged, could adversely affect our operating results in the
period in which the impairment occurs.
Our lines of business mainly depend on earnings derived from net
interest income. Net interest income is the difference between
interest earned on loans and investments and the interest
expense paid on other borrowings, including deposits at our
banks and other funding liabilities we have. Our interest income
and interest expense are affected by general economic conditions
and by the policies of regulatory authorities, including the
monetary policies of the Federal Reserve that cause our funding
costs and yields on new or variable rate assets to change.
Although we take measures intended to manage the risks of
operating in changing interest rate environments, we cannot
eliminate interest rate sensitivity. Our goal is to ensure that
interest rate sensitivity does not exceed prudent levels as
determined by our board of directors in certain policies. Our
risk management techniques include modeling interest rate
scenarios, using financial hedging instruments, and
match-funding certain loan assets. There are costs and risks
associated with our risk management techniques, and these could
be substantial.
Finally, to reduce the effect interest rates have on our
businesses, we periodically invest in derivatives and other
interest-sensitive instruments. While our intent in purchasing
these instruments is to reduce our overall interest rate
sensitivity, the performance of these instruments can, at times,
cause volatility in our results either due to factors such as
basis risk between the derivatives and the hedged item, timing
of accounting recognition differences or other such factors.
Our
operations may be adversely affected if we are unable to secure
adequate funding; our use of wholesale funding sources exposes
us to potential liquidity risk.
As a result of our restructuring, including our prior
discontinuation of our mortgage banking line of business, we
have had to seek alternative funding sources to contribute to
our other lines of business, which sources in some cases are
more expensive than those previously used.
Due to the sale of mortgage servicing rights and the loss of
escrow deposits associated with those servicing rights, we have
increased our reliance on wholesale funding, such as Federal
Home Loan Bank borrowings, public funds, and brokered deposits
in recent quarters. Because wholesale funding sources are
affected by general capital market conditions, the availability
of funding from wholesale lenders may be dependent on the
confidence these investors have in commercial banking, franchise
finance, and consumer finance businesses. While we have
processes in place to monitor and mitigate these funding risks,
the continued availability to us of these funding sources is
uncertain, and we could be adversely impacted if our business
segments become disfavored by wholesale lenders or large
depositors. As a result of the written agreement with the Office
of Thrift Supervision, Irwin Union Bank, F.S.B. (which held
approximately 12% of our total assets as of November 10,
2008) is no longer permitted to accept brokered deposits
unless it receives the prior approval of the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation. Although we have applied for approval, it
might not be granted. Therefore, Irwin Union Bank, F.S.B. may
not be able to accept brokered deposits in the future. Moreover,
even if such an approval is granted, the written agreement would
still impose limitations on Irwin Union Bank, F.S.B.s
freedom to set rates for brokered deposits. Our state-chartered
bank subsidiary, Irwin Union Bank and Trust Company, which
is regulated by the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago and the
Indiana Department of Financial Institutions, does not have any
regulatory restrictions on the issuance of brokered deposits.
Brokered deposits may be difficult for us to retain or replace
at attractive rates as they mature. Our financial flexibility
could be severely constrained if we are unable to renew our
wholesale funding or if adequate financing is not available in
the future at acceptable rates of interest. We may not have
sufficient liquidity to continue to fund new loans or lease
originations, and we may need to liquidate loans or other assets
unexpectedly in order to repay obligations as they mature.
21
Historically, we financed or sold the majority of our second
mortgage loan originations into the secondary market through the
use of securitizations. This market closed to all participants
in the middle of 2007. We expect it to remain closed
indefinitely. We are no longer producing these loans.
If
there were an acceleration of the recording of losses on our
home equity portfolio from our current expectations, it could
have a material adverse effect on our results of operations and
capital position.
As announced in July 2008, we agreed to securitize approximately
$275 million of home equity whole loans. The securitization
is treated as a financing and, as such, the loans remain on our
balance sheet. These loans, together with the $1 billion of
residual home equity loans that currently remain on our balance
sheet, as well as an additional remaining portfolio of
$40 million of home equity whole loans, will be run-off
over time. We believe our remaining exposure, including other
costs associated with a simultaneous exit of the segment, is
less than $250 million (pre-tax). We will evaluate the
performance of the loans on a regular basis. A number of
factors, including, but not limited to, changes in regulatory or
accounting interpretations, changes to our accounting policy, or
contractual triggers, could cause us to accelerate the
recognition of losses in a single period or a small number of
successive periods. If that were to occur, it may have a
material adverse affect on our results of operations and capital
position for such periods.
We
have credit risk inherent in our asset portfolios.
In our businesses, some borrowers may not repay loans that we
make to them. As all financial institutions do, we maintain an
allowance for loan and lease losses and other reserves to absorb
the level of losses that we think is probable in our portfolios.
However, our allowance for loan and lease losses may not be
sufficient to cover the loan and lease losses that we actually
may incur. While we maintain a reserve at a level management
believes is adequate, our charge-offs could exceed these
reserves. If we experience defaults by borrowers in any of our
businesses to a greater extent than anticipated, our earnings
could be negatively impacted.
We review the adequacy of these reserves and the underlying
estimates on a periodic basis and we make adjustments to the
reserves when required. However, our actual losses could exceed
our estimates and negatively impact our earnings. As part of our
written agreement with the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago and
the Indiana Department of Financial Institutions, we and Irwin
Union Bank and Trust Company agreed to review and revise as
necessary our allowance for loan and lease losses methodology to
assure compliance with relevant supervisory guidance and to
develop an acceptable program for the maintenance of an adequate
allowance for loan and lease losses going forward. As a result
of such review, we determined that the documentation supporting
our loan and lease loss reserves methodology should be enhanced
and we subsequently implemented these enhancements. Although
these enhancements did not result in any changes to any of our
previously-reported reserves, such reserves may change in the
future as economic and borrower conditions change.
We
hold in our portfolio a significant number of construction, land
and home equity loans, which may pose more credit risk than
other types of mortgage loans.
In light of current economic conditions, construction and land
loans and home equity lines of credit are considered more risky
than other types of mortgage loans. Due to the disruptions in
credit and housing markets, many of the developers to whom we
lend experienced a dramatic decline in sales of new homes from
their projects. As a result of this unprecedented market
disruption, a material amount of our land and construction
portfolio has or may become non-performing as developers are
unable to build and sell homes in volumes large enough for
orderly repayment of loans. At September 30, 2008, our
$4.7 billion loan and lease portfolio included
$0.5 billion (or 11%) of real estate construction and land
development (C&LD) loans. Included in the $0.5 billion
of C&LD loans were $58 million (or 12%) that were
nonperforming. The highest concentration of these nonperforming
loans is in the Phoenix and Las Vegas markets, which make up 7%
of our C&LD loan portfolio.
In addition, as home values decline, borrowers are increasingly
defaulting on home equity lines of credit in the portfolio of
these loans that we hold in runoff mode. At September 30,
2008, we held $1.3 billion of
22
home equity loans and lines of credit in our portfolio (which
represented 28% of our total loan portfolio). Included in the
$1.3 billion of home equity loans and lines of credit were
$41 million (or 3%) that were categorized as nonperforming.
Since May 1, 2008, we have limited our offering of
construction and land development loans only on an exception
basis. Between May 1, 2008 and September 30, 2008, we
have originated only $4.5 million of these loans.
Additionally, since August 21, 2008, we have ceased
offering loans and lines of credit in our home equity line of
business. Between August 21, 2008 and September 30,
2008, we funded $2.6 million in loans and lines of credit
in our home equity line of business that were previously
contracted for, but we have not closed any new loan originations
in this segment since September 30, 2008. We believe we
have established adequate reserves on our financial statements
to cover the credit risk of these loan portfolios. However,
losses could exceed our reserves, and ultimately result in a
material level of charge-offs, which could adversely impact our
results of operations, liquidity and capital.
We may
be required to repurchase mortgage loans that we previously sold
because of the credit risk inherent in those
loans.
We retain limited credit exposure from the sale of mortgage
loans. When we sell mortgage loans, we make industry standard
representations and warranties to the transferee regarding the
loans. These representations and warranties do not assure
against credit risk associated with the transferred loans, but
if individual mortgage loans are found not to have fully
complied with the associated representations and warranties we
have made to a transferee, we may be required to repurchase the
loans from the transferee or we may make payments in lieu of
curing alleged breaches of these representations and warranties.
Given the significant delinquencies in higher
combined-loan-to-value or loan-to-value products, we expect that
claims for repurchases pursuant to contractual representation
and warranties will increase. We have built a model to estimate
repurchase reserves for losses that are probable and estimable
based on expectations of paydowns, expected lives, default
probabilities and losses given default derived from a
combination of our historic experience and industry data. We
have established a $9 million reserve for what we consider
as probable and reasonably estimable losses. However, losses
attributable to repurchases could ultimately exceed our reserves.
Certain
of our consumer mortgage products were not sold by many
financial institutions.
In the past, we originated high loan-to-value home equity loans
not offered by many financial institutions. For this reason, the
performance of some of our financial assets may be less
predictable than those of other lenders. We may not have
adequate experience in a variety of economic environments to
predict accurately the losses from our remaining portfolios of
these products.
We
rely heavily on our management team and key personnel, and the
unexpected loss of key managers and personnel, or significant
changes in senior management, may affect our operations
adversely.
Our overall financial performance depends heavily on the
performance of key managers and personnel. Our past success was
influenced strongly by our ability to attract and to retain
senior management that is experienced in the niches within
banking for which they are responsible. If we are not able to
retain these key managers and personnel, we may not be able to
run our operations as effectively.
Our ability to retain executive officers and the current
management teams of each of our lines of business and our
holding company continues to be important to implement our
strategies successfully. As we complete our restructuring and
have a more streamlined business model, it may be more difficult
to retain some of our key managers. In our written agreement
with the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago and the Indiana
Department of Financial Institutions, we agreed to engage an
independent consultant to assess the banks management and
to take steps by December 9, 2008, to address the
independent consultants findings, including hiring
additional or replacement officers, if necessary. This process
was commenced prior to the signing of the written agreement. It
is possible that these findings could result in significant
changes in our senior management team. If we are required to
hire new members of management, the restrictions that the
23
written agreements place on our ability to enter into and make
payments pursuant to severance agreements may make it difficult
to attract persons of high quality to fill these positions.
Our
future success depends on our ability to compete effectively in
a highly competitive financial services industry.
The financial services industry, including commercial banking
and franchise finance, is highly competitive. We and our
operating subsidiaries encounter strong competition for
deposits, loans and other financial services in all of the
market areas in our lines of business. Our principal competitors
include other commercial banks, savings banks, savings and loan
associations, mutual funds, money market funds, finance
companies, trust companies, insurers, leasing companies, credit
unions, mortgage companies, real estate investment trusts
(REITs), private issuers of debt obligations, and suppliers of
other investment alternatives, such as securities firms. Many of
our non-bank competitors are not subject to the same degree of
regulation as we and our subsidiaries are and have advantages
over us in providing certain services. Many of our competitors
are significantly larger than we are and have greater access to
capital and other resources, lower operating costs, and lower
cost of funds. Also, our ability to compete effectively in our
lines of business is dependent on our ability to adapt
successfully to technological changes within the banking and
financial services industry.
We
have entered into written agreements with our regulators and our
business is affected by the highly regulated environment in
which we operate.
We and our subsidiaries are subject to extensive federal and
state regulation and supervision. Our failure to comply with
these requirements can lead to, among other remedies,
administrative enforcement actions, termination or suspension of
our licenses, rights of rescission for borrowers, and class
action lawsuits. Legislation and regulations have had, may
continue to have or may have significant impact on the financial
services industry. Legislative or regulatory changes could make
regulatory compliance more difficult or expensive for us,
causing us to change or limit some of our consumer loan products
or the way we operate our different lines of business. Future
changes could affect the profitability of some or all of our
lines of business.
On October 10, 2008, we entered into written agreements
with our regulators. Our holding company and our state-chartered
bank subsidiary, Irwin Union Bank and Trust Company,
entered into a written agreement with the Federal Reserve Bank
of Chicago and the Indiana Department of Financial Institutions.
Our federal savings bank subsidiary, Irwin Union Bank, F.S.B.,
entered into a written agreement with the Office of Thrift
Supervision. The failure to comply with the terms of these
written agreements could result in significant enforcement
actions against us of increasing severity, up to and including a
regulatory takeover of one or both of our bank subsidiaries.
The written agreement with the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
and the Indiana Department of Financial Institutions requires,
among other things, that we submit a capital plan that will
ensure our holding company and Irwin Union Bank and
Trust Company maintain sufficient capital to comply with
regulatory capital guidelines and to address the volume of our
adversely affected assets, concentration of credit, adequacy of
our allowance for loan and lease losses, planned growth and
anticipated levels of retained earnings. The written agreement
with the Office of Thrift Supervision requires, among other
things, that Irwin Union Bank, F.S.B. maintain a Tier 1
capital ratio of at least 9% and a Total Risk-Based Capital
Ratio of at least 11%.
As a result of the written agreement with the Federal Reserve
Bank of Chicago and the Indiana Department of Financial
Institutions, we and Irwin Union Bank and Trust Company are
not permitted to (1) declare or pay any dividend without
the prior approval of these regulators, or (2) make any
distributions of interest or principal on subordinated
debentures or trust preferred securities, unless we obtain the
prior written approval of these regulators. Therefore, we may
not be able to resume payments of such dividends or
distributions in the future.
In addition, like other registrants, we are subject to the
requirements of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. Failure to have
in place adequate programs and procedures could cause us to have
gaps in our internal control environment, putting our holding
company and its shareholders at risk of loss.
24
These and other potential changes in government regulation or
policies could increase our costs of doing business and could
adversely affect our operations and the manner in which we
conduct our business.
A
deterioration in our regulatory capital position could adversely
affect us.
The banking industry, in general, is heavily regulated, and we
and our subsidiaries are extensively regulated under state and
federal law. Regulations of the Federal Reserve, the Indiana
Department of Financial Institutions, the Office of Thrift
Supervision and the Federal Deposit Corporation that apply to us
specify minimum capital ratio requirements that must be
maintained by bank holding companies, banks and thrifts to be
considered a well-capitalized institution. In
addition, these regulators reserve the right to reclassify
institutions that meet these standards into a lower capital
category (i.e., less than well-capitalized)
at their own discretion based on safety and soundness
considerations. As of June 30, 2008, our holding company,
Irwin Financial Corporation, and its state-chartered bank
subsidiary, Irwin Union Bank and Trust Company, met the
applicable regulatory standard of a well-capitalized
institution under the relevant capital regulations that apply to
them. As a result of the written agreement with the Office of
Thrift Supervision, our federal savings bank subsidiary, Irwin
Union Bank, F.S.B., is considered adequately
capitalized, although we presently expect to continue to
have capital levels above those agreed to in the written
agreement applicable to the savings bank. As a result, the
savings bank, which holds approximately 12% of our total assets
as of November 10, 2008, is no longer permitted to accept
brokered deposits unless it receives the prior approval of the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. Although we have applied
for such approval, it might not be granted. Our other banking
subsidiary, Irwin Union Bank and Trust Company, a state
chartered bank regulated by the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
and the Indiana Department of Financial Institutions, does not
have any regulatory restrictions on the issuance of brokered
deposits.
Irwin Union Bank, F.S.B could be assessed higher premiums by the
Federal Deposit Insurance Fund and required to pay its
regulators increased assessment and application fees. In
addition, if Irwin Union Bank and Trust Company were no
longer considered well-capitalized, it would also be
subject to these higher fees, and it might lose access to public
funds in the state of Indiana, which could adversely affect our
liquidity and results of operations. Moreover, if we were
considered an undercapitalized institution, we could
be subject to certain prompt corrective action requirements,
regulatory controls and restrictions, which become more
extensive as an institution becomes more severely
undercapitalized. If such actions were to be taken, it could
adversely affect our business and we may have more limited
access to the capital markets.
Our
strategic restructuring will decrease the diversification of our
business and significantly increase our reliance on the
performance of our commercial banking and franchise finance
segments. If these segments do not perform as we anticipate, the
decrease in diversification could have a material adverse effect
on our results of operations.
We announced a restructuring through a series of transactions to
refocus on small business and local community banking. The
transactions included the exit from the small ticket leasing
business in the U.S. and Canada, along with the sale of
substantially all of the portfolio of loans and leases
associated with these businesses. We also continue to take steps
to exit our home equity business through the sale or run-off of
our home equity loan portfolio and the sale or managed reduction
of the servicing platform as appropriate based on the run-off of
loans.
Historically, our commercial banking and franchise finance
segments have been consistent and stable performers, but they
have also experienced losses during the current stressed
economic environment. We have taken significant loan loss
provisions in our commercial banking segment. Our non-performing
loans have risen over the past year and although we have
provided for this decline in credit quality, if these trends
worsen or if the commercial banking segment or franchise
segments otherwise do not perform as we expect, our results of
operations could be materially and adversely affected. We
believe our strategic restructuring and focus on these
businesses will ultimately improve our results, but we are no
longer as diversified as we were prior to the restructuring and
therefore do not have the same ability to offset negative trends
or results in these segments. In addition, in order to better
position ourselves to return to profitability, we have taken
steps, and will take additional steps in connection with exiting
the home equity business, to reduce the size and scope of our
25
enterprise oversight group. This process involves execution
risk and material downsizing risk, and may result in the
unintended loss of key personnel. See We rely
heavily on our management team and key personnel, and the
unexpected loss of key managers and personnel, or significant
changes in senior management, may affect our operations
adversely.
The
soundness of other financial institutions could adversely affect
us.
Financial services institutions are interrelated as a result of
trading, clearing, counterparty, or other relationships. We have
exposure to many different industries and counterparties, and we
routinely execute transactions with counterparties in the
financial services industry, including brokers and dealers,
commercial banks, investment banks, mutual and hedge funds, and
other institutional clients. Many of these transactions expose
us to credit risk in the event of default by our counterparty or
client. In addition, our credit risk may be exacerbated when the
collateral held by us cannot be realized or is liquidated at
prices not sufficient to recover the full amount of the loan or
derivative exposure due us. Such losses could materially and
adversely affect our results of operations or earnings.
We are
a defendant in class actions and other lawsuits that could
subject us to material liability.
We and our subsidiaries have been named as defendants in
lawsuits alleging, among other things, that we violated state
and federal laws in the course of making loans and leases and
breached agreements. Among the allegations are that we charged
impermissible and excessive rates and fees, participated in
fraudulent financing, are responsible for residential lead-based
paint exposure, and breached contractual provisions. Some of
these cases seek class action status, which generally involves a
large number of plaintiffs and could result in potentially
increased amounts of loss. At the present time, we are unable to
quantify the amount of loss, if any, that we could suffer in
these matters because the cases are in the early stages of
litigation. We have not established reserves for all of these
lawsuits due to either lack of probability of loss or inability
to accurately estimate potential loss. However, if decided
against us, the lawsuits have the potential to affect us
materially.
Our
business may be affected adversely by Internet
fraud.
We are inherently exposed to many types of operational risk,
including those caused by the use of computer, internet and
telecommunications systems. These may manifest themselves in the
form of fraud by employees, by customers, other outside entities
targeting us
and/or our
customers that use our internet banking, electronic banking or
some other form of our telecommunications systems. Given the
growing level of use of electronic, internet-based, and
networked systems to conduct business directly or indirectly
with our clients, certain fraud losses may not be avoidable
regardless of the preventative and detection systems in place.
26
USE OF
PROCEEDS
Although the actual amount will depend on participation in the
rights offer, we expect that the net proceeds from the rights
offer will be approximately
$ million. We intend to use
the proceeds of the rights offer for general corporate purposes,
including to (i) continue to maintain our capital ratios
above the levels that we have agreed upon with our bank
regulators, (ii) accomplish the other objectives we and our
bank regulators have set forth in the written agreements, and
(iii) position our holding company and bank subsidiaries to
return to profitability and respond to future business and
financing needs and opportunities.
27
THE
CORPORATION
We are a bank holding company headquartered in Columbus,
Indiana. We seek to create competitive advantage within the
banking industry by serving small businesses with lending,
leasing, deposit, and advisory services, as well as consumers in
the neighborhoods surrounding our bank branches. As a result of
the restructuring transactions that we announced in July 2008,
we streamlined our lines of business to focus on commercial
banking and franchise finance. We also service a portfolio of
home equity loans originated under a previous strategy. We
continue to take steps to exit our home equity business through
the sale or run-off of our home equity loan portfolio and the
sale or managed reduction of the servicing platform as
appropriate based on the run-off of loans.
Our business model is based on funding the activities of our
commercial banking and franchise finance primarily through
deposits gathered through our bank branches and borrowings from
the Federal Home Loan Bank, although we are pursuing ways to
diversify our funding sources. We operate two depository
institution subsidiaries Irwin Union Bank and
Trust Company, a commercial bank that was organized in
1871, and Irwin Union Bank, F.S.B., a federal savings bank that
was organized in 2000. We formed the holding company in 1972.
Other direct and indirect major subsidiaries include Irwin
Franchise Capital Corporation, our franchise finance subsidiary
and Irwin Home Equity Corporation, a consumer home equity
servicing company.
In commercial banking, we provide a full line of banking
services to small businesses and consumers in the communities
and neighborhoods served by our bank branch locations. Through
this approach, we provide small businesses in our communities
with the advice, credit, and other banking products that meet
their needs and help them to grow, which we believe large
national banks are often unable to do in a flexible and cost
effective manner. We focus on small businesses because our
understanding of these customers needs and our ability to
meet those needs creates added value that permits us not to have
to compete primarily on price. We also provide a full line of
banking services to consumers in the communities and
neighborhoods served by our bank branch locations.
Our franchise finance line of business also focuses on small
businesses the owners and operators of leading quick
service and casual dining restaurant concepts in the
U.S. We have our own direct sales force that establishes
relationships with seasoned
multi-unit
franchise operators by offering service and responsiveness that
is superior to the competition (primarily GE Capital, the
dominant lender in the franchise business). These
multi-unit
operators often seek to diversify their financing sources. We
believe we have built a good brand as an alternative to GE
Capital in this business. In post-closing surveys, 93% of our
customers said Irwin Franchise Capital Corporation delivered on
its promises and 99% said they would do business with Irwin
again.
The combination of commercial banking and franchise finance
allows us to diversify our revenues, credit risk, and
application of capital across borrower types and across
geographic regions. Such diversification is a key part of our
risk management. Within commercial banking, our customers have
different growth and risk profiles in the Midwest and Western
U.S. These markets perform differently due to differences
in local economies, affecting both the demand for and the credit
quality of our loans. Our franchise finance customers are well
diversified across the entire country and among leading
franchise concepts.
28
RECENT
DEVELOPMENTS
The severe stress that is being experienced in credit, housing
and financial markets has resulted in an extremely challenging
environment for our holding company and our bank subsidiaries.
We have experienced substantial losses in recent quarters and,
although our holding company has stayed above regulatory
well-capitalized levels, these capital levels have
dropped below our own internal capital targets. We have long
held that our strategy needs to evolve in response to changes in
environmental conditions, and therefore we have taken steps to
change our strategy to fit the environment in which we operate
today and will operate in the future.
On July 25, 2008, we announced a restructuring through a
series of transactions to refocus on small business and local
community banking. The transactions included the exit from the
small ticket leasing business in the U.S. and Canada, along
with the sale of substantially all of the portfolio of loans and
leases associated with these businesses. In addition, other
agreements have been executed in connection with the
restructuring that were designed to enable us to remove our loss
exposure to our home equity portfolio, although one such
transaction, structured to remove residual home equity exposure
from our balance sheet, was rescinded due to the acquirors
inability to obtain required third party consents. We continue
to take steps to exit our home equity business through the sale
or run-off of our home equity loan portfolio and the sale or
managed reduction of the servicing platform as appropriate based
on the run-off of loans. We believe the transactions noted above
were critical to lowering the risk inherent in our loan
portfolios, protecting our franchise in the current and future
environments, and better positioning our company for a return to
profitability. We continue to seek ways of eliminating our
exposure to the risk of loss from our home equity business.
On October 10, 2008, our holding company and Irwin Union
Bank and Trust (the bank) entered into a written
agreement with the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago and the
Indiana Department of Financial Institutions. On the same day,
Irwin Union Bank, F.S.B. (the savings bank), entered
into a supervisory agreement with the Office of Thrift
Supervision.
Our holding company and our state-chartered bank subsidiary,
Irwin Union Bank and Trust Company, which holds
approximately $4.5 billion or 85% of our total assets, are
subject to the written agreement with the Federal Reserve Bank
of Chicago and the Indiana Department of Financial Institutions.
This agreement provides that the holding company and the bank
must:
|
|
|
|
|
submit a plan to strengthen board oversight of the management
and operations of the holding company and the bank;
|
|
|
|
(1) by November 10, 2008, submit a report prepared by
an independent consultant regarding the consultants
assessment of the banks management and (2) by
December 10, 2008, take steps to address the independent
consultants findings, including hiring additional or
replacement officers, if necessary;
|
|
|
|
by November 9, 2008, submit a (1) written liquidity
and funds management plan designed to improve management of our
holding companys and our banks liquidity positions
and funds management practices and (2) joint contingency
plan that identifies available sources of liquidity and includes
adverse scenario planning;
|
|
|
|
by November 9, 2008, submit a capital plan that will ensure
our holding company and our bank maintain sufficient capital to
comply with regulatory capital guidelines and to address the
volume of our adversely affected assets, concentration of
credit, adequacy of our allowance for loan and lease losses,
planned growth and anticipated levels of retained earnings;
|
|
|
|
|
|
within 30 days from the receipt of any regulatory report of
examination, charge off all assets classified loss
unless otherwise approved by the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
and the Indiana Department of Financial Institutions;
|
|
|
|
|
|
by January 9, 2009 (1) review and revise as necessary
our allowance for loan and lease losses methodology to assure
compliance with relevant supervisory guidance and
(2) submit a written program for the maintenance of an
adequate allowance for loan and lease losses; and
|
29
|
|
|
|
|
by December 10, 2008, submit a three-year strategic plan
and a 2009 plan and budget for our holding company, on a
consolidated basis, and our bank.
|
As a result of this written agreement, our holding company and
our bank are not permitted to (1) declare or pay any
dividend without the prior approval of the Federal Reserve and
Indiana Department of Financial Institutions, or (2) make
any distributions of interest or principal on subordinated
debentures or trust preferred securities without the prior
approval of the Federal Reserve and Indiana Department of
Financial Institutions. In addition, our holding company and our
non-bank subsidiaries are not permitted to incur, increase, or
guarantee any debt without the prior written approval of the
Federal Reserve, and our holding company is not permitted to
purchase or redeem any of its common shares.
We believe that we have already met the majority of the
obligations under this written agreement and will be able to
comply with each of the other requirements in the written
agreement, and that doing so does not impose any material
changes on our business in light of the steps we have been
taking to restructure and reorganize our businesses. The failure
to comply with the terms of the written agreement could result
in significant enforcement actions against us of increasing
severity, up to and including a regulatory takeover of our
state-chartered bank.
In order to comply with the aforementioned written agreement
with the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago and the Indiana
Department of Financial Institutions, we have taken the
following measures:
|
|
|
|
|
we have submitted a plan on strengthening board oversight of the
management and operations of the holding company and the bank
and are already acting on it;
|
|
|
|
|
|
we have engaged an independent consultant regarding the
consultants assessment of the banks management, the
consultant completed its review in November and reported its
findings to the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago and the Indiana
Department of Financial Institutions;
|
|
|
|
|
|
we have submitted (1) a written liquidity and funds
management plan designed to improve management of our holding
companys and our banks liquidity positions and funds
management practices and (2) a joint contingency plan that
identifies available sources of liquidity and includes adverse
scenario planning and are already acting on these;
|
|
|
|
|
|
we submitted a capital plan to the Federal Reserve Bank of
Chicago and the Indiana Department of Financial Institutions. A
highly important component of this capital plan was raising
capital through the issuance of common shares under this rights
offer;
|
|
|
|
|
|
we have reviewed our allowance methodology for loan and lease
losses and have submitted the required documentation, and as a
result of our review, we determined that the documentation
supporting our loan and lease losses methodology could be
improved, and we developed and implemented various documentation
enhancements; however, the improvements did not result in any
changes to any of our previously reported loan and lease losses
levels; and
|
|
|
|
|
|
we will submit the 2009 plan and three-year strategic plan in
the fourth quarter.
|
Prior to the issuance of the written agreement with the Federal
Reserve Bank of Chicago and the Indiana Department of Financial
Institutions we suspended the payment of dividends on our
common, preferred, and trust preferred securities. In addition
we have no plans for further debt issuance, nor need to issue
debt to support our on-going business plan.
Irwin Union Bank F.S.B., our federal savings bank subsidiary,
holds approximately $.6 billion or 12% of our total assets.
It (but not the holding company or Irwin Union Bank and
Trust Company) is subject to a written agreement with the
Office of Thrift Supervision which provides the following:
|
|
|
|
|
the savings bank must maintain a Tier 1 capital ratio of at
least 9% and a Total Risk-Based Capital Ratio of at least 11%
and the savings bank is not permitted to accept brokered
deposits unless it receives the prior approval of the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation;
|
30
|
|
|
|
|
the savings bank must submit for review and approval or
non-objection by the Office of Thrift Supervision a revised
business plan that (1) defines strategies for preserving
and enhancing the savings banks capital within its risk
profile, (2) defines limits on high-risk lending
activities, (3) identifies strategies designed to improve
and sustain the savings banks earnings, and
(4) identifies strategies to stress-test and adjust
earnings forecasts based on continuing operating results,
economic conditions and the credit quality of our loan portfolio;
|
|
|
|
the savings bank will not be permitted to increase its current
levels of construction loans or land loans without the prior
approval of the Office of Thrift Supervision;
|
|
|
|
by October 31, 2008, the savings bank must be restructured
so that it operates on a completely independent basis from our
bank. The savings bank must hire (1) a full time President
and Chief Executive Officer, Chief Credit Officer and Chief
Financial Officer and (2) at least two additional
independent directors who are not management officials of our
holding company or our bank;
|
|
|
|
the savings bank is not permitted to increase its total assets
during any quarter in excess of an amount equal to the net
interest credited on deposit liabilities during the quarter
without the prior approval of the Office of Thrift Supervision;
|
|
|
|
the savings bank is not permitted to make employment agreements
with severance provisions, golden parachute
payments, and certain prohibited indemnification payments.
In addition, the savings bank is not permitted to enter into,
renew or revise any contractual arrangement related to
compensation or benefits with any director or senior executive
officer of the savings bank until the Office of Thrift
Supervision has approved or provided its non-objection to any
such agreement;
|
|
|
|
the savings bank is not permitted to enter into, renew or revise
any third-party contracts for services outside the normal course
of business until the Office of Thrift Supervision has approved
or provided its non-objection to any such agreement; and
|
|
|
|
the savings bank is not permitted to engage in transactions with
any affiliate or subsidiary without the prior approval of the
Office of Thrift Supervision.
|
As described above, the written agreement with the Office of
Thrift Supervision requires Irwin Union Bank, F.S.B. to maintain
a Tier 1 capital ratio of at least 9% and a Total
Risk-Based Capital Ratio of at least 11%. Under applicable
regulations, because the written agreement requires Irwin Union
Bank, F.S.B. to maintain a specific capital level, it is
classified as adequately capitalized, which is less
than well-capitalized, even though Irwin Union Bank,
F.S.B. holds a higher level of capital than the regulatory
definition of
well-capitalized
and currently satisfies the capital requirements set forth in
the written agreement.
We believe that we will we have already met the majority of the
obligations under this written agreement and will be able to
comply with each of the requirements in these agreements and
that doing so does not impose any material changes on our
business in light of the steps we have been taking to
restructure and reorganize our businesses. The failure to comply
with the terms of the written agreement could result in
significant enforcement actions against us including a
regulatory takeover of our savings bank.
In order to comply with the aforementioned written agreement
with the Office of Thrift Supervision, we have taken the
following measures:
|
|
|
|
|
we have submitted a revised business plan and are already acting
on it;
|
|
|
|
|
|
we have stopped making commercial construction and land loans in
the third quarter through the savings bank; we have submitted a
business plan which manages our growth within the specified
limits;
|
|
|
|
|
|
we have submitted a plan that addresses the restructuring of the
savings bank so that it operates on a completely independent
basis from our bank; we have identified the required new
executives and board members, who will take their appointments
pending approval by the Office of Thrift Supervision;
|
|
|
|
|
|
we have and will continue to adhere to the provisions regarding
employment agreements and third-party contracts for services.
|
31
An important part of our strategy to maintain liquidity and
satisfy all our regulators capital requirements has been
active balance sheet management. Reflecting our completed sales
of nearly $650 million of small ticket leasing assets, our
balance sheet has been reduced over 10% in the third quarter to
provide more flexibility in this difficult environment in which
the capital ratios of financial institutions such as ours are
under downward pressure. For example, as of September 30,
2008, we reduced our Tier 1 capital by approximately
$70 million to reflect valuation reserves for deferred tax
assets in accordance with regulatory capital requirements.
However, we did not reduce our Tier 1 capital for certain
amounts of net operating losses that we previously recognized
because we believe we can offset these net operating losses
through the recovery of taxes that we previously paid. If we are
unable to fully utilize these net operating losses, however, our
regulatory capital ratios may decline due to additional
Tier 1 capital reductions.
On November 11, 2008 we submitted to the Federal Reserve
Bank of Chicago our application for participation in the Capital
Purchase Program. As of the date of this prospectus, our
application is pending. We further believe that the UST is in
the process of reviewing its eligibility criteria for bank
organizations such as ours that have entered into written
agreements with bank regulators or that are subject to similar
regulatory actions. We do not know when the UST will finalize
its eligibility criteria or how our application will fit into
those criteria.
If granted, we would utilize the capital from our possible
participation in the Capital Purchase Program to extend lending
activities in all the communities and neighborhoods served by
our bank branch locations. Therefore, we believe that our
participation in the Capital Purchase Program is consistent
with, and will further, one of the primary goals of the Capital
Purchase Program, which is to reinforce the stability of
U.S. bank organizations such as ours in order to allow us
to support economic recovery and growth in the communities and
neighborhoods that we serve.
We expect to conduct the rights offer whether or not we
participate in the Capital Purchase Program. If we receive
approval to participate in the Capital Purchase Program, we will
issue and sell preferred shares, along with warrants to purchase
our common shares, to the UST, in exchange for an amount that
will not exceed $148 million, or 3% of our risk-weighted
assets. The preferred shares will qualify as Tier 1 capital
and will rank equally with the preferred shares that are
currently outstanding.
We are conducting the rights offer to enhance our capital
position in a manner that satisfies the capital plan
requirements in the written agreements, while providing our
existing shareholders the opportunity to limit ownership
dilution. While participation in the Capital Purchase Program
would significantly improve our capital position, we do not
believe the CPP is essential to our capital plan.
We believe our current capital plan, which includes the rights
offer in combination with the proposed exchange offer for a
portion of our trust preferred securities for common shares,
will enable us to continue to maintain our capital ratios above
the levels we agreed upon with our regulators, accomplish the
other objectives we and our regulators have set forth in the
written agreements, and position our holding company and bank
subsidiaries to return to profitability and respond to future
business and financing needs and opportunities.
32
THE
RIGHTS OFFER
The
Subscription Rights
We are distributing to the record holders of our common shares
as of the record date non-transferable subscription rights to
purchase shares of our common stock. The subscription price is
$ per full share. The subscription
rights will entitle the holders of our common shares to purchase
approximately an aggregate
of
of our common shares for an aggregate purchase price of
$ .
Each holder of record of our common shares will receive one
subscription right for each full common share owned by such
holder as of 5:00 p.m., New York time, on the record date.
Each subscription right will entitle the holder to a basic
subscription privilege and an over-subscription privilege.
Basic
Subscription Privilege
With your basic subscription privilege, you may purchase
of our
common shares per subscription right, upon delivery of the
required documents and payment of the subscription price of
$ per full share, prior to the
expiration of the rights offer. You may exercise all or a
portion of your basic subscription privilege; however, if you
exercise less than your full basic subscription privilege, you
will not be entitled to purchase shares under your
over-subscription privilege.
Fractional common shares resulting from the exercise of the
basic subscription privilege will be eliminated by rounding down
to the nearest whole share, with the total subscription payment
being adjusted accordingly. Any excess subscription payments
received by the subscription agent will be returned promptly,
without interest or penalty.
Over-Subscription
Privilege
In the event that you purchase all of the common shares
available to you pursuant to your basic subscription privilege,
you may also choose to purchase a portion of our common shares
that are not purchased by other shareholders through the
exercise of their basic subscription privileges. If sufficient
common shares are available, we will seek to honor the
over-subscription requests in full. If, however,
over-subscription requests exceed the number of common shares
available, we will allocate the available common shares pro rata
among the shareholders exercising the over-subscription
privilege in proportion to the number of common shares owned by
such shareholder on the record date, relative to the number of
shares owned on the record date by all shareholders exercising
the over-subscription privilege. If this pro rata allocation
results in any shareholder receiving a greater number of common
shares than the shareholder subscribed for pursuant to the
exercise of the over-subscription privilege, then such
shareholder will be allocated only that number of shares for
which the shareholder oversubscribed, and the remaining common
shares will be allocated among all other shareholders exercising
the over-subscription privilege on the same pro rata basis
described above. The proration process will be repeated until
all common shares have been allocated.
In order to properly exercise your over-subscription privilege,
you must deliver the subscription payment related to your
over-subscription privilege prior to the expiration of the
rights offer. Because we will not know the total number of
unsubscribed shares prior to the expiration of the rights offer,
if you wish to maximize the number of shares you purchase
pursuant to your over-subscription privilege, you will need to
deliver payment in an amount equal to the aggregate subscription
price for the maximum number of our common shares that may be
available to you (i.e., for the maximum number of common
shares available to you, assuming you exercise all of your basic
subscription privilege and are allotted the full amount of your
over-subscription).
We can provide no assurances that you will actually be entitled
to purchase the number of shares issuable upon the exercise of
your over-subscription privilege in full at the expiration of
the rights offer. We will not be able to satisfy your exercise
of the over-subscription privilege if all of our shareholders
exercise their basic subscription privileges in full, and we
will only honor an over-subscription privilege to the extent a
sufficient amount of our common shares are available following
the exercise of subscription rights under the basic
33
subscription privileges. In addition, limitations on the amount
of common shares that may be subscribed for pursuant to the
over-subscription privilege are described below under the
heading Regulatory Limitations.
|
|
|
|
|
To the extent the aggregate subscription price of the maximum
number of unsubscribed shares available to you pursuant to the
over-subscription privilege is less than the amount you actually
paid in connection with the exercise of the over-subscription
privilege, you will be allocated only the number of unsubscribed
shares available to you, and any excess subscription payments
received by the subscription agent will be returned promptly,
without interest or penalty.
|
|
|
|
|
|
To the extent the amount you actually paid in connection with
the exercise of the over-subscription privilege is less than the
aggregate subscription price of the maximum number of
unsubscribed shares available to you pursuant to the
over-subscription privilege, you will be allocated the number of
unsubscribed shares for which you actually paid in connection
with the over-subscription privilege.
|
Fractional common shares resulting from the exercise of the
over-subscription privilege will be eliminated by rounding down
to the nearest whole share, with the total subscription payment
being adjusted accordingly. Any excess subscription payments
received by the subscription agent will be returned promptly,
without interest or penalty.
Delivery
of Common Shares Acquired in the Rights Offer
If you purchase shares in the rights offer by submitting a
rights certificate and payment, we will mail you a share
certificate as soon as practicable after the completion of the
rights offer. One share certificate will be generated for each
rights certificate processed. Until your share certificate is
received, you may not be able to sell the common shares acquired
in the rights offer. If your shares as of the record date were
held by a custodian bank, broker, dealer or other nominee, and
you participate in the rights offer, you will not receive share
certificates for your new shares. Your custodian bank, broker,
dealer or other nominee will be credited with the shares of
common stock you purchase in the rights offer as soon as
practicable after the completion of the rights offer.
Reasons
for the Rights Offer
We are in the process of a strategic restructuring to refocus
our holding company and its bank and thrift subsidiaries on
serving small businesses and the communities in which we operate
in order to return to profitability in the rapidly evolving
U.S. banking industry. Raising our capital levels is an
important component of our restructuring plan. We have decided
to conduct the rights offer to enhance our capital and give
existing shareholders the opportunity to limit ownership
dilution. On October 10, 2008, our holding company and our
state-chartered subsidiary bank Irwin Union Bank and
Trust Company, entered into a written agreement with the
Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago and the Indiana Department of
Financial Institutions. On the same day, our federal savings
bank subsidiary Irwin Union Bank, F.S.B., entered into a written
agreement with the Office of Thrift Supervision. Both
agreements, require, among other things, that our holding
company and our bank subsidiaries prepare a capital plan that
will ensure that our holding company and our bank subsidiaries
maintain sufficient capital to comply with regulatory capital
guidelines and to address the volume of our adversely affected
assets, concentrations of credit, adequacy of our allowance for
loan and lease losses, planned growth and anticipated levels of
retained earnings. We believe that the rights offer will allow
us to continue to maintain our capital ratios above the levels
that we have agreed upon with our bank regulators, accomplish
the other objectives we and our bank regulators have set forth
in the written agreements, and position our holding company and
bank subsidiaries to return to profitability and respond to
future business and financing needs and opportunities.
Standby
Commitments
In connection with the rights offer, we have separately entered
into standby purchase agreements with Cummins Inc., William I.
Miller (our chairman and chief executive officer), Catherine G.
Miller (a sister of William I. Miller),
Elizabeth G. Miller (a sister of William I. Miller),
Moorhead Rodman (a retired partner of Warburg Pincus LLP), Henry
B. Schacht (a former chief executive officer of Cummins Inc. and
Lucent Inc.),
34
and John L. Vogelstein (a former vice chairman of Warburg
Pincus LLP), pursuant to which these investors have severally
agreed to acquire from us, at the same subscription price
offered to shareholders, any common shares that are not
subscribed for pursuant to the exercise of basic subscription
privileges or over-subscription privileges, subject to a maximum
amount set forth in each investors standby purchase
agreement.
The maximum number of shares that a standby purchaser will
purchase may vary depending on the standby purchaser and cannot
be determined until the completion of the rights offer. For
William I. Miller, Catherine G. Miller and Elizabeth G. Miller,
their standby commitments are in addition to the rights that
they have committed to exercise with respect to their direct
shareholdings. The standby commitments and commitments to
exercise rights, not including those of our independent
directors that are described below, include a commitment by
Cummins Inc. to purchase up to $25 million, subject to
certain limitations on total ownership. The remaining standby
purchasers have committed to purchase up to $12 million of
common shares in the aggregate, including the amount to be
purchased by members of the Miller family in connection with
their commitments to first exercise rights with respect to their
shares held outright.
The standby purchases are subject to a number of conditions,
including conditions relating to satisfactory approvals from our
banking regulators. If any of the conditions is not satisfied,
the standby purchasers will not be required to purchase any
shares. In addition, Cummins Inc., John L. Vogelstein and Rodman
Moorhead are not required to purchase common shares if
(i) the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago and the Indiana
Department of Financial Institutions determine that our holding
company and Irwin Union Bank and Trust Company will not
remain well-capitalized in light of foreseeable
capital requirements and that our capital plan, including the
rights offer, will not be satisfactory, (ii) they
reasonably believe that they will be deemed to
control (within the meaning of the Bank Holding
Company Act of 1956, as amended, or the Change in Bank Control
Act, as amended) our holding company or (iii) any consents
or approvals required to be obtained from any governmental
authority in connection with the purchase of shares pursuant to
the standby commitments have not been obtained or any applicable
waiting periods or appeal periods have not yet expired. In
addition to these conditions,
(i) John L. Vogelstein and Rodman Moorhead are
not required to purchase common shares if the subscription price
set by our board of directors is equal to or greater than the
market price of our common shares as calculated by the volume
weighted average trading price on the 20 days preceding the
date on which the rights offer is priced and (ii) Cummins
Inc. is not required to purchase common shares if our holding
company has not taken all required actions to increase the size
of our board by one director so that a designee of Cummins Inc.
may be elected or appointed to the board in the future if
Cummins so proposes. Even if we satisfy all these conditions,
Cummins Inc.s commitment may be reduced such that it will
not own more than 19.9% of our common shares upon closing of the
rights offer.
Each standby purchaser executed a non-disclosure agreement and
accordingly gained access to certain nonpublic information about
us and participated in discussions with our management. Each
standby purchaser performed a due diligence review of Irwin
Financial Corporation and subsequently negotiated and executed
standby purchase agreements. Any purchases will be made for
investment purposes and not with a view toward resale. However,
under the terms of the standby purchase agreements, we have
agreed to provide customary registration rights to the standby
purchasers. In addition, Cummins Inc. and John L. Vogelstein
executed a
lock-up
agreement pursuant to which they agreed not to transfer or
dispose of the common shares purchased pursuant to their standby
commitments, including by means of any hedging or short sale
transactions for a period of time. Cummins Inc. and John L.
Vogelstein are free to sell shares, subject to applicable
securities laws, (i) with respect to 25% of any shares they
purchase, 60 days after the closing date of the rights
offer, (ii) with respect to 50% of any shares they
purchase, 120 days after the closing date of the rights
offer, (iii) with respect to 75% of any shares they
purchase, 180 days after the closing date of the rights
offer and (iv) with respect to the remainder of any shares
they purchase, 240 days after the closing date of the
rights offer. These
lock-up
agreements contain a clause whereby we promise that
Cummins and John Vogelsteins
lock-up
agreements will not be any more restrictive than any other
lock-up or
similar agreement agreed to in connection with the proposed
exchange of our trust preferred securities for common shares.
The number of common shares that will be purchased by the
standby purchasers can only be determined upon the completion of
the rights offer. The number of shares will be determined by
reference to a formula that provides that the standby purchasers
will purchase all the common shares that could have been but
were
35
not subscribed for in the rights offer, subject to a maximum
number of shares set forth in each investors standby
purchase agreement. The maximum number of shares that a standby
purchaser will purchase may vary depending on the standby
purchaser and cannot be determined until the completion of the
rights offer. If the rights offer is fully subscribed directly
by shareholders then the standby purchasers will not purchase
any of our shares pursuant to their standby purchase agreements.
William I. Miller currently sits on the board of directors of
Cummins Inc. and has agreed to resign from that position if
Cummins exercises its standby commitment in full or in part.
Directors
Participation
Each of our directors has irrevocably committed to exercise
rights in the offering. Eight of the nine independent directors
have made this election with respect to the full amount of his
or her basic subscription privilege. Any such purchases will be
made for investment purposes and not with a view toward resale.
Although each of our directors is investing his or her own money
in the rights offer, our board of directors is making no
recommendation regarding your exercise of the subscription
rights. You are urged to make your decision based on your own
assessment of our business and the rights offer. Please see
Risk Factors for a discussion of some of the risks
involved in investing in our common shares.
The
Exchange Offers
We are also considering a series of exchange offers pursuant to
which a to-be-determined amount of our common shares would be
issued in exchange for a to-be-determined amount of trust
preferred securities that have been issued by various Delaware
statutory trusts that hold, as their sole assets, junior
subordinated debentures issued by us. If the transactions are
commenced, then we would offer selected holders of trust
preferred securities the right to exchange their trust preferred
securities for common shares at an exchange ratio to be
negotiated between us and the party to each exchange transaction.
We and our state-chartered bank and savings bank subsidiaries
are subject to measurement on three ratios to determine the
sufficiency of our capital. Two of these ratios are based on
Tier 1 or core capital and the third is based on total
capital (the sum of Tier 1 and Tier 2 capital). Under
the Federal Reserves risk-based capital requirements to
which our holding company is subject as a bank holding company,
Tier 1 capital, or core capital, consists of, among other
things, common shareholders equity, and subject to certain
limitations, trust preferred securities. Tier 2 capital, or
supplementary capital, consists of, among other things, and to
the extent not included in Tier 1 capital, trust preferred
securities. The proposed exchange offers would restructure these
elements of our holding companys capital to increase the
amount of capital that can be treated as Tier 1 capital. In
addition, in light of the Federal Reserves revised capital
regulations that take effect in March of 2009 and that limit the
amount of trust preferred securities that may be included in
Tier 2 capital to 50 percent of Tier 1 capital,
the proposed exchange offers would also increase the amount of
capital that otherwise would be able to be treated as
Tier 2 capital at that time. Finally, an exchange offer
will reduce our continuing obligation to pay or accrue quarterly
interest payments on the trust preferred securities that will be
exchanged.
We have not yet entered into definitive documentation with
respect to the proposed exchange offers.
Effect of
Rights Offer on Existing Shareholders
The ownership interests and voting interests of the existing
shareholders that do not fully exercise their basic subscription
privileges will be diluted. See Questions and Answers
Related to the Rights Offer How many common shares
will be outstanding after the rights offer.
36
Method of
Exercising Subscription Rights
The exercise of subscription rights is irrevocable and may not
be cancelled or modified. You may exercise your subscription
rights as follows:
Subscription
by Registered Holders
If you hold certificates of our common shares, the number of
rights you may exercise pursuant to the basic subscription
privilege is indicated on the enclosed rights certificate. You
may exercise your subscription rights by properly completing and
executing the rights certificate and forwarding it, together
with your full subscription payment, to the subscription agent
at the address set forth below under
Subscription Agent, prior to the
expiration of the rights offer.
Subscription
by Beneficial Owners
If you are a beneficial owner of our common shares that are
registered in the name of a broker, dealer, custodian bank or
other nominee, you will not receive a rights certificate.
Instead, one subscription right will be issued to the nominee
record holder for each of our common shares that you own at the
record date. If you are not contacted by your broker, dealer,
custodian bank or other nominee, you should promptly contact
your broker, dealer, custodian bank or other nominee in order to
subscribe for our common shares in the rights offer.
If you hold your common shares in the name of a broker, dealer,
custodian bank or other nominee, your nominee will exercise the
subscription rights on your behalf in accordance with your
instructions. Your nominee may establish a deadline that may be
before the 5:00 p.m., New York
time, ,
2008 expiration date that we have established for the rights
offer.
Subscription
by Participants in the Irwin 401k Plans
If you hold our common shares through one of the Irwin
401k Plans, you may exercise your basic subscription
privilege with respect to those common shares that you hold
through an Irwin 401k Plan (but not the oversubscription
privilege) by electing what percentage (if any) of your
subscription rights you would like to exercise and then
communicating your election to Fidelity, the trustee and record
keeper for each of the Irwin 401k Plans, in a timely manner
using the specific election procedures prescribed in the
materials that will be provided to you. Any election directing
the exercise of subscription rights must be received by Fidelity
not later than 4:00 p.m. New York time
on , 2008, or else it
will be too late and will not be effective. This is a special
deadline that applies to participants in the Irwin
401k Plans (notwithstanding the different deadline set
forth in this prospectus for shareholders generally), and any
subscription rights credited to your Irwin 401k Plan
accounts will expire unless they are properly exercised by this
special deadline for participants in the
Irwin 401k Plans.
If you are a participant of an Irwin 401k Plan, you will be able
to exercise your basic subscription privilege with respect to
common shares you hold through an Irwin 401k Plan, but you will
not have the opportunity to participate in the over-subscription
privilege with respect to such shares, which is available to
shareholders generally. If you wish to exercise your basic
subscription privilege with respect to common shares you hold
through an Irwin 401k Plan, you will need to provide direction
to Fidelity in your Plan Participant Election Form to effect a
reallocation among your current Irwin 401k Plan accounts in
order to pay the subscription price. Fidelity will then exercise
the subscription rights on your behalf and distribute the common
shares received in exchange therefor into your relevant Irwin
401k Plan account.
Payment
Method for Registered Holders
As described in the instructions accompanying the rights
certificate, payments must be made in full in United States
currency, in immediately available funds, by:
|
|
|
|
|
certified bank check or bank draft payable to Irwin Financial
Corporation, drawn upon a U.S. bank;
|
37
|
|
|
|
|
postal, telegraphic or express money order payable to Irwin
Financial Corporation; or
|
|
|
|
|
|
wire transfer of immediately available funds to account
maintained by the subscription agent.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Personal checks are not accepted. Payment received after the
expiration of the rights offer may not be honored, and the
subscription agent will return your payment to you promptly,
without interest or penalty.
|
You should read and follow the delivery and payment instructions
accompanying the rights certificate. DO NOT SEND RIGHTS
CERTIFICATES OR PAYMENTS DIRECTLY TO IRWIN. We will not consider
your subscription received until the subscription agent has
received delivery of a properly completed and duly executed
rights certificate and other subscription documents and payment
of the full subscription amount. The risk of delivery of all
documents and payments is borne by you or your nominee, not by
the subscription agent or us.
The method of delivery of rights certificates and payment of the
subscription amount to the subscription agent will be at the
risk of the holders of subscription rights. If sent by mail, we
recommend that you send subscription materials and payments by
overnight courier or by registered mail, properly insured, with
return receipt requested, and that a sufficient number of days
be allowed to ensure delivery to the subscription agent and
clearance of payment prior to the expiration of the rights offer.
Missing
or Incomplete Subscription Information
If you do not indicate the number of subscription rights being
exercised, or the subscription agent does not receive the full
subscription payment for the number of subscription rights that
you indicate are being exercised, then you will be deemed to
have exercised the maximum number of subscription rights that
may be exercised with the aggregate subscription payment you
delivered to the subscription agent. If the subscription agent
does not apply your full subscription payment to your purchase
of our common shares, any excess subscription payment received
by the subscription agent will be returned promptly, without
interest or penalty.
Expiration
Date and Amendments
The subscription period, during which you may exercise your
subscription rights, expires at 5:00 p.m., New York time,
on ,
2008, which is the expiration of the rights offer. If you do not
exercise your subscription rights prior to that time, your
subscription rights will expire and will no longer be
exercisable. We will not be required to issue common shares to
you if the subscription agent receives your rights certificate
and subscription payment after that time, regardless of when the
rights certificate and subscription payment were sent by you. We
have the option to extend the rights offer and the period for
exercising your subscription rights, although we do not
presently intend to do so. We may extend the expiration of the
rights offer by giving oral or written notice to the
subscription agent prior to the expiration of the rights offer.
If we elect to extend the expiration of the rights offer, we
will issue a press release announcing such extension no later
than 9:00 a.m., New York time, on the next business day
after the most recently announced expiration of the rights
offer. We reserve the right to amend or modify the terms of the
rights offer.
Subscription
Price
Our board of directors will form a pricing committee to
determine the subscription price. The pricing committee will
consider a number of factors, including the price at which our
shareholders might be willing to participate in the rights
offer, historical and current trading prices for our common
shares, the need for liquidity and capital, negotiations with
the standby purchasers, and the desire to provide an opportunity
to our shareholders to participate in the rights offer on a pro
rata basis. In conjunction with its review of these factors, our
board of directors is currently reviewing our history and
prospects, including our past and present earnings, our
prospects for future earnings, our current financial condition
and regulatory status, and a range of discounts to market value
represented by the subscription prices in various prior rights
offers of public companies. The subscription price will not
necessarily be related to our book value, net worth or any other
established criteria of value and may or may not be considered
the fair value of our common shares to be
38
offered in the rights offer. You should not assume or expect
that, after the rights offer, our common shares will trade at or
above the subscription price.
We cannot assure you that the market price of our common shares
will not decline during or after the rights offer. We also
cannot assure you that you will be able to sell common shares
purchased during the rights offer at a price equal to or greater
than the subscription price. We urge you to obtain a current
quote for our common shares before exercising your subscription
rights.
Conditions,
Withdrawal and Termination
We reserve the right to withdraw the rights offer prior to the
expiration of the rights offer for any reason. We may terminate
the rights offer, in whole or in part, if at any time before
completion of the rights offer there is any judgment, order,
decree, injunction, statute, law or regulation entered, enacted,
amended or held to be applicable to the rights offer that in the
sole judgment of the independent members of our board of
directors would or might make the rights offer or its
completion, whether in whole or in part, illegal or otherwise
restrict or prohibit completion of the rights offer. We may
waive any of these conditions and choose to proceed with the
rights offer even if one or more of these events occur. If we
terminate the rights offer, in whole or in part, all affected
subscription rights will expire without value, and all excess
subscription payments received by the subscription agent will be
returned promptly, without interest or penalty. If we cancel the
rights offer, we will issue a press release notifying
shareholders of the cancellation, and all subscription payments
received by the subscription agent will be returned promptly,
without interest or penalty.
Subscription
Agent
The subscription agent for this offering is The Colbent
Corporation. The address to which subscription documents, rights
certificates, subscription documents, and subscription payments
other than wire transfers, should be mailed or delivered is:
|
|
|
By Mail:
|
|
By Hand or Overnight Courier:
|
The Colbent Corporation
|
|
The Colbent Corporation
|
Irwin Financial Corporation Rights Offer
|
|
Irwin Financial Corporation Rights Offer
|
Att: Corporate Actions
|
|
Att: Corporate Actions
|
P.O. Box 859208
|
|
161 Bay State Drive
|
Braintree, MA
02185-9208
|
|
Braintree, MA 02185-9208
|
You are solely responsible for completing delivery to the
subscription agent of your subscription materials. The
subscription materials are to be received by the subscription
agent on or prior to 5:00 p.m., New York time, on , 2008.
We urge you to allow sufficient time for delivery of your
subscription materials to the subscription agent. If you deliver
subscription materials in a manner different from those
described in this prospectus, we may not honor the exercise of
your subscription rights.
Information
Agent
We have appointed D.F. King & Co., Inc. as information
agent for the offering. Any questions regarding Irwin Financial
Corporations rights offer or requests for additional
copies of documents may be directed to D.F. King &
Co., Inc., at
(800) 735-3591
(toll free) Monday through Friday (except bank holidays),
between 10:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m., New York time. Banks
and brokerage firms please call collect at
(212) 269-5550.
Fees and
Expenses
We will pay all fees charged by the subscription agent and
information agent. You are responsible for paying any other
commissions, fees, taxes or other expenses incurred in
connection with the exercise of the subscription rights.
39
No
Fractional Shares
We will not issue fractional shares. Fractional common shares
resulting from the exercise of the basic subscription privileges
and the over-subscription privileges will be eliminated by
rounding down to the nearest whole share, with the total
subscription payment being adjusted accordingly. Any excess
subscription payments received by the subscription agent will be
returned promptly, without interest or penalty.
Notice to
Nominees
If you are a broker, dealer, custodian bank or other nominee
holder that holds our common shares for the account of others on
the record date, you should notify the beneficial owners of the
shares for whom you are the nominee of the rights offer as soon
as possible to learn their intentions with respect to exercising
their subscription rights. You should obtain instructions from
the beneficial owner, as set forth in the instructions we have
provided to you for your distribution to beneficial owners. If
the beneficial owner so instructs, you should submit information
and payment for shares. We expect that the exercise of
subscription rights on behalf of beneficial owners may be made
through the facilities of DTC. You may exercise individual or
aggregate beneficial owner subscription rights by instructing
DTC to transfer subscription rights from your account to the
account of the subscription agent, together with certification
as to the aggregate number of subscription rights exercised and
the number of common shares subscribed for under the basic
subscription privilege and the over-subscription privilege, if
any, and your full subscription payment.
Beneficial
Owners
If you do not hold certificates for our common shares you are a
beneficial owner of our common shares. Instead of receiving a
rights certificate, you will receive your subscription rights
through a broker, dealer, custodian bank or other nominee. We
will ask your broker, dealer, custodian bank or other nominee to
notify you of the rights offer.
You should contact your broker, dealer, custodian bank or other
nominee if you do not receive information regarding the rights
offer, but believe you are entitled to subscription rights. We
are not responsible if you do not receive notice by your broker,
dealer, custodian bank or other nominee or if you do not receive
notice in time to respond to your nominee by the deadline
established by the nominee, which may be prior to
5:00 p.m. New York time,
on ,
2008.
If you wish to exercise your subscription rights, you will need
to have your broker, dealer, custodian bank or other nominee act
for you. If you hold certificates for our common shares and
received a rights certificate, but would prefer to have your
broker, dealer, custodian bank or other nominee act for you, you
should contact your nominee and request it to effect the
transaction for you.
Irwin
401k Plan Participants
If you hold our common shares through either of the Irwin 401k
Plans, Fidelity, as the 401k plan trustee and record keeper, is
the record holder of those shares. Instead of receiving a rights
certificate, you will receive your subscription rights through
Fidelity, and if you choose to exercise your basic subscription
privilege, you must direct Fidelity to implement your decision
on your behalf. A Plan Participant Election Form
will be provided to you to evidence your decision and to provide
your direction to Fidelity. We will ask Fidelity, or a designee
acting on Fidelitys behalf, to notify you of the rights
offer.
You should contact Fidelity if you do not receive
information regarding the rights offer, but believe you are
entitled to subscription rights through one of the Irwin 401k
Plans. We are not responsible if you do not receive notice by
Fidelity or its designee or if you do not receive notice in time
to respond to Fidelity by the deadline established by Fidelity,
which may be prior to 5:00 p.m. New York time,
on ,
2008.
If you wish to exercise your basic subscription privilege with
respect to common shares you hold through an Irwin 401k Plan,
you will need to provide directions to Fidelity in your Plan
Participant Election Form to effect a reallocation among your
current Irwin 401k Plan accounts in order to pay the
subscription price. Fidelity will then exercise the subscription
rights on your behalf and distribute the common shares received
in
40
exchange therefor into your relevant Irwin 401k Plan account.
See Method of Exercising Subscription
Rights Subscription by Participants in the Irwin
401k Plan.
Non-Transferability
of Subscription Rights
The subscription rights granted to you are non-transferable and,
therefore, you may not sell, transfer or assign your
subscription rights to anyone. The subscription rights will not
be listed for trading on the New York Stock Exchange or any
other stock exchange or market or on the OTC
Bulletin Board. The common shares issuable upon exercise of
the subscription rights will be listed on the New York Stock
Exchange Market under the ticker symbol IFC.
Validity
of Subscriptions
We will resolve all questions regarding the validity and form of
the exercise of your subscription rights, including time of
receipt and eligibility to participate in the rights offer. Our
determination will be final and binding. Once made,
subscriptions and directions are irrevocable, and we will not
accept any alternative, conditional or contingent subscriptions
or directions. We reserve the absolute right to reject any
subscriptions or directions not properly submitted or the
acceptance of which would be unlawful. You must resolve any
irregularities in connection with your subscriptions before the
subscription period expires, unless waived by us in our sole
discretion. Neither we nor the subscription agent shall be under
any duty to notify you or your representative of defects in your
subscriptions. A subscription will be considered accepted,
subject to our right to withdraw or terminate the rights offer,
only when a properly completed and duly executed rights
certificate and any other required documents and the full
subscription payment have been received by the subscription
agent. Our interpretations of the terms and conditions of the
rights offer will be final and binding.
Escrow
Arrangements; Return of Funds
The subscription agent will hold funds received in payment for
our common shares in a segregated account pending completion of
the rights offer. The subscription agent will hold this money in
escrow until the rights offer is completed or is withdrawn and
canceled. If the rights offer is canceled for any reason, all
subscription payments received by the subscription agent will be
returned promptly, without interest or penalty.
Shareholder
Rights
You will have no rights as a holder of our common shares you
purchase in the rights offer, if any, until certificates
representing our common shares are issued to you or until your
account at your record holder is credited with the our common
shares purchased in the rights offer. You will have no right to
revoke your subscriptions once made in accordance with the
procedures set forth in this prospectus.
Foreign
Shareholders
We will not mail this prospectus or rights certificates to
shareholders with addresses that are outside the United States
or that have an army post office or foreign post office address.
The subscription agent will hold these rights certificates for
their account. To exercise subscription rights, our foreign
shareholders must notify the subscription agent prior to
11:00 a.m., New York time, at least three business days
prior to the expiration of the rights offer and demonstrate to
the satisfaction of the subscription agent that the exercise of
such subscription rights does not violate the laws of the
jurisdiction of such shareholder.
No
Revocation or Change
Once you submit the form of rights certificate to exercise any
subscription rights, you are not allowed to revoke or change the
exercise or request a refund of monies paid. All exercises of
subscription rights are irrevocable, even if you learn
information about us that you consider to be unfavorable. You
should not exercise your subscription rights unless you are
certain that you wish to purchase additional common shares at
the subscription price.
41
Regulatory
Limitation
We will not be required to issue to you our common shares
pursuant to the rights offer if, in our opinion, you are
required to obtain prior clearance or approval from any state or
federal regulatory authorities to own or control such shares and
if, at the time the rights offer expires, you have not obtained
such clearance or approval. If we elect not to issue shares in
such case, such shares will become available to satisfy
subscriptions pursuant to the over-subscription privilege.
Because we are a registered bank holding company, the Change in
Bank Control Act of 1978 prohibits a person or group of persons
acting in concert from acquiring control
of us or Irwin Union Bank and Trust, our wholly-owned Indiana
chartered bank subsidiary, unless the Federal Reserve Board has
been given 60 days prior written notice of such
proposed acquisition and within that time period the Federal
Reserve Board has not issued a notice disapproving the proposed
acquisition or extending for up to another 30 days the
period during which such a disapproval may be issued. An
acquisition may be made prior to the expiration of the
disapproval period if the Federal Reserve Board issues written
notice of its intent not to disapprove the action. Under a
rebuttable presumption established by the Federal Reserve Board,
the acquisition of more than 10% of a class of voting stock of a
bank holding company with a class of securities registered under
Section 12 of the Exchange Act (such as our common shares)
would, under the circumstances set forth in the presumption,
constitute the acquisition of control.
In addition, any company would be required to obtain
the approval of the Federal Reserve Board under the Bank Holding
Company Act of 1956, as amended (BHCA) before
acquiring 25% (5% in the case of an acquiror that is a bank
holding company) or more of our outstanding common shares, or
such lesser number of our common shares as constitute control
over our holding company.
Because we are a bank holding company incorporated in Indiana
and Irwin Union Bank and Trust is an Indiana-chartered bank, the
Indiana foreign bank holding company statute prohibits a
non-Indiana bank holding company (including a company that only
becomes a bank holding company upon acquisition of control of
the bank at issue) from acquiring control of us or Irwin Union
Bank and Trust unless the Indiana Department of Financial
Institutions (the DFI) has approved the acquisition.
Control is defined as owning 25% of the total, aggregated voting
shares of the institution, controlling the election of a
majority of directors or exercising a controlling influence over
the management or policies of a bank or company, as determined
by the Federal Reserve after notice and opportunity for hearing.
In addition, the Indiana change of bank control statute
prohibits an investor, acting directly, indirectly or in concert
with one or more other investors, from acquiring control of us
or Irwin Union Bank and Trust unless the DFI has received an
application by which the DFI is given 120 days prior
written notice of the proposed change in control and within that
time the DFI has issued a notice approving the proposed change
in control. Control is defined as the power to vote at least 25%
of any class of voting securities or to direct the management or
policies of the bank or bank holding company.
Material
U.S. Federal Income Tax Treatment of Rights
Distribution
For U.S. federal income tax purposes, you should not
recognize income or loss upon receipt or exercise of these
subscription rights to purchase our common shares for the
reasons described below in Material U.S. Federal
Income Tax Consequences.
Listing
We expect that the common shares that we will issue upon
exercise of the subscription rights will be listed for trading
on the NYSE under the symbol IFC and we intend to
apply for listing.
42
Outstanding
Common Shares after the Rights Offer
As
of ,
2008, of
our common shares were issued and outstanding. Assuming no other
transactions by us involving our common shares, and no options
for our common shares are exercised, prior to the expiration of
the rights offer, if the rights offer is fully subscribed
through the exercise of the subscription rights
and/or the
standby purchasers acquire all of the common shares not
purchased by the holders of subscription rights before the
expiration of the rights offer, then an
additional of
our common shares will be issued and outstanding after the
closing of the rights offer, for a total
of
common shares outstanding. As a result of the rights offer, the
ownership interests and voting interests of the existing
shareholders that do not fully exercise their basic subscription
privileges will be diluted.
In addition, we are in negotiations with certain holders of our
trust preferred securities to exchange their trust preferred
shares for common shares. If we complete the trust preferred
exchange offer concurrently with the common shareholder rights
offer, additional common shares will be issued to holders of the
trust preferred shares. As a result of the exchange offer, the
ownership interests and voting interests of all existing
shareholders, even those that fully participate in the rights
offer, and the standby purchasers, will be substantially
diluted. We cannot determine the amount of dilution at this time.
43
DESCRIPTION
OF THE COMMON SHARES
The following description does not purport to be complete and
is subject to, and qualified in its entirety by reference to,
our Restated Articles of Incorporation and our Code of By-Laws,
as amended to date.
Common
Shares
We are currently authorized to issue 200,000,000 common shares,
no par value. There
were
outstanding common shares as of as
of ,
2008.
As
of ,
2008,
approximately
common shares were reserved for issuance upon the exercise of
employee stock options (of which options to purchase an
aggregate
of
common shares currently were exercisable). The outstanding
common shares currently are, and the common shares to be issued
in the rights offer will upon issuance be, fully paid and
non-assessable. Each common share has the same relative rights
as, and is identical in all respects with, each other common
share.
Dividend
Rights
Holders of our common shares are entitled to receive such
dividends as may be declared by our board of directors out of
legally available funds, and to receive pro rata any assets
distributable to holders of our common shares upon our
liquidation.
On March 3, 2008, we announced that our board of directors
voted to suspend the payment of dividends on our common,
preferred and trust preferred securities. In addition, as a
result of the written agreement with the Federal Reserve Bank of
Chicago and the Indiana Department of Financial Institutions, we
are not permitted to (1) declare or pay any dividend
without the prior approval of the Federal Reserve Bank of
Chicago and Indiana Department of Financial Institutions, or
(2) make any distributions of interest or principal on
subordinated debentures or trust preferred securities, unless we
obtain the prior written approval of the Federal Reserve Bank of
Chicago and the Indiana Department of Financial Institutions.
There is no certainty that we will resume payments of dividends
in the future.
Voting
Rights
Holders of our common shares are entitled to vote for the
election of directors and upon all other matters, which may be
submitted to a vote of shareholders generally, with each share
being entitled to one vote. Our common shareholders do not
possess cumulative voting rights. This means that holders of
more than 50% of our common shares (on a fully diluted basis)
voting for the election of directors can elect all of the
directors, and holders of the remaining shares will not be able
to elect any directors.
Liquidation
Rights
In the event of any liquidation, dissolution or winding up of
our holding company, the holders of our common shares would be
entitled to receive, after payment or provision for payment of
all our debts and liabilities, all of our assets available for
distribution. Holders of our preferred shares may have a
priority over the holders of common shares in the event of any
liquidation or dissolution.
Other
Rights
Common shareholders have no preemptive rights to purchase
additional securities that may be issued by us in the future,
although our common shareholders do have certain contingent
preferred share purchase rights that may be triggered under our
shareholder rights plan as discussed below. There are no
redemption or conversion provisions applicable to our common
shares, and common shareholders are not liable for any further
capital call or assessment.
44
PRICE
RANGE OF COMMON SHARES AND DIVIDENDS
Our common shares trade on the NYSE under the symbol
IFC. As
of ,
2008, there
were
common shares issued and outstanding. As
of ,
2008, there
were shareholders
of record. The following table provides the high and low closing
sales price per share during the periods indicated, as reported
on the NYSE, and dividends paid per common share during such
periods.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Common Stock
|
|
|
|
Low Sale Price
|
|
|
High Sale Price
|
|
|
Dividends
|
|
|
2008:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Fourth Quarter (through December 1, 2008)
|
|
$
|
1.50
|
|
|
$
|
4.00
|
|
|
|
|
(1)
|
Third Quarter
|
|
$
|
2.35
|
|
|
$
|
5.16
|
|
|
|
|
(1)
|
Second Quarter
|
|
$
|
2.69
|
|
|
$
|
6.61
|
|
|
|
|
(1)
|
First Quarter
|
|
$
|
4.56
|
|
|
$
|
11.49
|
|
|
|
|
(1)
|
2007:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Fourth Quarter
|
|
$
|
7.35
|
|
|
$
|
12.01
|
|
|
$
|
0.12
|
|
Third Quarter
|
|
$
|
9.53
|
|
|
$
|
14.98
|
|
|
$
|
0.12
|
|
Second Quarter
|
|
$
|
14.75
|
|
|
$
|
18.47
|
|
|
$
|
0.12
|
|
First Quarter
|
|
$
|
18.64
|
|
|
$
|
22.94
|
|
|
$
|
0.12
|
|
2006:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Fourth Quarter
|
|
$
|
19.48
|
|
|
$
|
22.94
|
|
|
$
|
0.11
|
|
Third Quarter
|
|
$
|
18.21
|
|
|
$
|
19.96
|
|
|
$
|
0.11
|
|
Second Quarter
|
|
$
|
18.01
|
|
|
$
|
21.00
|
|
|
$
|
0.11
|
|
First Quarter
|
|
$
|
19.14
|
|
|
$
|
21.78
|
|
|
$
|
0.11
|
|
|
|
|
(1) |
|
On March 3, 2008, we announced that our board of directors
voted to suspend the payment of dividends on our common,
preferred and trust preferred securities. |
The resumption of dividend payments and the amount of future
dividends will depend on earnings, financial condition, capital
requirements and other factors, and will be determined by our
board of directors on a quarterly basis. For a discussion of our
dividend policy, see Managements Discussion and Analysis
of Financial Condition and Results of Operations in our
Quarterly Report on
Form 10-Q
for the quarter ended March 31, 2008.
The last reported sale price of our common shares on
December 1, 2008, as reported by the NYSE, was $1.70.
45
MATERIAL
U.S. FEDERAL INCOME TAX CONSEQUENCES
This section describes the material United States federal income
tax consequences of the ownership and exercise of the
subscription rights acquired through the rights offer and the
common shares received upon exercise of the subscription rights
or, if applicable, upon exercise of the over-subscription
privilege. This discussion is the opinion of
Sullivan & Cromwell LLP, counsel to the Company. It
applies to you only if you are a U.S. holder, acquire your
subscription rights in the rights offer and you hold your
subscription rights or common shares issued to you upon exercise
of the subscription rights or, if applicable, the
over-subscription privilege as capital assets for tax purposes.
This section does not apply to you if you are not a
U.S. holder or if you are a member of a special class of
holders subject to special rules, including:
|
|
|
|
|
A financial institution,
|
|
|
|
A regulated investment company,
|
|
|
|
A real estate investment trust,
|
|
|
|
A dealer in securities,
|
|
|
|
A trader in securities that elects to use a mark-to-market
method of accounting for securities holdings,
|
|
|
|
A tax-exempt organization,
|
|
|
|
An insurance company,
|
|
|
|
A person liable for alternative minimum tax,
|
|
|
|
A person that holds common shares as part of a straddle or a
hedging or conversion transaction, or
|
|
|
|
A person whose functional currency is not the U.S. dollar.
|
This section is based on the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as
amended, its legislative history, existing and proposed
regulations, published rulings and court decisions, all as
currently in effect. These laws are subject to change, possibly
on a retroactive basis.
You are a U.S. holder if you are a beneficial owner of
subscription rights or common shares and you are:
|
|
|
|
|
An individual citizen or resident of the United States,
|
|
|
|
A domestic corporation,
|
|
|
|
An estate whose income is subject to United States federal
income tax regardless of its source, or
|
|
|
|
A trust if a United States court can exercise primary
supervision over the trusts administration and one or more
United States persons are authorized to control all substantial
decisions of the trust.
|
If a partnership (including any entity treated as a partnership
for U.S. federal income tax purposes) receives the
subscription rights or holds the common shares received upon
exercise of the subscription rights or the over-subscription
privilege, the tax treatment of a partner in a partnership
generally will depend upon the status of the partner and the
activities of the partnership. Such a partner or partnership
should consult its tax advisor as to the U.S. federal
income tax consequences of receiving, exercising and disposing
of the subscription rights and acquiring, holding or disposing
of the common shares.
You should consult your own tax advisor regarding the United
States federal, state, local,
non-U.S. and
other tax consequences of owning, exercising and disposing of
subscription rights and common shares in your particular
circumstances.
This discussion addresses only United States federal income
taxation.
Taxation
of Subscription Rights
Receipt of Subscription Rights. Your
receipt of subscription rights pursuant to the rights offer
should be treated as a nontaxable distribution with respect to
your existing common shares for U.S. federal income tax
46
purposes. The discussion below assumes that the receipt of
subscription rights will be treated as a nontaxable distribution.
If the fair market value of the subscription rights you receive
is less than 15% of the fair market value of your existing
common shares on the date you receive the subscription rights,
the subscription rights will be allocated a zero basis for
U.S. federal income tax purposes, unless you elect to
allocate basis between your existing common shares and the
subscription rights in proportion to the relative fair market
values of the existing common shares and the subscription rights
determined on the date of receipt of the subscription rights. If
you choose to allocate basis between your existing common shares
and the subscription rights, you must make this election on a
statement included with your tax return for the taxable year in
which you receive the subscription rights. Such an election is
irrevocable.
On the other hand, if the fair market value of the subscription
rights you receive is 15% or more of the fair market value of
your existing common shares on the date you receive the
subscription rights, then you must allocate your basis in your
existing common shares between the existing common shares and
the subscription rights you receive in proportion to their fair
market values determined on the date you receive the
subscription rights.
Your holding period in a subscription right will include your
holding period in the common shares with respect to which the
subscription right was distributed.
Exercise of Subscription Rights or Over-Subscription
Privilege. Generally, you will not recognize
gain or loss on the exercise of a subscription right or
over-subscription privilege. Your tax basis in a new common
share acquired when you exercise a subscription right will be
equal to your adjusted tax basis in the subscription right or
over-subscription privilege plus the subscription price. The
holding period of a common share acquired when you exercise your
subscription right will begin on the date of exercise.
Acquisition of Common Shares through Exercise of
Over-Subscription Privilege. If you acquire
common shares through exercise of the over-subscription
privilege, your basis in such shares will generally be equal to
the subscription price you paid for such shares. The holding
period with respect to such common shares will commence on the
day after the acquisition of the common shares.
Not Exercising Subscription Rights. If
you do not exercise your subscription rights, you should not
recognize a capital loss for United States federal income tax
purposes and any portion of the tax basis in your existing
common shares previously allocated to the subscription right not
exercised will be re-allocated to the existing common shares.
Taxation
of Common Shares
Distributions. Distributions with
respect to common shares acquired upon exercise of subscription
rights will be taxable as dividend income when actually or
constructively received to the extent of our current or
accumulated earnings and profits as determined for
U.S. federal income tax purposes. To the extent that the
amount of a distribution exceeds our current and accumulated
earnings and profits, such distribution will be treated first as
a tax-free return of capital to the extent of your adjusted tax
basis in such common shares and thereafter as capital gain.
Subject to certain exceptions for short-term and hedged
positions, distributions constituting dividend income received
by certain non-corporate U.S. holders, including
individuals, in respect of the common shares in taxable years
beginning before January 1, 2011 are generally taxed at a
maximum rate of 15%. Similarly, subject to similar exceptions
for short-term and hedged positions, distributions on the common
shares constituting dividend income paid to holders that are
domestic corporations generally will qualify for the
dividends-received deduction. You should consult your own tax
advisor regarding the availability of the reduced dividend tax
rate and the dividends-received deduction in light of your
particular circumstances.
Dispositions. If you sell or otherwise
dispose of the common shares, you will generally recognize
capital gain or loss equal to the difference between the amount
you realize and your adjusted tax basis in the common shares.
Such capital gain or loss will be long-term capital gain or loss
if your holding period for the
47
common shares is more than one year. Long-term capital gain of a
non-corporate U.S. holder, including individuals, that is
recognized in taxable years beginning before January 1,
2011 is generally taxed at a maximum rate of 15%. The
deductibility of net capital losses is subject to limitations.
Information
Reporting and Backup Withholding
For non-corporate U.S. holders, information reporting
requirements, on Internal Revenue Service Form 1099,
generally will apply to the payment of dividends on the common
shares and the payment of the proceeds from the sale or
redemption of common shares.
Additionally, backup withholding will apply to such payments if
a non-corporate U.S. holder fails to provide an accurate
taxpayer identification number, is notified by the Internal
Revenue Service that it has failed to report all dividends
required to be shown on its federal income tax returns, or in
certain circumstances, fails to comply with applicable
certification requirements.
You generally may obtain a refund of any amounts withheld under
the backup withholding rules that exceed your income tax
liability by timely filing a refund claim with the Internal
Revenue Service.
48
PLAN OF
DISTRIBUTION
As soon as practicable after the record date for the rights
offer, we will distribute the subscription rights and rights
certificates to individuals who owned our common shares at
5:00 p.m., New York time,
on ,
2008. If you wish to exercise your subscription rights and
purchase our common shares, you should complete the subscription
materials and payment for the shares to the subscription agent,
The Colbent Corporation, at the following address:
|
|
|
By Mail:
|
|
By Hand or Overnight Courier:
|
The Colbent Corporation
|
|
The Colbent Corporation
|
Irwin Financial Corporation Rights Offer
|
|
Irwin Financial Corporation Rights Offer
|
Att: Corporate Actions
|
|
Att: Corporate Actions
|
P.O. Box 859208
|
|
161 Bay State Drive
|
Braintree, MA
02185-9208
|
|
Braintree, MA 02185-9208
|
See The Rights Offer Method of Exercising
Subscription Rights.
The standby purchases are subject to conditions. See
Questions and Answers Relating to the Rights
Offer Are there any conditions to the standby
commitments?
Cummins Inc. and John L. Vogelstein executed a
lock-up
agreement pursuant to which they agreed not to transfer or
dispose of the common shares purchased pursuant to their standby
commitments, including by means of any hedging or short sale
transactions for a period of time. Cummins Inc. and John L.
Vogelstein are free to sell shares, subject to applicable
securities laws, (i) with respect to 25% of any shares they
purchase, 60 days after the closing date of the rights
offer, (ii) with respect to 50% of any shares they
purchase, 120 days after the closing date of the rights
offer, (iii) with respect to 75% of any shares they
purchase, 180 days after the closing date of the rights
offer and (iv) with respect to the remainder of any shares
they purchase, 240 days after the closing date of the
rights offer. These
lock-up
agreements contain a clause whereby we promise that
Cummins and John Vogelsteins
lock-up
agreements will not be any more restrictive than any other
lock-up or
similar agreement agreed to in connection with the proposed
exchange of our trust preferred securities for common shares.
We have engaged Stifel, Nicolaus & Company,
Incorporated, a broker-dealer registered with the Financial
Industry Regulatory Authority, as our financial and marketing
advisor. As compensation for its services, upon completion of
the rights offer, we have agreed to pay Stifel,
Nicolaus & Company, Incorporated $500,000.
Stifel, Nicolaus & Company, Incorporated has also
served as our financial advisor in connection with the asset
dispositions we completed in July 2008. We paid Stifel,
Nicolaus & Company, Incorporated $3.6 million of
compensation for is services in connection with those
transactions.
49
EXPERTS
The consolidated financial statements of Irwin Financial
Corporation at December 31, 2007 and 2006, and for each of
the two years in the period ended December 31, 2007,
incorporated by reference in this Prospectus and Registration
Statement have been audited by Ernst & Young LLP,
independent registered public accounting firm, as set forth in
their report thereon, and incorporated herein by reference. Such
consolidated financial statements are incorporated herein by
reference in reliance upon such report given on the authority of
such firm as experts in accounting and auditing.
The consolidated statements of income, shareholders equity
and cash flows of Irwin Financial Corporation for the year ended
December 31, 2005, incorporated in this Prospectus by
reference to the Annual Report on
Form 10-K
for the year ended December 31, 2007 have been so
incorporated in reliance on the report of PricewaterhouseCoopers
LLP, an independent registered public accounting firm, given on
the authority of said firm as experts in auditing and accounting.
WHERE YOU
CAN FIND INFORMATION
This prospectus is a part of a Registration Statement on
Form S-3
filed by us with the SEC under the Securities Act. This
prospectus does not contain all the information set forth in the
registration statement, certain parts of which are omitted in
accordance with the rules and regulations of the SEC. For
further information with respect to us and the securities
offered by this prospectus, reference is made to the
registration statement, including the exhibits to the
registration statement and documents incorporated by reference.
Statements contained in this prospectus concerning the
provisions of such documents are necessarily summaries of such
documents and each such statement is qualified in its entirety
by reference to the copy of the applicable document filed with
the SEC.
We file periodic reports, proxy statements and other information
with the SEC. Our filings are available to the public over the
Internet at the SECs web site at
http://www.sec.gov.
You may also inspect and copy these materials at the public
reference facilities of the SEC at 100 F Street, N.E.,
Room 1580, Washington, D.C. 20549. Copies of such
material can be obtained at prescribed rates from the Public
Reference Section of the SEC at 100 F Street, N.E.,
Washington, D.C. 20549. Please call the SEC at
1-800-SEC-0330
for further information.
Each holder of the trust securities will receive a copy of our
annual report at the same time as we furnish the annual report
to the holders of our common stock.
DOCUMENTS
INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE
We incorporate by reference into this prospectus the
information in documents we file with the SEC, which means that
we can disclose important information to you through those
documents. The information incorporated by reference is an
important part of this prospectus. Some information contained in
this prospectus updates the information incorporated by
reference and some information that we file subsequently with
the SEC will automatically update this prospectus. We
incorporate by reference the documents listed below:
(a) our Annual Report on
Form 10-K
for the year ended December 31, 2007, filed with the SEC on
March 14, 2008 (File
No. 001-16691);
(b) our Quarterly Report on
Form 10-Q
for the quarter ended March 31, 2008, filed with the SEC on
May 7, 2008 (File
No. 001-16691);
(c) our Quarterly Report on
Form 10-Q
for the quarter ended June 30, 2008, filed with the SEC on
August 7, 2008 (File
No. 001-16691);
(d) our Quarterly Report on
Form 10-Q
for the quarter ended September 30, 2008, filed with
the SEC on November 10, 2008 (File No. 001-16691);
(e) our Current Reports on
Form 8-K
filed with the SEC on January 3, 2008; January 29,
2008; February 11, 2008; March 3, 2008; May 6,
2008; July 23, 2008; July 24, 2008 (as amended by the
50
amendment filed on August 8, 2008); July 25, 2008;
July 31, 2008; August 6, 2008; September 16,
2008; September 22, 2008; October 1, 2008;
October 14, 2008; October 15, 2008; and
November 7, 2008.
(f) the description of our common shares, which is
registered under Section 12 of the Securities Exchange Act,
in our Registration Statement on
Form S-1
on February 14, 2002, including any subsequently filed
amendments and reports updating such description.
We also incorporate by reference any filings we make with the
SEC under Sections 13(a), 13(c), 14 or 15(d) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 after the initial filing of the
registration statement that contains this prospectus and before
the time that all of the securities offered in this prospectus
are sold.
You may request, and we will provide, a copy of any or all of
these filings at no cost by contacting Suzie Singer, our
Corporate Communications Officer, at Irwin Financial
Corporation, 500 Washington Street, Columbus, Indiana 47201, or
by calling
(812) 376-1909.
We file periodic reports, proxy statements and other information
with the SEC. Our filings are available to the public over the
Internet at the SECs web site at
http://www.sec.gov.
You may also inspect and copy these materials at the public
reference facilities of the SEC at 100 F Street, N.E.,
Washington, D.C. 20549. Copies of such material can be
obtained at prescribed rates from the Public Reference Section
of the SEC at 100 F Street, N.E.,
Washington, D.C. 20549. Please call the SEC at
1-800-SEC-0330
for further information.
51
COMMON SHARES
IRWIN FINANCIAL
CORPORATION
PROSPECTUS
,
2008
The information in
this prospectus is not complete and may be changed. This
prospectus is not an offer to sell these securities and it is
not soliciting an offer to buy these securities in any state
where the offer or sale is not permitted.
|
SUBJECT TO COMPLETION, DATED
DECEMBER 2, 2008
PROSPECTUS
Irwin Financial
Corporation
Common Shares
This prospectus relates to the offer and sale from time to time
of up to an aggregate
of of
our common shares by the selling shareholders named herein,
including shares that have been issued to the selling
shareholders in transactions exempt from the registration
requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended. If we
distribute to our shareholders subscription rights to purchase
our common shares in a rights offer, the selling shareholders
have severally agreed to provide standby commitments to acquire
common shares that are not subscribed for in such rights offer.
In connection therewith, we agreed to register common shares
acquired pursuant to such standby commitments for resale by the
selling shareholders.
The prices at which the selling shareholders may sell the shares
will be determined by prevailing market prices or through
privately-negotiated transactions. We will not receive any
proceeds from the sale of the common shares offered herein. The
registration of these shares does not necessarily mean the
selling stockholders will offer or sell all or any of these
shares. The methods of resale offered hereby are described under
the heading of Plan of Distribution.
Our common shares are listed on the New York Stock Exchange (the
NYSE) under the symbol IFC. The closing
price of our common shares on the NYSE on December 1, 2008
was $1.70 per share.
You should carefully read this prospectus and any applicable
prospectus supplement prepared by us, together with the
documents we incorporate by reference, before you invest in our
common shares.
INVESTING IN OUR COMMON SHARES INVOLVES A HIGH DEGREE OF
RISK. YOU SHOULD CONSIDER THE RISK FACTORS DESCRIBED IN OUR
QUARTERLY REPORT ON
FORM 10-Q
FOR THE PERIOD ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 2008 AND IN THE DOCUMENTS WE
INCORPORATE HEREIN BY REFERENCE.
These securities are not deposits, savings accounts or
other obligations of any bank and are not insured or guaranteed
by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation or any other
government agency. None of the Securities and Exchange
Commission, the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve, the
Office of Thrift Supervision, the Indiana Department of
Financial Institutions or any state securities regulator has
approved or disapproved of these securities or determined if
this prospectus is accurate or complete. Any representation to
the contrary is a criminal offense.
The date of this prospectus
is ,
2008.
TABLE OF
CONTENTS
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Page
|
|
|
|
|
iii
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
3
|
|
|
|
|
5
|
|
|
|
|
6
|
|
|
|
|
10
|
|
|
|
|
11
|
|
|
|
|
12
|
|
|
|
|
12
|
|
i
You should rely only on the information contained in or
incorporated by reference in this prospectus and any applicable
prospectus supplement with respect to this offering filed by us
with the Securities and Exchange Commission (the
SEC). This prospectus may be used only for the
purpose for which it has been prepared. No one is authorized to
give information other than that contained in this prospectus
and in the documents referred to in this prospectus and which
are made available to the public. Neither we or the selling
shareholders have authorized any other person to provide you
with different information. If anyone provides you with
different or inconsistent information, you should not rely on
it.
Neither we nor the selling shareholders are making an offer
to sell these securities in any jurisdiction where the offer or
sale is not permitted. You should not assume that the
information appearing in the prospectus or any applicable
prospectus supplement prepared by us or any document
incorporated by reference is accurate as of any date other than
the date of the applicable document. Our business, financial
condition, results of operations and prospects may have changed
since that date. This prospectus does not constitute an offer,
or an invitation on our behalf, to subscribe for and purchase
any of the securities and may not be used for or in connection
with an offer or solicitation by anyone in any jurisdiction in
which such an offer or solicitation is not authorized or to any
person to whom it is unlawful to make such an offer or
solicitation.
ii
FORWARD-LOOKING
STATEMENTS
Certain statements contained in this prospectus constitute
forward-looking statements within the meaning of
Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933 and
Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. We
intend such forward-looking statements to be covered by the safe
harbor provisions for forward-looking statements contained in
the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, and are
including this statement for purposes of invoking these safe
harbor provisions. You can identify these statements from our
use of the words plan, forecast,
estimate, project, believe,
intend, anticipate, expect,
target, is likely, will, and
similar expressions. These forward-looking statements may
include, among other things:
|
|
|
|
|
statements and assumptions relating to financial performance;
|
|
|
|
|
|
statements relating to the anticipated effects on results of
operations or financial condition from recent or future
developments or events;
|
|
|
|
|
|
statements relating to our business and growth strategies and
our regulatory capital levels;
|
|
|
|
|
|
the expected timing for completion of the transactions described
herein;
|
|
|
|
|
|
the expected effect of the restructuring and this offering on
the Corporations balance sheet, profitability, liquidity,
and capital ratios;
|
|
|
|
|
|
statements relating to our participation in the
U.S. Treasury Departments Capital Purchase Program
and its potential effect on our regulatory capital
levels; and
|
|
|
|
|
|
any other statements, projections or assumptions that are not
historical facts.
|
We qualify any forward-looking statements entirely by these and
the following cautionary factors:
Actual future results may differ materially from our
forward-looking statements and we qualify all forward-looking
statements by various risks and uncertainties we face, as well
as the assumptions underlying the statements, including the
following, cautionary factors: difficulties in raising capital
through this rights offer and in effectuating a recapitalization
through a proposed exchange of trust preferred securities for
common shares, including the failure of shareholders to
participate in the rights offer, or the failure to satisfy the
conditions that require the standby purchasers to purchase
common shares; difficulties in completing the transactions for
the disposition of our home equity business including selling or
otherwise reducing risk associated with home equity loans on our
balance sheet, or the completion of due diligence satisfactory
to potential purchasers; failure to obtain any necessary
regulatory approvals, third-party consents or bondholder
consents for any dispositions or other transactions; satisfying
conditions necessary to release purchase price proceeds from
escrow; obtaining the desired tax treatment for any
dispositions; competition from other financial service providers
for experienced managers as well as for customers; potential
deterioration or effects of general or regional economic
conditions, particularly in sectors relating to real estate
and/or
mortgage lending, small business lending, and franchise
restaurants finance; participation or lack of participation in
governmental programs implemented under the Emergency Economic
Stabilization Act of 2008, including without limitation the
Troubled Asset Relief Program and the Capital Purchase Program,
and the impact of such programs and related regulations on us
and on national and local economic and financial markets and
conditions; fluctuations in housing prices; potential effects
related to the companys decision to suspend the payment of
dividends on its common, preferred and trust preferred
securities; potential changes in direction, volatility and
relative movement (basis risk) of interest rates, which may
affect consumer demand for our products and the management and
success of our interest rate risk management strategies;
staffing fluctuations in response to product demand or the
implementation of corporate strategies that affect our work
force; the relative profitability of our lending and deposit
operations; the valuation and management of our portfolios,
including the use of external and internal modeling assumptions
we embed in the valuation of those portfolios and
short-term
swings in the valuation of such portfolios; borrowers
refinancing opportunities, which may affect the prepayment
assumptions used in our valuation estimates and which may affect
loan demand; unanticipated deterioration in the credit quality
or collectability of our loan and lease assets, including
higher-than-expected increases in non-performing assets or
charge-offs; deterioration resulting from the effects of natural
disasters; levels of future repurchases of residential mortgage,
home equity, or other loans or leases due
iii
to alleged violations of representations and warranties we made
when selling these loans and leases to the secondary market or
in securitizations; unanticipated deterioration or changes in
estimates of the carrying value of our other assets, including
securities; difficulties in delivering products to the secondary
market as planned; difficulties in expanding our business;
difficulty in obtaining or retaining deposit or other funding
sources as needed, including the loss of public fund deposits
should our state-chartered bank subsidiary become less than
well-capitalized, and other constraints resulting from
regulatory actions; competition from other financial service
providers for experienced managers as well as for customers;
changes in the value of our lines of business, subsidiaries, or
companies in which we invest; changes in variable compensation
plans related to the performance and valuation of lines of
business where we tie compensation systems to line-of-business
performance; unanticipated lawsuits or outcomes in litigation;
legislative or regulatory changes, including changes in laws,
rules or regulations that affect tax, consumer or commercial
lending, corporate governance and disclosure requirements, and
other laws, rules or regulations affecting the rights and
responsibilities of our holding company, state-chartered bank or
federal savings bank subsidiaries; regulatory actions that
impact our holding company, bank or thrift, including the
written agreement the company and its state-chartered bank
subsidiary, Irwin Union Bank and Trust Company, entered
into with the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago and the Indiana
Department of Financial Institutions on October 10, 2008,
and the written agreement the companys federal savings
bank subsidiary, Irwin Union Bank, F.S.B., entered into with the
Office of Thrift Supervision on the same day; changes in the
interpretation and application of regulatory capital or other
rules; the availability of resources to address changes in laws,
rules or regulations or to respond to regulatory actions;
changes in applicable accounting policies or principles or their
application to our businesses or final audit adjustments,
including additional guidance and interpretation on accounting
issues and details of the implementation of new accounting
methods; the final disposition of our remaining assets and
obligations relating to the lines of business we have exited or
are exiting, including the mortgage banking segment, small
ticket commercial leasing segment and home equity segment; or
governmental changes in monetary or fiscal policies.
In addition, our past results of operations are not necessarily
indicative of our future results. We discuss these and other
uncertainties in the Risk Factors section in
Amendment No. 1 to the Registration Statement on
Form S-3
filed on December 2, 2008 and in Irwins Annual Report
on
Form 10-K
for the year ended December 31, 2007 and
Form 10-Q
for the quarter ended September 30, 2008, as well as in any
future filings we may make that may be incorporated by reference
herein. For information on the documents we are incorporating by
reference and how to obtain a copy, please see Where You
Can Find More Information in this prospectus. We undertake
no obligation to update publicly any of these statements in
light of future events, except as required in subsequent reports
we file with the Securities and Exchange Commission
(SEC).
iv
SUMMARY
The following summary highlights selected information
contained elsewhere in this prospectus and may not contain all
of the information that is important to you. We encourage you to
read this prospectus, the risk factors described in the
Risk Factors section of our Quarterly Report on
Form 10-Q
for the period ended September 30, 2008, our Registration
Statement on
Form S-3
filed on December 2, 2008 and in the other documents we
incorporate herein by reference, and the documents identified
under the heading Where You Can Find More
Information of this prospectus, in their entirety. Unless
otherwise mentioned or unless the context requires otherwise,
all references in this prospectus to Irwin,
we, us, our, the
Corporation or similar references mean Irwin
Financial Corporation and its subsidiaries.
Irwin
Financial Corporation
We are a bank holding company headquartered in Columbus,
Indiana. We seek to create competitive advantage within the
banking industry by serving small businesses with lending,
leasing, deposit and advisory services, as well as consumers in
the neighborhoods surrounding our bank branches. As a result of
the restructuring transactions that we announced in July 2008,
we streamlined our lines of business to focus on commercial
banking and franchise finance. We also service a portfolio of
home equity loans originated under a previous strategy. We
continue to take steps to exit our home equity business through
the sale or run-off of our home equity loan portfolio and the
sale or managed reduction of the servicing platform as
appropriate based on the run-off of loans.
Our business model is based on funding the activities of our
commercial banking and franchise finance primarily through
deposits gathered through our bank branches and borrowings from
the Federal Home Loan Bank, although we are pursuing ways to
diversify our funding sources. We operate two depository
institution subsidiaries Irwin Union Bank and
Trust Company, a commercial bank that was organized in
1871, and Irwin Union Bank, F.S.B., a federal savings bank that
was organized in 2000. We formed the holding company in 1972.
Other direct and indirect major subsidiaries include Irwin
Franchise Capital Corporation, our franchise finance subsidiary
and Irwin Home Equity Corporation, a consumer home equity
servicing company.
In commercial banking, we provide a full line of banking
services to small businesses and consumers in the communities
and neighborhoods served by our bank branch locations. Through
this approach, we provide small businesses in our communities
with the advice, credit, and other banking products that meet
their needs and help them to grow, which large national banks
are often unable to do in a flexible and cost effective manner.
We focus on small businesses because our understanding of these
customers needs and our ability to meet those needs
creates added value that permits us not to have to compete
primarily on price. We also provide a full line of banking
services to consumers in the communities and neighborhoods
served by our bank branch locations.
Our franchise finance line of business also focuses on small
businesses the owners and operators of leading quick
service and casual dining restaurant concepts in the
U.S. We have our own direct sales force that establishes
relationships with seasoned
multi-unit
franchise operators by offering service and responsiveness that
is superior to the competition (primarily GE Capital, the
dominant lender in the franchise business). These
multi-unit
operators often seek to diversify their financing sources. We
believe we have built a good brand as an alternative to GE
Capital in this business. In post-closing surveys, 93% of our
customers said Irwin Franchise Capital Corporation delivered on
its promises and 99% said they would do business with Irwin
again.
The combination of commercial banking and franchise finance
allows us to diversify our revenues, credit risk, and
application of capital across borrower types and across
geographic regions. Such diversification is a key part of our
risk management. Within commercial banking, our customers have
different growth and risk profiles in the Midwest and Western
U.S. These markets perform differently due to differences
in local economies, affecting both the demand for and the credit
quality of our loans. Our franchise finance customers are well
diversified across the entire country and among leading
franchise concepts.
1
The
Rights Offer and Standby Commitments
We filed with the SEC a registration statement on
Form S-3
with respect to a rights offer (the Rights Offer)
and our common shares to be issued pursuant to the Rights Offer.
In the Rights Offer, our shareholders receive subscription
rights that contain (1) a basic subscription privilege that
entitles the shareholder to subscribe and
purchase of
our common shares at $ per share
for each share that such shareholder owns at the record date and
(2) an over-subscription privilege that entitles the
shareholder to purchase a portion of our common shares that are
not purchased by our other shareholders through the exercise of
their basic subscription privileges, at the same subscription
price of $ per share, subject to
proration and adjustment and subject, further, to reduction by
us in certain circumstances.
In connection with the Rights Offer, we have separately entered
into standby purchase agreements with Cummins Inc.
(Cummins), William I. Miller (our chairman and chief
executive officer), Catherine G. Miller (a sister of William I.
Miller), Elizabeth G. Miller (a sister of William I. Miller),
Henry B. Schacht (a former chief executive officer of Cummins
and Lucent Inc.), John L. Vogelstein (a former vice chairman of
Warburg Pincus LLP) and Rodman Moorhead (a retired partner of
Warburg Pincus LLP), pursuant to which these investors have
severally agreed to acquire from us, at the same subscription
price offered to shareholders, any common shares that are not
subscribed for pursuant to the exercise of subscription rights,
subject to a maximum amount set forth in each investors
standby purchase agreement.
In connection with the Rights Offer, we agreed to provide the
selling shareholders with registration rights with respect to
the common shares purchased, with the intended effect of such
registration rights being to provide the selling shareholders
with the ability to make registered sales of such common shares.
This prospectus is being filed in connection with such
registration.
The selling shareholders and we also agreed to provide one
another with certain indemnification rights in connection with
such registration.
Our standby purchase agreement with Cummins further provides
that Cummins will have the right to appoint one director to our
board of directors so long as it holds five percent or more of
our total issued and outstanding common shares.
William I. Miller currently sits on the board of directors of
Cummins and has agreed to resign from that position if Cummins
exercises its standby commitment in full or in part.
Upon completion of the Rights Offer, the maximum aggregate
amount of common shares that the standby purchasers may acquire
equals
common shares.
The
Shares Offered in This Prospectus
|
|
|
Common Shares offered |
|
common
shares |
|
|
|
Use of Proceeds |
|
All of our common shares being offered under this prospectus are
being sold by the selling shareholders. Accordingly, we will not
receive any proceeds from the sale of these shares. |
|
|
|
Listing of Common Shares |
|
Our common shares are listed on The New York Stock Exchange
under the symbol IFC. |
2
SELLING
SHAREHOLDERS
This prospectus relates to the disposition from time to time by
the selling shareholders listed below of up to the number of
common shares listed in the table below. Our common shares
offered by this prospectus were issued to the selling
shareholders as standby purchasers of our common shares not
subscribed in the Rights Offer. In the standby purchase
agreements relating to the Rights Offer, we agreed to file this
prospectus, registering for resale our common shares acquired by
the selling shareholders.
We will not receive any proceeds from the disposition of our
common shares by the selling shareholders. We will pay all
expenses relating to the registration of the shares with the SEC.
The following table sets forth for the selling shareholders:
|
|
|
|
|
the number and percent of our common shares that each selling
shareholder beneficially owned prior to the offering for resale
of the shares under this prospectus;
|
|
|
|
|
|
the number of our common shares registered for sale for the
account of each selling shareholder under this
prospectus; and
|
|
|
|
|
|
the number and percent of our common shares to be beneficially
owned by each selling shareholder after the completion of the
offering (assuming all of the shares covered hereby are sold by
the selling shareholders).
|
The number of shares in the column Number of Shares Being
Offered represents all of the shares that the selling
shareholders may dispose of under this prospectus. We do not
know how long the selling shareholders will hold the shares
before disposing of them or of how many shares they will
dispose. See Summary The Rights Offer and
Standby Commitments for a description of certain
restrictions on the ability of the selling shareholders to sell
our common shares purchased in connection with the Rights Offer.
This table is prepared solely based on information supplied to
us by the selling shareholders and assumes the sale of all of
our common shares covered hereby. Because the selling
shareholders may sell all or some of the shares offered by this
prospectus, and because there are currently no agreements,
arrangements or understandings for the sale of any such shares,
we cannot estimate the number of shares that will be held by the
selling shareholders after completion of the offering. Unless
set forth herein, the selling shareholders have not had, during
the past three years, any position, office or other material
relationship with us or any of our predecessors or affiliates.
The applicable percentages of beneficial ownership are based on
an aggregate
of
of our common shares issued and outstanding as
of ,
2008.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Shares
|
|
|
|
|
|
Shares
|
|
|
|
|
Beneficially
|
|
|
|
|
|
Beneficially
|
|
|
|
|
Owned Prior
|
|
|
|
Number of
|
|
Owned After
|
|
|
|
|
to Offering
|
|
|
|
Shares Being
|
|
Offering
|
|
|
Shareholders
|
|
Number(1)
|
|
Percent
|
|
Offered
|
|
Number(2)
|
|
Percent
|
|
Cummins, Inc.
One American Square, Suite 1800
Indianapolis, Indiana 46282
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
William I. Miller(3)
500 Washington Street
Columbus, Indiana 47102
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Catherine G. Miller(4)
P.O. Box 6603
Hamden, Connecticut 06517
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Elizabeth G. Miller(4)
P.O. Box 175
Pound Ridge, New York 10576
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Henry B. Schacht
1150 5th Avenue
New York, New York 10128
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
3
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Shares
|
|
|
|
|
|
Shares
|
|
|
|
|
Beneficially
|
|
|
|
|
|
Beneficially
|
|
|
|
|
Owned Prior
|
|
|
|
Number of
|
|
Owned After
|
|
|
|
|
to Offering
|
|
|
|
Shares Being
|
|
Offering
|
|
|
Shareholders
|
|
Number(1)
|
|
Percent
|
|
Offered
|
|
Number(2)
|
|
Percent
|
|
John L. Vogelstein
New Providence Asset Management LP
650 5th Avenue, Floor 16
New York, New York 10019
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Rodman Moorhead
Warburg Pincus
466 Lexington Avenue, Floor 10
New York, New York 10017
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(1) |
|
Assumes the selling shareholders purchase the maximum number of
shares set forth in their standby purchase agreements. |
|
|
|
(2) |
|
Assumes the selling shareholders (i) dispose of all the
common shares covered by this prospectus and (ii) do not
acquire any additional common shares. |
|
|
|
(3) |
|
Chairman and CEO of Irwin Financial Corporation; Director of
Cummins, Inc. since 1989; however, Mr. Miller has agreed to
resign from that position if Cummins exercises its standby
commitment in full or in part. |
|
|
|
(4) |
|
Sister of William I. Miller |
4
DESCRIPTION
OF THE COMMON SHARES
The following description does not purport to be complete and
is subject to, and qualified in its entirety by reference to,
our Restated Articles of Incorporation and our Code of By-Laws,
as amended to date.
Common
Shares
We are currently authorized to issue 200,000,000 common shares,
no par value. There
were
outstanding common shares as of as
of ,
2008.
As
of ,
2008,
approximately
common shares were reserved for issuance upon the exercise of
employee stock options (of which options to purchase an
aggregate
of
common shares currently were exercisable). The outstanding
common shares currently are, and the common shares to be issued
in the Rights Offer will upon issuance be, fully paid and
non-assessable. Each common share has the same relative rights
as, and is identical in all respects with, each other common
share.
Dividend
Rights
Holders of our common shares are entitled to receive such
dividends as may be declared by our board of directors out of
legally available funds, and to receive pro rata any assets
distributable to holders of our common shares upon our
liquidation.
On March 3, 2008, we announced that our board of directors
voted to suspend the payment of dividends on our common,
preferred and trust preferred securities. In addition, as a
result of the written agreement with the Federal Reserve Bank of
Chicago and the Indiana Department of Financial Institutions, we
are not permitted to (1) declare or pay any dividend
without the prior approval of the Federal Reserve Bank of
Chicago and Indiana Department of Financial Institutions, or
(2) make any distributions of interest or principal on
subordinated debentures or trust preferred securities, unless we
obtain the prior written approval of the Federal Reserve Bank of
Chicago and the Indiana Department of Financial Institutions.
There is no certainty that we will resume payments of dividends
in the future.
Voting
Rights
Holders of our common shares are entitled to vote for the
election of directors and upon all other matters which may be
submitted to a vote of shareholders generally, with each share
being entitled to one vote. Our common shareholders do not
possess cumulative voting rights. This means that holders of
more than 50% of our common shares (on a fully diluted basis)
voting for the election of directors can elect all of the
directors, and holders of the remaining shares will not be able
to elect any directors.
Liquidation
Rights
In the event of any liquidation, dissolution or winding up of
our holding company, the holders of our common shares would be
entitled to receive, after payment or provision for payment of
all our debts and liabilities, all of our assets available for
distribution. Holders of our preferred shares may have a
priority over the holders of common shares in the event of any
liquidation or dissolution.
Other
Rights
Common shareholders have no preemptive rights to purchase
additional securities that may be issued by us in the future,
although our common shareholders do have certain contingent
preferred share purchase rights that may be triggered under our
shareholder rights plan as described in our
Form 8-A
filed on March 2, 2001. There are no redemption or
conversion provisions applicable to our common shares, and
common shareholders are not liable for any further capital call
or assessment.
5
MATERIAL
U.S. FEDERAL INCOME TAX CONSIDERATIONS
The following is a summary of certain U.S. federal income
tax consequences relevant to the purchase, ownership, and
disposition of the common shares. This discussion is the opinion
of Sullivan & Cromwell LLP, counsel to the Company, and is
based on the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, its
legislative history, existing and proposed regulations under the
Internal Revenue Code, published rulings and court decisions,
all as currently in effect. These laws are subject to change,
possibly on a retroactive basis. Other federal tax consequences
(such as estate and gift tax consequences) and state, local and
foreign tax consequences are not summarized, nor are tax
consequences to special classes of investors including, but not
limited to, tax-exempt organizations, insurance companies, banks
or other financial institutions, partnerships or other entities
classified as partnerships for U.S. federal income tax
purposes, dealers in securities, persons liable for the
alternative minimum tax, traders in securities that elect to use
a mark-to-market method of accounting for their securities
holdings, persons that will hold the common shares as a position
in a hedging, straddle or conversion
transaction or other risk reduction transaction, and
United States holders (as defined below) whose functional
currency for tax purposes is not the U.S. dollar. Tax
consequences may vary depending upon the particular status of an
investor. This discussion is limited to taxpayers who will hold
the common shares as capital assets.
Please consult your own tax advisor concerning the
consequences of owning the common shares in your particular
circumstances under the Internal Revenue Code and the laws of
any other taxing jurisdiction.
You are a U.S. holder if you are a beneficial owner of
common shares and you are:
|
|
|
|
|
a citizen or resident of the United States,
|
|
|
|
|
|
a domestic corporation,
|
|
|
|
|
|
an estate whose income is subject to United States federal
income tax regardless of its source, or
|
|
|
|
|
|
a trust if a United States court can exercise primary
supervision over the trusts administration and one or more
United States persons are authorized to control all substantial
decisions of the trust.
|
A
non-U.S. holder
is a beneficial owner of the common shares that is not a United
States person for U.S. federal income tax purposes.
Distributions
Distributions with respect to our common shares will be taxable
as dividend income when actually or constructively received to
the extent of our current or accumulated earnings and profits as
determined for U.S. federal income tax purposes. To the
extent that the amount of a distribution with respect to common
shares exceeds our current and accumulated earnings and profits,
such distribution will be treated first as a tax-free return of
capital to the extent of your adjusted tax basis in such common
shares and thereafter as capital gain.
U.S.
Holders
Subject to certain exceptions for short-term and hedged
positions, distributions constituting dividend income received
by certain non-corporate U.S. holders, including
individuals, in respect of the common shares in taxable years
beginning before January 1, 2011 are generally taxed at a
maximum rate of 15%. Similarly, subject to similar exceptions
for short-term and hedged positions, distributions on the common
shares constituting dividend income paid to holders that are
domestic corporations generally will qualify for the dividends
received deduction. You should consult your own tax advisor
regarding the availability of the reduced dividend tax rate and
the dividends received deduction in light of your particular
circumstances.
6
Non-U.S.
Holders
Except as described below, if you are a
non-U.S. holder
of common shares, dividends paid to you are subject to
withholding of United States federal income tax at a 30% rate or
at a lower rate if you are eligible for the benefits of an
income tax treaty that provides for a lower rate. Even if you
are eligible for a lower treaty rate, we and other payors will
generally be required to withhold at a 30% rate (rather than the
lower treaty rate) on dividend payments to you, unless you have
furnished to us or another payor:
|
|
|
|
|
a valid Internal Revenue Service
Form W-8BEN
or an acceptable substitute form upon which you certify, under
penalties of perjury, your status as (or, in the case of a
United States alien holder that is an estate or trust, such
forms certifying the status of each beneficiary of the estate or
trust as) a
non-United
States person and your entitlement to the lower treaty rate with
respect to such payments, or
|
|
|
|
|
|
in the case of payments made outside the United States to an
offshore account (generally, an account maintained by you at an
office or branch of a bank or other financial institution at any
location outside the United States), other documentary evidence
establishing your entitlement to the lower treaty rate in
accordance with U.S. Treasury regulations.
|
If you are eligible for a reduced rate of United States federal
withholding tax under a tax treaty, you may obtain a refund of
any amounts withheld in excess of that rate by filing a refund
claim with the Internal Revenue Service.
If dividends paid to you are effectively connected
with your conduct of a trade or business within the United
States and, if required by a tax treaty, the dividends are
attributable to a permanent establishment that you maintain in
the United States, we and other payors generally are not
required to withhold tax from the dividends, provided that you
have furnished to us or another payor a valid Internal Revenue
Service
Form W-8ECI
or an acceptable substitute form upon which you represent, under
penalties of perjury, that:
|
|
|
|
|
you are a
non-United
States person, and
|
|
|
|
|
|
the dividends are effectively connected with your conduct of a
trade or business within the United States and are includible in
your gross income.
|
Effectively connected dividends are taxed at rates
applicable to United States citizens, resident aliens and
domestic United States corporations.
If you are a corporate
non-U.S. holder,
effectively connected dividends that you receive
may, under certain circumstances, be subject to an additional
branch profits tax at a 30% rate or at a lower rate
if you are eligible for the benefits of an income tax treaty
that provides for a lower rate.
Dispositions
U.S.
Holders
If you are a U.S. holder and you sell or otherwise dispose
of the common shares, you will generally recognize capital gain
or loss equal to the difference between the amount you realize
and your adjusted tax basis in the shares. Such capital gain or
loss will be long-term capital gain or loss if your holding
period for the shares is more than one year. Long-term capital
gain of a non-corporate United States holder that is recognized
in taxable years beginning before January 1, 2011 is
generally taxed at a maximum rate of 15%. The deductibility of
net capital losses is subject to limitations.
Non-U.S.
Holders
If you are a
non-U.S. holder,
you generally will not be subject to United States federal
income tax on gain that you recognize on a disposition of common
shares unless:
|
|
|
|
|
the gain is effectively connected with your conduct
of a trade or business in the United States, and the gain is
attributable to a permanent establishment that you maintain in
the United States, if that is
|
7
|
|
|
|
|
required by an applicable income tax treaty as a condition for
subjecting you to United States taxation on a net income basis,
|
|
|
|
|
|
you are an individual, you are present in the United States for
183 or more days in the taxable year of the sale and certain
other conditions exist, or
|
|
|
|
|
|
we are or have been a United States real property holding
corporation for federal income tax purposes and you hold,
directly or indirectly, at any time during the five-year period
ending on the date of disposition, more than 5% of our common
stock and you are not eligible for any treaty exemption.
|
We have not been, are not and do not anticipate becoming a
United States real property holding corporation for United
States federal income tax purposes.
If you are a corporate
non-U.S. holder,
effectively connected gains that you recognize may
also, under certain circumstances, be subject to an additional
branch profits tax at a 30% rate or at a lower rate
if you are eligible for the benefits of an income tax treaty
that provides for a lower rate.
Information
reporting and backup withholding
U.S.
Holders
For non-corporate U.S. holders, information reporting
requirements, on Internal Revenue Service Form 1099,
generally will apply to the payment of dividends on common
shares and the payment of the proceeds from the sale or
redemption of shares.
Additionally, backup withholding will apply to such payments if
a non-corporate United States holder fails to provide an
accurate taxpayer identification number, is notified by the
Internal Revenue Service that it has failed to report all
dividends required to be shown on its federal income tax
returns, or in certain circumstances, fails to comply with
applicable certification requirements.
You generally may obtain a refund of any amounts withheld under
the backup withholding rules that exceed your income tax
liability by timely filing a refund claim with the Internal
Revenue Service.
Non-U.S.
Holders
If you are a
non-U.S. holder,
you are generally exempt from backup withholding with respect to
|
|
|
|
|
dividend payments on the common shares and
|
|
|
|
|
|
the payment of the proceeds from the sale (including a
redemption) of the common shares effected at a United States
office of a broker,
|
as long as:
|
|
|
|
|
the payor or broker does not have actual knowledge or reason to
know that you are a United States person and you have furnished
to the payor or broker:
|
|
|
|
|
|
a valid Internal Revenue Service
Form W-8BEN
or an acceptable substitute form upon which you certify, under
penalties of perjury, that you are (or, in the case of a
non-U.S. holder
that is an estate or trust, such forms certifying that each
beneficiary of the estate or trust is) a
non-United
States person, or
|
|
|
|
|
|
other documentation upon which it may rely to treat the payments
as made to a
non-United
States person in accordance with U.S. Treasury
Regulations, or
|
|
|
|
|
|
you otherwise establish an exemption.
|
Information reporting will generally apply to dividend payments.
Payment of the proceeds from the sale of common shares effected
at a foreign office of a broker generally will not be subject to
information reporting or backup withholding. However, a sale or
redemption of common
8
shares that is effected at a foreign office of a broker will be
subject to information reporting and backup withholding if:
|
|
|
|
|
the proceeds are transferred to an account maintained by you in
the United States,
|
|
|
|
|
|
the payment of proceeds or the confirmation of the sale or
redemption is mailed to you at a United States address, or
|
|
|
|
|
|
the sale or redemption has some other specified connection with
the United States as provided in U.S. Treasury regulations,
|
unless the broker does not have actual knowledge or reason to
know that you are a United States person and the documentation
requirements described above are met or you otherwise establish
an exemption.
In addition, a sale of common shares will be subject to
information reporting if it is effected at a foreign office of a
broker that is:
|
|
|
|
|
a United States person,
|
|
|
|
|
|
a controlled foreign corporation for United States tax purposes,
|
|
|
|
|
|
a foreign person 50% or more of whose gross income is
effectively connected with the conduct of a United States trade
or business for a specified three-year period, or
|
|
|
|
|
|
a foreign partnership, if at any time during its tax year:
|
|
|
|
|
|
one or more of its partners are U.S. persons,
as defined in U.S. Treasury regulations, who in the
aggregate hold more than 50% of the income or capital interest
in the partnership, or
|
|
|
|
|
|
such foreign partnership is engaged in the conduct of a United
States trade or business,
|
unless the broker does not have actual knowledge or reason to
know that you are a United States person and the documentation
requirements described above are met or you otherwise establish
an exemption. Backup withholding will apply if the sale is
subject to information reporting and the broker has actual
knowledge that you are a United States person.
You generally may obtain a refund of any amounts withheld under
the backup withholding rules that exceed your income tax
liability by timely filing a refund claim with the Internal
Revenue Service.
9
PLAN OF
DISTRIBUTION
The selling shareholders may sell from time to time our common
shares listed under Number of Shares Being Offered
in the Selling Shareholders table above. Sales by
the selling shareholders may be made on The New York Stock
Exchange, in the over-the-counter market or otherwise. The
timing and amount of sales will likely depend on market
conditions and other factors. The sale prices may be market
prices prevailing at the time of sale, negotiated prices or
fixed prices. Sales may involve:
|
|
|
|
|
sales to underwriters who will acquire shares for their own
account and resell them;
|
|
|
|
|
|
cross or block transactions in which a broker or dealer will
attempt to sell the shares as agent but may purchase and resell
a portion of the block as principal to facilitate the
transaction;
|
|
|
|
|
|
purchases and resales by a broker or dealer as principal for its
own account;
|
|
|
|
|
|
an exchange distribution or special offering in accordance with
the rules of any stock exchange on which our common shares are
listed;
|
|
|
|
|
|
ordinary brokerage transactions and transactions in which a
broker solicits purchasers;
|
|
|
|
|
|
a transaction in which a broker-dealer agrees with the selling
shareholder to sell a specified number of such shares at a
stipulated price per share;
|
|
|
|
|
|
transactions in the over-the-counter market;
|
|
|
|
|
|
means other than established trading markets, including direct
sales of the shares to purchasers or sales of the shares
effected through agents;
|
|
|
|
|
|
transactions in options, swaps, or other derivatives that may
not be listed on an exchange;
|
|
|
|
|
|
the creation or settlement of hedging transactions;
|
|
|
|
|
|
privately negotiated transactions;
|
|
|
|
|
|
transactions to cover short sales;
|
|
|
|
|
|
any other transaction permitted pursuant to applicable
law; or
|
|
|
|
|
|
any combination of the transactions set forth above.
|
In connection with the resale of our common shares, the selling
shareholders may enter into hedging transactions with
broker-dealers, which may in turn engage in short sales of our
common shares and deliver common shares to close out such short
positions, or loan or pledge common shares to broker-dealers
that in turn may sell such securities. Such transactions may be
effected by the selling shareholders at market prices prevailing
at the time of sale, at prices related to such prevailing market
prices, at negotiated prices or at fixed prices. The selling
shareholders may effect such transactions by selling the
securities to or through broker-dealers and such broker-dealers
may receive compensation in the form of discounts or commissions
from the selling shareholders and may receive commissions from
the purchasers of the securities for whom they may act as agent
(which discounts or commissions from the selling shareholders or
such purchasers will not exceed those customary in the type of
transactions involved).
Any broker-dealers that participate with the selling
shareholders in the distribution of our common shares may be
deemed to be underwriters within the meaning of the
Securities Act, and any commissions or discounts received by
such broker-dealers and any profit on the resale of the
securities by such broker-dealers might be deemed to be
underwriting discounts and commissions under such act.
If the selling shareholders engage an underwriter in connection
with the sale of the shares, to the extent required, this
prospectus will be supplemented to describe the number of shares
being offered and the terms of the offering, including the names
of the underwriters, the public offering price, and any
compensation to underwriters, dealers or agents. We know of no
existing agreements, arrangements or understandings by the
selling shareholders for the distribution of the shares of our
common stock covered by the prospectus.
10
In connection with the Rights Offer, we entered into a
lock-up
agreement with each of Cummins and John Vogelstein pursuant to
which Cummins and John Vogelstein agreed not to transfer or
dispose of the common shares purchased pursuant to their standby
commitments, including by means of any hedging or short sale
transactions, for a period of time. Cummins and John Vogelstein
are free to sell shares, subject to applicable securities laws,
(i) with respect to 25% of any shares they purchase,
60 days after the closing date of the Rights Offer,
(ii) with respect to 50% of any shares they purchase,
120 days after the closing date of the Rights Offer,
(iii) with respect to 75% of any shares they purchase,
180 days after the closing date of the Rights Offer and
(iv) with respect to the remainder of any shares they
purchase, 240 days after the closing date of the Rights
Offer. These
lock-up
agreements contain a clause whereby the Company promises that
Cummins and John Vogelsteins
lock-up
agreements will not be any more restrictive than any other
lock-up or
similar agreement agreed to in connection with the proposed
exchange of the Companys trust preferred securities for
common shares.
We have agreed to pay agent fees and commissions, and fees and
disbursements of our counsel and accountants, as well as all
registration and filing fees and all printing costs incurred in
connection with the offering.
We have agreed to indemnify the selling shareholders against
certain liabilities, including liabilities under the Securities
Act, and to contribute to payments that the selling shareholders
may be required to make for these liabilities.
WHERE YOU
CAN FIND MORE INFORMATION
This prospectus is a part of a Registration Statement on
Form S-3
filed by us with the SEC under the Securities Act. This
prospectus does not contain all the information set forth in the
registration statement, certain parts of which are omitted in
accordance with the rules and regulations of the SEC. For
further information with respect to us and the securities
offered by this prospectus, reference is made to the
registration statement, including the exhibits to the
registration statement and documents incorporated by reference.
Statements contained in this prospectus concerning the
provisions of such documents are necessarily summaries of such
documents and each such statement is qualified in its entirety
by reference to the copy of the applicable document filed with
the SEC.
We file periodic reports, proxy statements and other information
with the SEC. Our filings are available to the public over the
Internet at the SECs web site at
http://www.sec.gov.
You may also inspect and copy these materials at the public
reference facilities of the SEC at 100 F Street, N.E.,
Washington, D.C. 20549. Copies of such material can be
obtained at prescribed rates from the Public Reference Section
of the SEC at 100 F Street, N.E.,
Washington, D.C. 20549. Please call the SEC at
1-800-SEC-0330
for further information.
We incorporate by reference into this prospectus the
information in documents we file with the SEC, which means that
we can disclose important information to you through those
documents. The information incorporated by reference is an
important part of this prospectus. Some information contained in
this prospectus updates the information incorporated by
reference and some information that we file subsequently with
the SEC will automatically update this prospectus. We
incorporate by reference the documents listed below:
|
|
|
|
|
our Annual Report on
Form 10-K
for the year ended December 31, 2007, filed with the SEC on
March 14, 2008 (File
No. 001-16691);
|
|
|
|
|
|
our Quarterly Reports on
Form 10-Q
for the quarters ended March 31, 2008, June 30, 2008
and September 30, 2008, filed with the SEC on May 7,
2008, August 7, 2008 and November 10, 2008
respectively (File
No. 001-16691);
|
|
|
|
|
|
our Current Reports on
Form 8-K
filed with the SEC on January 3, 2008; January 29,
2008; February 11, 2008; March 3, 2008; May 6,
2008; July 23, 2008; July 24, 2008 (as amended by the
amendment filed on August 8, 2008); July 25, 2008;
July 31, 2008; August 6, 2008; September 16,
|
11
|
|
|
|
|
2008; September 22, 2008; October 1, 2008;
October 14, 2008; October 15, 2008; and
November 7, 2008; and
|
|
|
|
|
|
the description of our common shares, which are registered under
Section 12 of the Securities Exchange Act, in our
Registration Statement on
Form S-1
on February 14, 2002, including any subsequently filed
amendments and reports updating such description.
|
We also incorporate by reference any filings we make with the
SEC under Sections 13(a), 13(c), 14 or 15(d) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 after the initial filing of the
registration statement that contains this prospectus and before
the time that all of the securities offered in this prospectus
are sold.
You may request, and we will provide, a copy of any or all of
these filings at no cost by contacting Suzie Singer, our
Corporate Communications Officer, at Irwin Financial
Corporation, 500 Washington Street, Columbus, Indiana 47201, or
by calling
(812) 376-1909.
LEGAL
OPINIONS
Certain legal matters relating to our common shares offered by
this prospectus, including the validity of the common shares,
are being passed on for us by Ice Miller LLP, Indianapolis,
Indiana, 46282.
EXPERTS
The consolidated financial statements of Irwin Financial
Corporation at December 31, 2007 and 2006, and for each of
the two years in the period ended December 31, 2007,
incorporated by reference in this Prospectus and Registration
Statement have been audited by Ernst & Young LLP,
independent registered public accounting firm, as set forth in
their report thereon, and incorporated herein by reference. Such
consolidated financial statements are incorporated herein by
reference in reliance upon such report given on the authority of
such firm as experts in accounting and auditing.
The consolidated statements of income, shareholders equity
and cash flows of Irwin Financial Corporation for the year ended
December 31, 2005, incorporated in this Prospectus by
reference to the Annual Report on
Form 10-K
for the year ended December 31, 2007 have been so
incorporated in reliance on the report of PricewaterhouseCoopers
LLP, an independent registered public accounting firm, given on
the authority of said firm as experts in auditing and accounting.
12
PART II
INFORMATION
NOT REQUIRED IN PROSPECTUS
|
|
Item 14.
|
Other
Expenses of Issuance and Distribution.
|
The following table sets forth the various expenses payable in
connection with the sale and distribution of the securities
being registered, other than underwriting discounts and
commissions. All of such expenses will be paid by Irwin. All
amounts shown are estimates, except the SEC registration fee and
the FINRA and the New York Stock Exchange filing fees:
|
|
|
|
|
SEC registration fee
|
|
$
|
1,965
|
|
FINRA filing fee
|
|
|
5,500
|
|
Subscription agent fee
|
|
|
15,000
|
|
Printing and mailing expenses
|
|
|
50,000
|
|
Fees and expenses of counsel
|
|
|
500,000
|
|
Accounting and related expenses
|
|
|
25,000
|
|
Miscellaneous
|
|
|
55,000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total
|
|
$
|
652,465
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Item 15.
|
Indemnification
of Directors and Officers.
|
Insofar as indemnification for liabilities arising under the
Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the Securities
Act) may be permitted to our directors, officers, and
controlling persons pursuant to the following provisions, or
otherwise, we have been advised that in the opinion of the SEC
such indemnification is against public policy as expressed in
the Securities Act and is, therefore, unenforceable.
The Indiana Business Corporation Law (IBCL), the
provisions of which we are governed by, empowers an Indiana
corporation to indemnify present and former directors, officers,
employees, or agents or any person who may have served at the
request of the corporation as a director, officer, employee, or
agent of another corporation (Eligible Persons)
against liability incurred in any proceeding, civil or criminal,
in which the Eligible Person is made a party by reason of being
or having been in any such capacity, or arising out of his
status as such, if the individual acted in good faith and
reasonably believed that (a) the individual was acting in
the best interests of the corporation, or (b) if the
challenged action was taken other than in the individuals
official capacity as an officer, director, employee or agent,
the individuals conduct was at least not opposed to the
corporations best interests, or (c) if in a criminal
proceeding, either the individual had reasonable cause to
believe his conduct was lawful or no reasonable cause to believe
his conduct was unlawful.
The IBCL further empowers a corporation to pay or reimburse the
reasonable expenses incurred by an Eligible Person in connection
with the defense of any such claim, including counsel fees; and,
unless limited by its Articles of Incorporation, the corporation
is required to indemnify an Eligible Person against reasonable
expenses if he is wholly successful in any such proceeding, on
the merits or otherwise. Under certain circumstances, a
corporation may pay or reimburse an Eligible Person for
reasonable expenses prior to final disposition of the matter.
Unless a corporations articles of incorporation provide
otherwise, an Eligible Person may apply for indemnification to a
court which may order indemnification upon a determination that
the Eligible Person is entitled to mandatory indemnification for
reasonable expenses or that the Eligible Person is fairly and
reasonably entitled to indemnification in view of all the
relevant circumstances without regard to whether his actions
satisfied the appropriate standard of conduct.
Before a corporation may indemnify any Eligible Person against
liability or reasonable expenses under the IBCL, a quorum
consisting of directors who are not parties to the proceeding
must (1) determine the indemnification is permissible in
the specific circumstances because the Eligible Person met the
requisite standard of conduct, (2) authorize the
corporation to indemnify the Eligible Person and (3) if
appropriate, evaluate the reasonableness of expenses for which
indemnification is sought. If it is not possible to obtain a
quorum of uninvolved directors, the foregoing action may be
taken by a committee of two or more directors
II-1
who are not parties to the proceeding, special legal counsel
selected by the Board or such a committee, or by the
shareholders of the corporation.
In addition to the foregoing, the IBCL states that the
indemnification it provides shall not be deemed exclusive of any
other rights to which those indemnified may be entitled under
any provision of the Articles of Incorporation or Bylaws,
resolution of the board of directors or shareholders, or any
other authorization adopted after notice by a majority vote of
all the voting shares then issued and outstanding. The IBCL also
empowers an Indiana corporation to purchase and maintain
insurance on behalf of any Eligible Person against any liability
asserted against or incurred by him in any capacity as such, or
arising out of his status as such, whether or not the
corporation would have had the power to indemnify him against
such liability.
Our Amended and Restated Articles of Incorporation provide for
indemnification as a matter of right to any of our directors,
officers or employees who have been successful on the merits of
a claim against them, and for indemnification under certain
other circumstances where allowed, by the action of
disinterested members of the board of directors.
We have purchased $40 million in directors and
officers liability insurance, the effect of which is to
indemnify the directors and officers of us and our subsidiaries
against certain losses caused by errors, misstatement or
misleading statements, wrongful acts, omissions, neglect or
breach of duty by them or similar matters claimed against them
in their capacities as directors or officers.
|
|
|
|
|
Exhibit
|
|
|
Number
|
|
Description
|
|
|
4
|
.1
|
|
Restated Articles of Incorporation of Irwin Financial
Corporation. (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3(a) to
Form 10-K
Report for the year ended December 31, 2000, File
No. 0-06835).
|
|
4
|
.2
|
|
Restated Articles of Incorporation of Irwin Financial
Corporation, as amended November 3, 2008. (Incorporated by
reference to Exhibit 3.1 to
Form 10-Q
Report for the quarter ended September, 30, 2008, File
No. 001-16691).
|
|
4
|
.3
|
|
Code of By-laws of Irwin Financial Corporation, as amended
November 28, 2007. (Incorporated by reference to
Exhibit 3.2 1 to
Form 10-Q
Report for the quarter ended September, 30, 2008, File
No. 001-16691).
|
|
4
|
.4
|
|
Rights Agreement, dated as of March 1, 2001, between Irwin
Financial Corporation and Irwin Union Bank and Trust.
(Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.1 to
Form 8-A
filed with the SEC on March 2, 2001, File
No. 0-06835).
|
|
4
|
.5
|
|
Appointment of Successor Rights Agent dated as of May 11,
2001 between Irwin Financial Corporation and National City Bank.
(Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.5 to
Form S-8
filed with the SEC on September 7, 2001, File
No. 333-69156).
|
|
5
|
.1
|
|
Opinion of Ice Miller LLP (validity opinion).
|
|
8
|
.1
|
|
Opinion of Sullivan & Cromwell LLP as to certain tax
matters.
|
|
10
|
.1
|
|
Standby Purchase Agreement, dated as of October 13, 2008,
by and between Irwin Financial Corporation and Cummins Inc.
(Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to
Form 8-K
filed with the SEC on October 14, 2008).
|
|
10
|
.2
|
|
Form of Standby Purchase Agreement for John L. Vogelstein and
Rodman Moorhead
|
|
10
|
.3
|
|
Form of Standby Purchase Agreement for William I. Miller,
Catherine G. Miller, Elizabeth G. Miller and Henry B. Schacht.
|
|
23
|
.1
|
|
Consent of Ice Miller LLP (included in opinion filed as
Exhibit 5.1).
|
|
23
|
.2
|
|
Consent of Sullivan & Cromwell LLP (included in
opinion filed as Exhibit 8.1).
|
|
23
|
.3
|
|
Consent of Ernst & Young LLP.
|
|
23
|
.4
|
|
Consent of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP.
|
|
24
|
.1
|
|
Powers of Attorney (included as part of signature pages).
|
II-2
(a) The undersigned registrant hereby undertakes:
(1) To file, during any period in which offers or sales are
being made, a post-effective amendment to this registration
statement:
(i) to include any prospectus required by
section 10(a)(3) of the Securities Act of 1933;
(ii) to reflect in the prospectus any facts or events
arising after the effective date of the registration statement
(or the most recent post-effective amendment thereof) which,
individually or in the aggregate, represent a fundamental change
in the information set forth in the registration statement.
Notwithstanding the foregoing, any increase or decrease in
volume of securities offered (if the total dollar value of
securities offered would not exceed that which was registered)
and any deviation from the low or high end of the estimated
maximum offering range may be reflected in the form of
prospectus filed with the SEC pursuant to Rule 424(b) if,
in the aggregate, the changes in volume and price represent no
more than 20% change in the maximum aggregate offering price set
forth in the Calculation of Registration Fee table
in the effective registration statement; and
(iii) to include any material information with respect to
the plan of distribution not previously disclosed in the
registration statement or any material change to such
information in the registration statement;
provided, however, that paragraphs (a)(1)(i), (a)(1)(ii) and
(a)(1)(iii) of this section do not apply if the registration
statement is on
Form S-3
or
Form F-3
and the information required to be included in a post-effective
amendment by those paragraphs is contained in reports filed with
or furnished to the SEC by the registrant pursuant to
section 13 or section 15(d) of the Securities Exchange
Act of 1934 that are incorporated by reference in the
registration statement, or is contained in a form of prospectus
filed pursuant to Rule 424(b) that is part of the
registration statement;
(2) That, for the purpose of determining any liability
under the Securities Act of 1933, each such post-effective
amendment shall be deemed to be a new registration statement
relating to the securities offered therein, and the offering of
such securities at that time shall be deemed to be the initial
bona fide offering thereof;
(3) To remove from registration by means of a
post-effective amendment any of the securities being registered
which remain unsold at the termination of the offering;
(4) That, for the purpose of determining liability under
the Securities Act of 1933 to any purchaser:
(i) If the registrant is relying on Rule 430B:
(A) Each prospectus filed by the registrant pursuant to
Rule 424(b)(3) shall be deemed to be part of the
registration statement as of the date the filed prospectus was
deemed part of and included in the registration
statement; and
(B) Each prospectus required to be filed pursuant to
Rule 424(b)(2), (b)(5), or (b)(7) as part of a registration
statement in reliance on Rule 430B relating to an offering
made pursuant to Rule 415(a)(1)(i), (vii), or (x) for
the purpose of providing the information required by section
10(a) of the Securities Act of 1933 shall be deemed to be part
of and included in the registration statement as of the earlier
of the date such form of prospectus is first used after
effectiveness or the date of the first contract of sale of
securities in the offering described in the prospectus. As
provided in Rule 430B, for liability purposes of the issuer
and any person that is at that date an underwriter, such date
shall be deemed to be a new effective date of the registration
statement relating to the securities in the registration
statement to which that prospectus relates, and the offering of
such securities at that time shall be deemed to be the initial
bona fide offering thereof; provided, however, that no statement
made in a registration statement or prospectus that is part of
the registration statement or made in a document incorporated or
deemed incorporated by reference into the registration statement
or prospectus
II-3
that is a part of the registration statement will, as to a
purchaser with a time of contract of sale prior to such
effective date, supersede or modify any statement that was made
in the registration statement or prospectus that was part of the
registration statement or made in any such document immediately
prior to such effective date; or
(ii) If the registration is subject to Rule 430C, each
prospectus filed pursuant to Rule 424(b) as part of a
registration statement relating to an offering, other than
registration statements relying on Rule 430B or other than
prospectuses filed in reliance on Rule 430A, shall be
deemed to be part of and included in the registration statement
as of the date it is first used after effectiveness; provided,
however, that no statement made in a registration statement or
prospectus that is part of the registration statement or made in
a document incorporated or deemed incorporated by reference into
the registration statement or prospectus that is part of the
registration statement will, as to a purchaser with a time of
contract of sale prior to such first use, supersede or modify
any statement that was made in the registration statement or
prospectus that was part of the registration statement or made
in any such document immediately prior to such date of first
use; and
(5) That, for the purpose of determining liability of the
registrant under the Securities Act of 1933 to any purchaser in
the initial distribution of the securities:
The undersigned registrant undertakes that in a primary offering
of securities of the undersigned registrant pursuant to this
registration statement, regardless of the underwriting method
used to sell the securities to the purchaser, if the securities
are offered or sold to such purchaser by means of any of the
following communications, the undersigned registrant will be a
seller to the purchaser and will be considered to offer or sell
such securities to such purchaser:
(i) any preliminary prospectus or prospectus of the
undersigned registrant relating to the offering required to be
filed pursuant to Rule 424;
(ii) any free writing prospectus relating to the offering
prepared by or on behalf of the undersigned registrant or used
or referred to by the undersigned registrant;
(iii) the portion of any other free writing prospectus
relating to the offering containing material information about
the undersigned registrant or its securities provided by or on
behalf of the undersigned registrant; and
(iv) any other communication that is an offer in the
offering made by the undersigned registrant to the purchaser.
(7) The undersigned registrant hereby undertakes that, for
purposes of determining any liability under the Securities Act
of 1933, each filing of the registrants annual report
pursuant to section 13(a) or section 15(d) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 that is incorporated by
reference in the registration statement shall be deemed to be a
new registration statement relating to the securities offered
therein, and the offering of such securities at that time shall
be deemed to be the initial bona fide offering thereof.
(8) Insofar as indemnification for liabilities arising
under the Securities Act of 1933 may be permitted to
directors, officers, and controlling persons of the registrant
pursuant to the foregoing provisions, or otherwise, the
registrant has been advised that in the opinion of the SEC such
indemnification is against public policy as expressed in that
Securities Act of 1933 and is, therefore, unenforceable. In the
event that a claim for indemnification against such liabilities
(other than the payment by the registrant of expenses incurred
or paid by a director, officer, or controlling person of the
registrant in the successful defense of any action, suit or
proceeding) is asserted by such director, officer, or
controlling person in connection with the securities being
registered, the registrant will, unless in the opinion of its
counsel the matter has been settled by controlling precedent,
submit to a court of appropriate jurisdiction the question
whether such indemnification by it is against public policy as
expressed in the Securities Act and will be governed by the
final adjudication of such issue.
II-4
(9) The undersigned registrant hereby undertakes that:
(1) for purposes of determining any liability under the
Securities Act of 1933, the information omitted from the form of
prospectus filed as part of this registration statement in
reliance upon Rule 430A and contained in a form of
prospectus filed by the registrant pursuant to
Rule 424(b)(1) or (4) or 497(h) under the Securities
Act of 1933 shall be deemed to be part of this registration
statement as of the time it was declared effective.
(2) for the purpose of determining any liability under the
Securities Act of 1933, each post-effective amendment that
contains a form of prospectus shall be deemed to be a new
registration statement relating to the securities offered
therein, and the offering of such securities at that time shall
be deemed to be the initial bona fide offering thereof.
II-5
SIGNATURES
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, as
amended, Irwin Financial Corporation certifies that it has
reasonable grounds to believe that it meets all of the
requirements of filing on
Form S-3
and has duly caused pre-effective Amendment No. 1 to the
Registration Statement to be signed on its behalf by the
undersigned, thereunto duly authorized, in the City of Columbus,
State of Indiana, on December 2, 2008.
By: IRWIN FINANCIAL CORPORATION
|
|
|
|
By:
|
/s/ William
I. Miller
|
William I. Miller
Chief Executive Officer and
Chairman of the Board
POWER OF
ATTORNEY
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, as
amended, this pre-effective Amendment No. 1 to the
Registration Statement has been signed by the following persons
in the capacities and on the date indicated.
|
|
|
|
|
Signature
|
|
Title
|
|
|
|
|
/s/ William
I. Miller
William
I. Miller
|
|
Director, Chairman of the Board
(Principal Executive Officer)
|
|
|
|
/s/ Gregory
F. Ehlinger
Gregory
F. Ehlinger
|
|
Senior Vice President and Chief
Financial Officer
(Principal Financial Officer)
|
|
|
|
/s/ Jody
A. Littrell
Jody
A. Littrell
|
|
Vice President and Controller
(Principal Accounting Officer)
|
|
|
|
*
Sally
A. Dean
|
|
Director
|
|
|
|
*
David
W. Goodrich
|
|
Director
|
|
|
|
*
R.
David Hoover
|
|
Director
|
|
|
|
*
William
H. Kling
|
|
Director
|
|
|
|
*
Brenda
J. Lauderback
|
|
Director
|
II-6
|
|
|
|
|
Signature
|
|
Title
|
|
|
|
|
*
John
C. McGinty, Jr.
|
|
Director
|
|
|
|
*
Dayton
H. Molendorp
|
|
Director
|
|
|
|
*
Lance
R. Odden
|
|
Director
|
|
|
|
*
Marita
Zuraitis
|
|
Director
|
|
|
|
|
|
*By:
|
|
/s/ William
I. Miller
William
I. Miller
Attorney-in-Fact
|
|
|
Date: December 2, 2008
II-7