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Is The Lowder Era Coming To An End?

With all the hype of National Signing Day this past week, you may have missed the story posted by GumpTown Tiger in the Fanposts section (right side bar). He shared with us a column written by Opelika-Auburn News writer Paul Davis that details the troubles of Bobby Lowder.

Yesterday we wrote about Chizik giving Auburn fans hope. I think you'll agree this column also gives everyone hope. There may be something good that comes out of this recession after all. 

Lowder should take his money and go home

By Paul Davis
Columnist, Opelika-Auburn News
Published: February 2, 2009

Is Bobby Lowder too big to fail? The same week that the Montgomery banker was announced as one of Alabama's most influential men, the federal government and Colonial Bank shareholders have selected him as one the nation's worst bankers.

The situation at Colonial is so bad, some say, that it may be destined to be seized by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation or sold to a more stable banking institution.

Stock prices fell so low on Wednesday that I considered buying a few thousand shares.

My bride quickly vetoed that notion. But at 78 cents a share it looked tempting. And before the final bell Wednesday, it had started a recovery, closing at 85 cents.

Folks started unloading that stock as fast as wet rats jumping from a sinking ship. Some 25 million shares were sold and Lowder's personal portfolio (he has about 7.7 million shares) shrank from a value of more than $200 million to around $6.5 million.

Where do all these developments leave one of the state's richest men and Auburn University's most powerful trustee? He has always used money to buy his way into prominent positions, both in the business world and at Auburn University. It was his daddy's money that got him started and that money helped him muscle his way into the most powerful person at Auburn. He has been on the Auburn board since before today's crop of seniors was born.

He, alone, hired and fired presidents and coaches. He could get you promoted or demoted. He walked into board meetings with enough proxy votes in his pocket that he knew the outcome of every vote. A majority of Auburn's trustees, for most of the time he has served, have been deeply in debt to Lowder, served on his board, or were on his payroll. The few who have no ties to Lowder were always in the minority. His wings were clipped a bit when the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools told him to back away or sit back and see Auburn stripped of its accreditation.

During the years he was screwing up things at Auburn, he and his bankers were screwing up what was once a thriving financial institution.

He led the march into the sub-prime mortgage market, making loans he shouldn't have made to people who had no chance of repaying. The losses are staggering.

Lowder was seeking another federal bailout recently. The feds said that for Lowder to get another $553 million in taxpayer funds, he needed to raise from investors a match of $300 million. He couldn't do that and the stock tanked.

Tony Plath, a University of North Carolina banking professor, said failure to get the federal cash "is the Good Housekeeping kiss of death" for Colonial.

A spokesman for Morgan Keegan & Co. in New York said "(Colonial) Shareholder value has already been destroyed..."

Readers of this column know there has never been any love lost between Lowder and me. I do not gloat over his misfortune. I pity the man. Friendships, love and respect are never purchased. They are earned. Lowder has never earned his way. Bricks and mortar and bronze letters across the façade of some of Auburn's most majestic buildings don't constitute a real legacy even when adorned with the names of your mother and daddy, yourself and your wife. Richard Scrushy tried that route in Birmingham.

A great legacy is built upon great deeds, on selfless acts. At Auburn, the names associated with its greatness were not wealthy men, but honorable individuals who knew their first obligation was service. The names roll easily off the tongue. Names such as Harry Philpot, Ralph Draughon, Shug Jordan, Wayne Flint, Jim Foy, Wilford Bailey.

I don't know if Colonial Bank is going away. But I surely do hope that Lowder does.

Take one of those spacious, unsold condos in Florida that your bank can't sell and just go away. The state and especially Auburn University would be so much better off.

That's a good legacy. Take the dollars you have left, Mr. Lowder, and just leave.

Please.

 

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Who are ...

Who are the haters going to hate on now? Oh, I remember … Jay Jacobs is not gone yet.

by xotus on Feb 7, 2009 8:54 AM CST reply actions  

Haters?

So let me get this straight “xotus” — you support Lowder?!

What do an Auburn fan and a bammer have in common? (Neither of them ever attended u.a.t.).

by AUshorecm on Feb 7, 2009 10:47 AM CST up reply actions  

Support?

So let me get this straight "AUshorecm" — you infer that from what I wrote?!

by xotus on Feb 8, 2009 6:57 AM CST up reply actions  

That's pretty funny......

one of the guys screaming for Tubervilles head the most calling other people haters.

I would have gone to bammer if my grades hadn't been good enough to go to AU

by Todd92 on Feb 9, 2009 9:37 AM CST up reply actions  

I'm curious ...

I’m the person who said, “words mean things.”

I believe you’re the person who replied, " … yes, words mean things but not always in the literal sense …"

I’m curious, in this case, when you said that I was a person — “screaming for Tubervilles head” — did you mean that you had read some words that I had written that called for Coach Tuberville to resign or to be fired? Or did you just want to write some words that were not to be taken by the readers of this blog to mean want they mean in the literal sense?

by xotus on Feb 9, 2009 10:04 AM CST up reply actions  

I recall you being one of the people wanting Tuberville gone....

that clear enough?

I would have gone to bammer if my grades hadn't been good enough to go to AU

by Todd92 on Feb 9, 2009 10:14 AM CST up reply actions  

What's clear is ...

What’s clear is, that in this case, your assertions were rash and inaccurate .

by xotus on Feb 9, 2009 10:35 AM CST up reply actions  

If I have erred my apology....

but I seem to remember you being one who was all for Tuberville getting the heave ho……although possibly not the way it was handled. Again if I remember it incorrectly and you were not …..my bad.

I would have gone to bammer if my grades hadn't been good enough to go to AU

by Todd92 on Feb 9, 2009 11:00 AM CST up reply actions  

Todd 92

You always seem to speak so eloquently and my compliments on being so articulate. With that being said, you can ALWAYS asscuse me of calling for Lebo’s head-firguretively speaking of course. I want Lebo to get the heave ho. Hahaha, I just thought that you need someone to stick to their words. If I end up being wrong, by all means, do not let me forget. Right now, I’m not forgetting being correct.

by Sparkey on Feb 9, 2009 11:13 AM CST up reply actions  

I don't disagree that Lebo hasn't shown squat....

but most of that I do attribute to recruiting not X’s and O’s. And I wouldn’t be upset if he were shown the door. But the timing is bad and quite frankly we would be seen in a more positive light by prospective coaches if Lebo were given more time in a place where winning basketball has always been an uphill battle. I think AU would be better off in the long run to allow Lebo to recruit one season with the new facility….if he still can’t do it then goodbye Coach Lebo and AU has a new facility and a reputation as a place where a coach can get every opportunity to prove himself.

I would have gone to bammer if my grades hadn't been good enough to go to AU

by Todd92 on Feb 9, 2009 1:04 PM CST up reply actions  

Todd...

…..That’s a very good point. I think Lebo is as good as they come, as far as strategy, and is good motivating players. You don’t see “lack of effort” written in Auburn basketball news stories often.

…..I think Lebo’s a pretty straight arrow, too. We haven’t caught even a whiff of NCAA trouble, on his watch. I was figuring that Lebo was gone after this year, but now, I think you’re right. We could certainly do worse!

by Acid Reign on Feb 9, 2009 6:29 PM CST up reply actions  

I dfoubt Lowder will be going anywhere

He is like cockroaches and twinkies in that he is one of only a few things that could survive a nuclear war. However, if by some faint miracle, thousands of prayers are answered and he gets to steppin, I am hopeful that all of his lap dogs won’t be far behind. Jacobs inluded.

"Jay Jacobs can't go to the bathroom without Bobby Lowder's permission" - Paul Finebaum

by GumptownTiger on Feb 9, 2009 9:20 AM CST up reply actions  

yeah right

this article is not going to change a damn thing

by mgizmo2005 on Feb 7, 2009 11:40 AM CST reply actions  

I dont think the intent of the article is to change a thing...

It is to let people know what Bobby Lowder is facing and it is inevitable that Colonial Bank will fail. Everyone knows that Lowder has his money tucked away somewhere nice and safe. So just because Colonial fails won’t necessarily mean Lowder will be without any money. I would like nothing more than to see him out of the picture at Auburn. We’ll see if this is the one thing that will cause it.

by kerr024 on Feb 7, 2009 2:46 PM CST up reply actions  

No he will be fine

I t will be all the investors he misled that will be f’ed in the a

"Jay Jacobs can't go to the bathroom without Bobby Lowder's permission" - Paul Finebaum

by GumptownTiger on Feb 9, 2009 9:20 AM CST up reply actions  

Lowder won't be in a soup line anytime soon....

but to see his personal stock value in his own bank go from inexcess of 200 million to about 7 million in a short term has had to weaken his ability to buy control at AU. One thing that we haven’t seen at AU in over 25 years is a change in power and if Lowder fails to hold onto his control we may only see it fall on Jimmy Rane and the Yella Man is about as egotisticial power hungry as the imp is. Basically its like Castro finally losing power…..to his brother.

I would have gone to bammer if my grades hadn't been good enough to go to AU

by Todd92 on Feb 9, 2009 9:46 AM CST up reply actions  

Lowder isn't going to be ruined,

…..but he’s taken a hit. Colonial may fail, and if it does, he no longer controls a bank. That’s pretty big, in terms of power. However, he’s been making CEO pay and bonuses all these years. If he’s worth even a grain of his financial salt, he’s going to be extremely diversified in his holdings. Nearly everything has taken a value hit this year, but for someone worth as much as a hundred million, that’s a hit down to 60 million or so. Still richer than you or I ever will be!

…..Like any despot, there are things over the years that Lowder has done that I have heartily approved of, and things that I found abhorrent. There’s an old saying that football coaches lose about 10 percent of their support each year. I’d think that applies as well for boosters that keep getting negative press. The criticism can’t be fun for Lowder. Here’s hoping both he, and our current leadership, continue to improve in their decision-making skills.

by Acid Reign on Feb 7, 2009 11:11 PM CST reply actions  

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