Mortgage lender UWM Holdings Corporation (UWMC +0.62%), the indirect parent company of United Wholesale Mortgage, announced the first major acquisition in its history earlier this week.
Many investors were unhappy about this, however, and according to data compiled by S&P Global Market Intelligence, these folks were collectively trading UWM's stock down by xx% week-to-date as of late Friday morning.
Two into one
On Wednesday, UWM announced it had agreed to acquire mortgage real estate investment trust (mREIT) Two Harbors Investment. The deal is valued at $1.3 billion, UWM said, and will be paid for entirely in the company's stock.
Image source: Getty Images.
The acquirer, a wholesale mortgage lender, added that the deal "represents a powerful alignment of two highly-complementary organizations -- positioning the combined company for accelerated growth and enhanced outcomes for UWM, brokers, consumers and stockholders."
UWM was surely enticed by Two Harbors's RoundPoint Mortgage Servicing subsidiary, which is a mortgage servicing rights (MSR) business. At a stroke, having RoundPoint under its umbrella will come close to doubling its existing MSR portfolio (to around $400 billion, according to UWM).

NYSE: UWMC
Key Data Points
Not exactly a bargain-basement price
While it's usually advantageous to pay for a pricey acquisition with stock rather than cash, $1.3 billion is a substantial sum, regardless -- currently, UWM's market cap is under $8 billion, while its latest annual revenue figure was under $2.5 billion. So it isn't surprising that investors were skittish about the deal.
However, if the company can smoothly and successfully integrate Two Harbors into its own business, it might just prove the bears wrong. Yes, Two Harbors is a different sort of mortgage company than UWM, but the two exist in the same sphere, and I think the synergistic effect could be strong in the combined entity. I believe UWM's potential will be nicely enhanced once this transaction closes.