Deutsche Bank analyst Matt O'Connor released a research note last week in which he named TCF Financial Corp. a potential acquisition target.
O'Connor, who has a "buy" on TCF, called it "one of few banks with remaining leverage to credit recovery; potential acquisition target."
The one-line observation was tucked in a 40-page report on whether bank loan growth will accelerate in 2013.
The upshot: "We think a ramp-up of growth in late 2013/2014 is possible."
The target of takeover talk that pushed TCF's stock price to $28 per share in 2007, TCF was drubbed by the recession and bank regulators a couple years ago who curbed the service charges on debit cards and retail transactions that contributed heavily to TCF's profits.
"We're always for sale -- for the right price," TCF spokesman Jason Korstange said last week.
BMO, Bank of America and others have been rumored to be interested in a market dominated by Wells Fargo and U.S. Bank. CEO Bill Cooper, 69, the boss since 1985, save a brief retirement, has been working on a four-year turnaround. He said a year ago of sale speculation: "It's not time to drain the swamp when you're up to your ass in alligators."
The bank's shares are hovering around $12.30, close to their 2012 highs but far from the five-year high of $23.58 in September 2008, before the financial crisis unfolded.