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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549


FORM 8-K

CURRENT REPORT
Pursuant to Section 13 or 15(d) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934

Date of Report (Date of Earliest Event Reported) September 10, 2002


WASHINGTON MUTUAL, INC.
(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)

Washington   1-14667   91-1653725
(State or other jurisdiction of incorporation)   (Commission File No.)   (I.R.S. Employer Identification No.)

1201 Third Avenue Seattle, Washington 98101
(Address of principal executive offices and zip code)

Registrant's telephone number, including area code: (206) 461-2000


Item 9. Regulation FD Disclosure.

        The following slides may be used by Washington Mutual, Inc. in various presentations to investors:



logo


OVERVIEW

Second Quarter 2002

Kerry Killinger
Chairman, President and
Chief Executive Officer


Forward-Looking Statements

        "This presentation contains forward-looking statements, which are not historical facts and pertain to future operating results. These forward-looking statements are within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These forward-looking statements include, but are not limited to, statements about our plans, objectives, expectations and intentions and other statements contained in this document that are not historical facts. When used in this presentation, the words "expects," "anticipates," "intends," "plans," "believes," "seeks," "estimates," or words of similar meaning, or future or conditional verbs, such as "will," "would," "should," "could," or "may" are generally intended to identify forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements are inherently subject to significant business, economic and competitive uncertainties and contingencies, many of which are beyond our control. In addition, these forward-looking statements are subject to assumptions with respect to future business strategies and decisions that are subject to change. Actual results may differ materially from the results discussed in these forward-looking statements for the reasons, among others, discussed under the heading "Business—Factors That May Affect Future Results" in Washington Mutual's 2001 Annual Report on Form 10-K and under the heading, "Cautionary Statements," in Washington Mutual's Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the period ended June 30, 2002, which include: changes in general business and economic conditions may significantly affect our earnings; the risk that our inability to effectively manage the volatility of our mortgage banking business could adversely affect our earnings; the risk that the impact of rising interest rates may result in an increase in our cost of interest-bearing liabilities, which could outpace the increase in the yield on interest-earning assets and lead to a reduction in the net interest margin; the risk that our inability to effectively integrate the operations and personnel of companies we have acquired could adversely affect our earnings and financial condition; the concentration of operations in California could adversely affect our operating results if the California economy or real estate market declines; competition from other financial services companies in our markets could adversely affect our ability to achieve our financial goals; changes in the regulation of financial services companies could adversely affect our business.

Business Segment Financial Information

        Business segment financial information is prepared for management information purposes and uses methodologies which do not conform to generally accepted accounting principles. These methodologies include internal allocations of the cost of funds, hedge gains or losses, loan loss provisions and certain overhead items.


Unique Business Model


Net Income by Business Segment

         GRAPHIC


Five-Year Plan: 2000-2004

Achieve Financial Targets

 
  YTD 6/30/02
  Targets 2000-2004
 
Return on average common equity   20.42 % >20.00 %
EPS growth   18.45 (a) >13.00  
Efficiency ratio   47.21 (b) <45.00  
NPA/Total assets   0.96 (c) <1.00  
Common equity/total assets   7.51 (c)(d) >5.00  
Estimated total risk-based capital   12.40 (c)(d)(e) >11.00  

(a)
Increase in earnings per share from 1/1/02 through 6/30/02 over 1/1/01 through 6/30/01

(b)
Excludes amortization of intangible assets amortizable under GAAP

(c)
As of 6/30/02

(d)
Excludes unrealized net gain/loss on available-for-sale securities and derivatives

(e)
Estimate of what WMI's total risk-based capital would be if it were a bank holding company that complies with the Federal Reserve Board capital requirements

Creating Shareholder Value Dime
EPS Growth(a)

         GRAPHIC


(a)
Excludes SAIF assessment in Q3 1996 and transaction-related charges (all applicable periods); includes acquired companies only after date of merger

(b)
PNC acquisition refers to the acquisition of the mortgage operations of The PNC Financial Services Group, Inc.

(c)
HomeSide acquisition refers to the purchase of certain operating assets from HomeSide Lending, Inc.

Creating a Powerful National Franchise

Banking and Financial Services

Home Loans and Insurance Services

Specialty Finance Market Position


Characteristics of High Performing Companies


WaMu—A High Performing Company


(a)
Calculated using quarterly EPS as originally reported from Q1 '96 to Q2 '02; excludes SAIF assessment in Q3 '96 and transaction-related charges (all applicable periods); includes acquired companies only after date of merger

(b)
Historical EPS growth rate calculated from Q1 '96 to Q1 '02 using quarterly EPS for each period ending Source: Standard and Poor's

(c)
Company data from Bloomberg

Strong Intangibles


Acquisition Update

Closed Transactions

  Deposit & Loan Servicing
Conversion Status

PNC(a)   X
Bank United Corp.   X
Fleet Mortgage Corp.   X
Dime Savings Bank    
  Deposit Systems   X
  Loan Servicing Systems   Q4 2002
NAMC(b)   Q4 2002
HomeSide Acquisition(c)   N/A

(a)
The mortgage operations of The PNC Financial Services Group, Inc.

(b)
North American Mortgage Company, a subsidiary of Dime Bancorp, Inc.

(c)
Acquired certain operating assets of HomeSide Lending, Inc.

Creating Shareholder Value

Cumulative Value of Investments(a)

         GRAPHIC


Summary



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BANKING AND FINANCIAL SERVICES GROUP

Second Quarter 2002

Kim Kahmer
Group Chief Financial Officer


Forward-Looking Statements

        "This presentation contains forward-looking statements, which are not historical facts and pertain to future operating results. These forward-looking statements are within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These forward-looking statements include, but are not limited to, statements about our plans, objectives, expectations and intentions and other statements contained in this document that are not historical facts. When used in this presentation, the words "expects," "anticipates," "intends," "plans," "believes," "seeks," "estimates," or words of similar meaning, or future or conditional verbs, such as "will," "would," "should," "could," or "may" are generally intended to identify forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements are inherently subject to significant business, economic and competitive uncertainties and contingencies, many of which are beyond our control. In addition, these forward-looking statements are subject to assumptions with respect to future business strategies and decisions that are subject to change. Actual results may differ materially from the results discussed in these forward-looking statements for the reasons, among others, discussed under the heading "Business—Factors That May Affect Future Results" in Washington Mutual's 2001 Annual Report on Form 10-K and under the heading, "Cautionary Statements," in Washington Mutual's Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the period ended June 30, 2002, which include: changes in general business and economic conditions may significantly affect our earnings; the risk that our inability to effectively manage the volatility of our mortgage banking business could adversely affect our earnings; the risk that the impact of rising interest rates may result in an increase in our cost of interest-bearing liabilities, which could outpace the increase in the yield on interest-earning assets and lead to a reduction in the net interest margin; the risk that our inability to effectively integrate the operations and personnel of companies we have acquired could adversely affect our earnings and financial condition; the concentration of operations in California could adversely affect our operating results if the California economy or real estate market declines; competition from other financial services companies in our markets could adversely affect our ability to achieve our financial goals; changes in the regulation of financial services companies could adversely affect our business.

Business Segment Financial Information

        Business segment financial information is prepared for management information purposes and uses methodologies which do not conform to generally accepted accounting principles. These methodologies include internal allocations of the cost of funds, hedge gains or losses, loan loss provisions and certain overhead items.


Highlights


Mission

        To be the bank of choice nationwide for middle-market consumers and small-and mid-sized businesses by delivering great value and friendly service


Profile


*
Includes households acquired with Dime acquisition

Distribution Network

         GRAPHIC

Market

  Retail Branches
  ATMs
  Business Banking Centers
  Financial Consultants
California   546   1,007   14   359
WA/OR   288   387   20   90
Texas   204   210   5   51
Florida   141   265   1   63
NY/NJ   127   268   3   74
UT/ID   51   58   11   6
Las Vegas   21   27     3
Phoenix   24   26   1   3
Atlanta   33   39     4
   
 
 
 
Total   1,435 * 2,287   55   653

*
Occasio represents 231 of total

Segment Net Interest Income

         GRAPHIC


Segment Noninterest Income

         GRAPHIC


Segment Noninterest Expense

         GRAPHIC


Segment Net Income

         GRAPHIC


Same-Store Sales(a)

 
  Per Location
   
 
 
  % change
 
 
  YTD 6/30/01
  YTD 6/30/02
 
# of Checking Accts(b)     4,981     5,800   16 %
Consumer Lending   $ 2,972,037   $ 5,029,521   69 %
Mortgage Lending   $ 2,676,458   $ 2,864,508   7 %
Fee Income   $ 485,500   $ 568,662   17 %
FTE(c)     9.9     10.4   3 %

(a)
Averages of 1,021 Banking & Financial Services financial centers open during Q2 2001, reported as of the end of the period

(b)
As of the end of the period

(c)
Monthly average for the period

Five-Year Targets: 2000-2004


Household Market Share

         GRAPHIC

 
  12/31/99
  6/30/02
  Change
 
WA/OR   28.3 % 29.8 % 1.4 %
California   23.8   27.8   4.0  
UT/ID   10.8   12.2   1.4  
Nevada   NA   8.1   8.1  
Arizona   NA   2.1   2.1  
   
 
 
 
Western States Average   24.0 % 25.0 %    

Florida

 

22.5

%

26.3

%

3.8

%
Texas   3.2   10.3 (a) 7.2  
NY/NJ   NA   8.5 (b) 8.5  
Georgia   NA   2.0   2.0  
   
 
 
 
Other States Average   12.8 % 12.0 %    
Overall Average   21.0 % 19.0 %    

(a)
Includes households acquired from Bank United

(b)
Includes households acquired from Dime

Household Growth

         GRAPHIC


Multi-Pronged Growth Strategy


Desirable National Brand


*
In major metropolitan markets served

Desirable National Brand

Ad Awareness

         GRAPHIC


Top Service Provider

         GRAPHIC


*
In all markets served by Banking & Financial Services financial centers

Cross-sell Ratio*

         GRAPHIC


*
Product and service cross-sell for Banking & Financial Services households with a tenure of two or more years

Multi-Pronged Growth Strategy


Mass Market Appeal


Net Retail Checking Account Growth

         GRAPHIC


Product Relationship Growth Attributed to Free Checking(a)(b)

         GRAPHIC


(a)
Includes households that opened a Free Checking account in January 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, or 2002. Relationship balance includes all deposit, investment, consumer loan and mortgage loan balances held by the households at opening and at the beginning of each subsequent year.

(b)
Weighted average balances per household

Financial Center Incentive Compensation


Financial Center Incentive Compensation

+   Production credits
+   Deposit/assets under management credits
+   Fee income
+   Other income
-   Operating expenses
=   Net income
÷   FTE

=   Net income per FTE

Financial Center Incentive Compensation(a)

 
  Financial Center(b) Managers
  Assistant Financial Center(b) Managers
  Sales Positions
  Service Positions
  Total
 
Base   43 % 64 % 42 % 90 % 60 %
Incentive   57   36   58   10   40  

(a)
Actual compensation mix paid year to date 5/31/02

(b)
Dime Managers not included because base/incentive mix will not change until 2003

Multi-Pronged Growth Strategy


De Novo Expansion


Occasio in De Novo Market

Original Forecast Model vs. Actual Results

12th Month of Operation

  Original Model(a)
  Las Vegas Actual(b)
 
Checking Accts.     1,928     1,224  
Loans ($000s)   $ 3,035   $ 1,383  
Deposits ($000s)   $ 11,020   $ 9,562  
Transaction Deposit Mix     85 %   86 %
Fee Income ($000s)   $ 40   $ 58  
Operating Expenses ($000s)   $ 74   $ 79  

(a)
Averages of 16 Las Vegas Occasio Banking & Financial Services financial centers for the 12th month of operation

(b)
Averages; calendar month and year varies by location

Occasio Sites in De Novo Markets

         GRAPHIC

Location

  Current Sites
  Proposed Sites for 2002
Las Vegas, NV   21   1
Phoenix, AZ   24   7
Atlanta, GA   33   30
Denver, CO   0   20
   
 
Total   78   58

Occasio Sites in Existing Markets

         GRAPHIC

Location

  Occasio
  Occasio Retrofits
  Total
  Proposed Sites for 2002
California   26   18   44   31
Texas   22   20   42   26
Florida   14   13   27   23
Washington   15   4   19   8
Oregon   7   4   11   6
Idaho   3   0   3   3
Utah   3   0   3   1
NY/NJ   4   0   4   36
   
 
 
 
Total   94   59   153   134

Results of Same-Store Sales Comparison

Occasio Retrofits vs. Traditional are favorable

         GRAPHIC


(a)
Averages of 56 Banking & Financial Services financial centers open at least one year and retrofit in Occasio style by 12/31/01

(b)
Averages of 965 Banking & Financial Services financial centers open at least one year by 12/31/01 and have not been retrofit

Denver (Opening late 2002)

        Dramatic growth in population and households in the last decade


         PHOTO


Multi-Pronged Growth Strategy


Significant Recent Acquisitions

        Banking and Financial Services seeks to maximize value for all acquired franchises

 
  Year Acquired
  Branches Acquired
  Households* Acquired
American Savings (ASB)   1996   159   590,000
Great Western (GW)   1997   411   2,210,000
Home Savings (HSA)   1998   383   1,260,000
Bank United (BNKU)   2001   157   280,000
Dime Savings (DIME)   2002   123   609,000

*
Approximate number of households using criteria of acquired companies

ASB and GW Same-Store Sales(a)

 
  1998
  1999
  % change
 
# of Checking Accts(b)     4,109     4,721   15 %
Consumer Lending Volume   $ 1,258,947   $ 1,674,358   33  
Mortgage Lending Volume   $ 411,426   $ 1,792,338   336  
Fee Income   $ 585,018   $ 847,529   45  
FTE(c)     10.0     10.4   3  

(a)
Comparative results following acquisition and integration; average of 331 unconsolidated former ASB and GW financial centers

(b)
As of the end of the period

(c)
Monthly average for year

HSA Same-Store Sales(a)

 
  1999
  2000
  % change
 
# of Checking Accts(b)     2,728     3,273   20 %
Consumer Lending Volume   $ 2,607,191   $ 4,096,047   126  
Mortgage Lending Volume   $ 798,238   $ 1,134,766   42  
Fee Income   $ 287,472   $ 454,480   58  
FTE(c)     8.7     8.5   (2 )

(a)
Comparative results following acquisition and integration; average of 222 unconsolidated former HSA financial centers

(b)
As of the end of the period

(c)
Monthly average for year

Bank United Same-Store Sales(a)

 
  Q2'01
  Q2'02
  % change
 
# of Checking Accts(b)     1,680     2,161   29 %
Consumer Lending Volume   $ 287,807   $ 889,018   209  
Mortgage Lending Volume   $ 25,875   $ 74,030   186  
Fee Income   $ 60,744   $ 115,996   91  
FTE(c)     5.9     5.7   (4 )

(a)
Comparative results following acquisition; average of 138 unconsolidated former BNKU financial centers

(b)
As of the end of the period

(c)
Monthly average for year

Dime Integration on Track


Five-Year Targets: 2000-2004


Depositor & Other Retail Banking Fees and Securities Fees & Commissions*

         GRAPHIC


*
WMI consolidated

Segment Expense Coverage Ratio

         GRAPHIC


*
Noninterest expense excludes transition expense associated with the conversion of acquired companies

Fee Income Strategy

        Listen to consumers


Fee Income Future Plans


Five-Year Targets: 2000-2004


Consumer Loan Portfolio*

         GRAPHIC


*
Excludes WM Finance consumer loans

Consumer Loan Opportunities


Consumer Loan Accomplishments and Future Plans


Five-Year Targets: 2000-2004


Remix Deposit Base

         GRAPHIC


*
Liquid CDs were reclassified as time deposits in 2001 due to the early withdrawal penalties associated with the accounts. Prior to 2001, these deposits were included in the transaction deposit base due to the nature of the product. Including Liquid CD accounts at 6/30/02 in the transaction deposit base would change the transaction/time deposit mix to 73%/27%

Impact of Remix on Cost of Deposits

        Increased proportion of transaction balances provides a 25 bps funding cost advantage at 6/30/02

 
  6/30/02 Rates
  12/31/99 Mix/WAIR
  6/30/02 Mix/WAIR
 
Transaction Deposits   1.87 % 54 % 71 %
Time Deposits   3.32 % 46 % 29 %
Wtd. Avg. Int. Rate       2.54 %* 2.29 %*

*
6/30/02 rate, based on period end balances, are used in calculating the weighted average interest rate for both periods

Five-Year Targets: 2000-2004


Deposits

         GRAPHIC


*
Liquid CDs were reclassified as time deposits in 2001 due to the early withdrawal penalties associated with the accounts. Prior to 2001, these deposits were included in the transaction deposit base due to the nature of the product. Liquid CD products account for $2.1 billion in deposits as of 12/31/99, $2.3 billion as of 12/31/00, $6.2 billion as of 12/31/01, and $2.5 billion as of 6/30/02

Platinum Account Results


Consumer Deposit Accomplishments and Future Plans


WM Group of Funds


Summary



GRAPHIC


HOME LOANS AND INSURANCE SERVICES GROUP

Second Quarter 2002

Craig Davis
Group President


Forward-Looking Statements

        "This presentation contains forward-looking statements, which are not historical facts and pertain to future operating results. These forward-looking statements are within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These forward-looking statements include, but are not limited to, statements about our plans, objectives, expectations and intentions and other statements contained in this document that are not historical facts. When used in this presentation, the words "expects," "anticipates," "intends," "plans," "believes," "seeks," "estimates," or words of similar meaning, or future or conditional verbs, such as "will," "would," "should," "could," or "may" are generally intended to identify forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements are inherently subject to significant business, economic and competitive uncertainties and contingencies, many of which are beyond our control. In addition, these forward-looking statements are subject to assumptions with respect to future business strategies and decisions that are subject to change. Actual results may differ materially from the results discussed in these forward-looking statements for the reasons, among others, discussed under the heading "Business—Factors That May Affect Future Results" in Washington Mutual's 2001 Annual Report on Form 10-K and under the heading, "Cautionary Statements," in Washington Mutual's Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the period ended June 30, 2002, which include: changes in general business and economic conditions may significantly affect our earnings; the risk that our inability to effectively manage the volatility of our mortgage banking business could adversely affect our earnings; the risk that the impact of rising interest rates may result in an increase in our cost of interest-bearing liabilities, which could outpace the increase in the yield on interest-earning assets and lead to a reduction in the net interest margin; the risk that our inability to effectively integrate the operations and personnel of companies we have acquired could adversely affect our earnings and financial condition; the concentration of operations in California could adversely affect our operating results if the California economy or real estate market declines; competition from other financial services companies in our markets could adversely affect our ability to achieve our financial goals; changes in the regulation of financial services companies could adversely affect our business.

Business Segment Financial Information

        Business segment financial information is prepared for management information purposes and uses methodologies which do not conform to generally accepted accounting principles. These methodologies include internal allocations of the cost of funds, hedge gains or losses, loan loss provisions and certain overhead items.


At a Glance

GRAPHIC

GRAPHIC

        Our lines of business:


*
Source: Inside Mortgage Finance

Our Goal

        As America's Lending Leader...


Mortgage Industry Overview


Industry Trends


Drivers of Growth: Projected Single-Family Mortgage Debt Outstanding

 
  Annual Growth Rate
 
 
  Actual(a)
  Forecast Range(b)
 
 
  1980s
  1990s
  2000s
 
Households   1.5 % 1.4 % 1.3     -   1.4 %

Homeownership Rate

 

(0.2

)

0.5

 

0.5     -   0.6

 

Average Home Price Gains

 

7.3

 

3.6

 

5.0     -   6.5

 

 
SF Residential Investment   8.6 % 5.5 % 6.8% -   8.5 %

 

Debt-to-Value Ratio

 

2.0

 

1.6

 

1.3     -   1.7

 

 
SF Mortgage Debt Outstanding   10.6 % 7.0 % 8.1% - 10.2 %

 

(a)
Bureau of the Census, Federal Reserve Board, Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight and National Association of Realtors, as of period presented

(b)
Fannie Mae Forecast, May 2002

Servicing Market Trends

         GRAPHIC

        Source: Inside Mortgage Finance


Origination Market Trends

         GRAPHIC

        Source: Mortgage Bankers Association, Mortgage Finance Forecast, August 2002


Accelerating Consolidation

         GRAPHIC

        Source: Inside Mortgage Finance


Risk Management


Competitive Strengths


Unique Business Model

         GRAPHIC

A mortgage product for all interest rate cycles


Maximize Economies of Scale


Customer Relationship Management


Brand Awareness

         GRAPHIC


Our Business Strategy

         GRAPHIC


Strategic Objectives


Building America's Lending Leader


Servicing Market Share Growth

         GRAPHIC


*
As of 6/30/02 portfolio includes servicing from WM Finance

Source: Inside Mortgage Finance


Servicing Portfolio*

         GRAPHIC


*
As of 6/30/02 portfolio includes servicing from WM Finance

Servicing Profile(a)

         GRAPHIC


(a)
As of 6/30/02 portfolio includes servicing from WM Finance

(b)
Approximately $6.5 B of mortgage servicing rights (MSR) are associated with the $477.3 B of loans serviced with MSR

Building America's Lending Leader


Origination Market Share Growth

         GRAPHIC


(a)
WM market share (1) excludes co-issues and originations of acquired companies prior to their acquisition and (2) includes single family residential mortgage originations of WM Finance, second mortgages and home equity line of credits originated by Banking and Financial Services

(b)
Source: Inside Mortgage Finance

Loan Volume by Product Mix*

         GRAPHIC

*
WM market share (1) excludes co-issues and originations of acquired companies prior to their acquisition and (2) includes single family residential mortgage originations of WM Finance, second mortgages and home equity line of credits originated by Banking and Financial Services

Nationwide Presence
As of 6/30/02

         GRAPHIC


Loan Volume by Channel(a)

         GRAPHIC


(a)
WM market share (1) excludes co-issues and originations of acquired companies prior to their acquisition and (2) includes single family residential mortgage originations of WM Finance, second mortgages and home equity line of credits originated by Banking and Financial Services

(b)
Retail includes Home Loan centers, consumer direct, and Consumer Banking financial centers

Loan Volume by Geographic Mix*

         GRAPHIC


*
Excludes co-issues, bulk purchases and originations by acquired companies prior to their acquisition by Washington Mutual

Optis Technology Platform

        WaMu's end-to-end automated mortgage origination platform

 
  Purpose
  Status
Release 0.1   Supports Speed of Decision   Fully deployed

Optis Value

 

Web-based appraisal management and delivery system

 

Fully deployed

Release 0.2

 

Provides Reliability of Close

 

Deployment Q1 '03

Building America's Lending Leader


Revenue Stabilization

         GRAPHIC


*
Includes effects of inter-segment hedge allocation

Insurance Revenue

         GRAPHIC


Segment Income Statement

 
  YTD
6/30/02

  YTD
6/30/01

  (%)
change

 
 
  (in millions)

 
Net interest income after provision   $ 1,525   $ 887   72 %

Noninterest income*

 

 

998

 

 

608

 

64

 

Noninterest expense

 

 

1,102

 

 

517

 

113

 

Net income

 

 

873

 

 

603

 

45

 

*
Includes effects of inter-segment hedge allocation

HomeSide Lending Acquisition Announced


Summary



logo


SPECIALTY FINANCE

Second Quarter 2002

Craig Chapman
Group President


Forward-Looking Statements

        "This presentation contains forward-looking statements, which are not historical facts and pertain to future operating results. These forward-looking statements are within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These forward-looking statements include, but are not limited to, statements about our plans, objectives, expectations and intentions and other statements contained in this document that are not historical facts. When used in this presentation, the words "expects," "anticipates," "intends," "plans," "believes," "seeks," "estimates," or words of similar meaning, or future or conditional verbs, such as "will," "would," "should," "could," or "may" are generally intended to identify forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements are inherently subject to significant business, economic and competitive uncertainties and contingencies, many of which are beyond our control. In addition, these forward-looking statements are subject to assumptions with respect to future business strategies and decisions that are subject to change. Actual results may differ materially from the results discussed in these forward-looking statements for the reasons, among others, discussed under the heading "Business—Factors That May Affect Future Results" in Washington Mutual's 2001 Annual Report on Form 10-K and under the heading, "Cautionary Statements," in Washington Mutual's Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the period ended June 30, 2002, which include: changes in general business and economic conditions may significantly affect our earnings; the risk that our inability to effectively manage the volatility of our mortgage banking business could adversely affect our earnings; the risk that the impact of rising interest rates may result in an increase in our cost of interest-bearing liabilities, which could outpace the increase in the yield on interest-earning assets and lead to a reduction in the net interest margin; the risk that our inability to effectively integrate the operations and personnel of companies we have acquired could adversely affect our earnings and financial condition; the concentration of operations in California could adversely affect our operating results if the California economy or real estate market declines; competition from other financial services companies in our markets could adversely affect our ability to achieve our financial goals; changes in the regulation of financial services companies could adversely affect our business.

Business Segment Financial Information

        Business segment financial information is prepared for management information purposes and uses methodologies which do not conform to generally accepted accounting principles. These methodologies include internal allocations of the cost of funds, hedge gains or losses, loan loss provisions and certain overhead items.


Our Segment


Segment Focus*

         GRAPHIC


*
Based on loan and MBS balances of $30.6 billion as of 6/30/02

Market Position


Our Mission

        To drive higher growth, higher returns and diversify risk while accelerating Washington Mutual's evolution into the nation's leading middle-market financial services company


Overall Objectives


Goals


Segment Business Model


Multi-Family—Market Size of $1.3 trillion*

         GRAPHIC


*
As of 2000, based on valuations

Source: National Multi Housing Council study, released 2001


Multi-Family—Top 10 Originators in 2000

Rank

  Institution
  Loans
  # of Loans
  Avg. Loan
  Loans
% of Total

 
 
   
  ($ in millions)

   
  ($ in thousands)

   
 
1   Washington Mutual   $ 2,520   2,389   $ 1,055   9.4 %
2   Wachovia/ First Union     1,772   430     4,120   6.6  
3   ARCS Commercial Mortgage     1,531   263     5,820   5.7  
4   California Federal Bank     892   511     1,746   3.3  
5   Dime Bancorp     767   369     2,077   2.9  
6   GMAC Commercial Mortgage     721   137     5,265   2.7  
7   LaSalle Bank     713   1,347     529   2.7  
8   World Savings     663   903     734   2.5  
9   Bank of America     639   166     3,849   2.4  
10   American Property Financing     515   46     11,186   1.9  
    Other Reporting Originators     16,880   21,287     793   62.9  
   
 
 
 
 
 
Multi-Family Originations   $ 26,829   27,846   $ 963   100.0 %

Multi-Family Originations—Market Share

         GRAPHIC


Multi-Family—Our Advantages


Multi-Family—Top 20 Markets*

1.   New York City   $ 294
2.   San Francisco     114
3.   Los Angeles     112
4.   Boston     56
5.   Chicago     53
6.   Washington DC     47
7.   San Diego     33
8.   Orange County     30
9.   Atlanta     30
10.   Newark     29
11.   Philadelphia     28
12.   Miami     28
13.   Seattle     26
14.   Houston     22
15.   Minneapolis     20
16.   Dallas     19
17.   Detroit     18
18.   Denver     18
19.   Phoenix     14
20.   Fort Lauderdale     14

*
As of 2000, based on valuations (in billions)

Multi-Family Focus—Expand to New Markets


National Operations Center


Capital Markets Strategy


Segment Net Income

         GRAPHIC


Segment Net Interest Income

         GRAPHIC


Segment Noninterest Income

         GRAPHIC


Segment Noninterest Expense

         GRAPHIC


Multi-Family and CRE Originations

         GRAPHIC


Multi-Family Lending Performance Metrics(a)

 
  6/30/01
  6/30/02
 
 
  ($ in millions)

 
Loans & MBS Outstanding(b)   $ 15,724   $ 17,051  
Average Loan & MBS Yield     8.15 %   6.13 %
Delinquencies(c)     0.35 %   0.08 %
Nonaccruals     0.17 %   0.02 %

(a)
Excludes multifamily construction loans which are part of Other Commercial Lending

(b)
Period ending balances (net of deferred fees)

(c)
Includes all nonaccrual loans regardless of payment status

Other Commercial Lending Performance Metrics

 
  6/30/01
  6/30/02
 
 
  ($ in millions)

 
Loans & MBS Outstanding(a)   $ 9,639   $ 10,739  
Average Loan & MBS Yield     8.31 %   6.45 %
Delinquencies(b)     2.03 %   4.45 %
Nonaccruals     1.72 %   3.90 %

(a)
Period ending balances (net of deferred fees)

(b)
Includes all nonaccrual loans, regardless of payment status

Consumer Finance Profile


Consumer Finance

Performance Metrics

 
  6/30/01
  6/30/02
 
 
  ($ in millions)

 
Receivables Outstanding   $ 3,781   $ 3,935  
Average Receivables Yield     15.53 %   14.97 %
Efficiency Ratio     42.13 %   38.66 %
Delinquency 60+*     2.91 %   3.17 %

*
Three or more payments past due


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CREDIT RISK MANAGEMENT

Second Quarter 2002

Jim Vanasek
Executive Vice President
and Chief Credit Risk Officer


Forward-Looking Statements

        "This presentation contains forward-looking statements, which are not historical facts and pertain to future operating results. These forward-looking statements are within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These forward-looking statements include, but are not limited to, statements about our plans, objectives, expectations and intentions and other statements contained in this document that are not historical facts. When used in this presentation, the words "expects," "anticipates," "intends," "plans," "believes," "seeks," "estimates," or words of similar meaning, or future or conditional verbs, such as "will," "would," "should," "could," or "may" are generally intended to identify forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements are inherently subject to significant business, economic and competitive uncertainties and contingencies, many of which are beyond our control. In addition, these forward-looking statements are subject to assumptions with respect to future business strategies and decisions that are subject to change. Actual results may differ materially from the results discussed in these forward-looking statements for the reasons, among others, discussed under the heading "Business—Factors That May Affect Future Results" in Washington Mutual's 2001 Annual Report on Form 10-K and under the heading, "Cautionary Statements," in Washington Mutual's Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the period ended June 30, 2002, which include: changes in general business and economic conditions may significantly affect our earnings; the risk that our inability to effectively manage the volatility of our mortgage banking business could adversely affect our earnings; the risk that the impact of rising interest rates may result in an increase in our cost of interest-bearing liabilities, which could outpace the increase in the yield on interest-earning assets and lead to a reduction in the net interest margin; the risk that our inability to effectively integrate the operations and personnel of companies we have acquired could adversely affect our earnings and financial condition; the concentration of operations in California could adversely affect our operating results if the California economy or real estate market declines; competition from other financial services companies in our markets could adversely affect our ability to achieve our financial goals; changes in the regulation of financial services companies could adversely affect our business.

Business Segment Financial Information

        Business segment financial information is prepared for management information purposes and uses methodologies which do not conform to generally accepted accounting principles. These methodologies include internal allocations of the cost of funds, hedge gains or losses, loan loss provisions and certain overhead items.


Risk Exposure by Loan Type

         GRAPHIC


*
Specialty Mortgage Finance (SMF) includes purchased subprime loans and first mortgages originated by Washington Mutual Finance (WMF); CRE is Commercial Real Estate

Risk Exposure by Geography

         GRAPHIC


Asset Quality—SFR

 
  Portfolio(a)
(in billions)

  Delinquencies(b)/
Portfolio

 
12/31/01   $ 84.6   2.58 %
3/31/02     88.9   2.77  
6/30/02     87.3 (c) 2.35  

(a)
Excludes SMF portfolio. Also excludes loans held for sale for all periods.

(b)
Two or more payments past due including nonaccrual.

(c)
SFR portfolio is 98% permanent mortgages and 2% construction loans.

Asset Quality—SMF(a)

 
  Portfolio(b)
(in billions)

  Delinquencies(c)/
Portfolio

 
12/31/01   $ 9.8   6.51 %
3/31/02     10.5   6.56  
6/30/02     10.6   6.31  

(a)
Specialty mortgage finance.

(b)
Includes purchased subprime loan portfolios as well as first mortgages originated by Washington Mutual Finance. Excludes loans held for sale for all periods.

(c)
Two or more payments past due including nonaccrual.

Asset Quality—CRE: Multi-family

 
  Portfolio
(in billions)

  Delinquencies*/
Portfolio

 
12/31/01   $ 15.6   0.52 %
3/31/02     17.2   0.62  
6/30/02     17.6   0.44  

*
Two or more payments past due including nonaccrual

Asset Quality—Other CRE

 
  Portfolio
(in billions)

  Delinquencies*/
Portfolio

 
12/31/01   $ 4.5   7.25 %
3/31/02     6.9   5.32  
6/30/02     6.8   4.37  

*
Two or more payments past due including nonaccrual

Asset Quality—Consumer Loans(a):

Banking Subsidiaries

 
  Portfolio
(in billions)

  Delinquencies(b)/
Portfolio

 
12/31/01   $ 10.5   1.77 %
3/31/02     15.1   1.28  
6/30/02     16.7 (c) 1.11  

(a)
Includes second mortgage loans

(b)
Two or more payments past due including nonaccrual

(c)
Portfolio is 81% home equity products, 10% vehicles/cash secured, 7% manufactured housing and 2% unsecured

Asset Quality—Consumer Loans: WM Finance

 
  Portfolio
(in billions)

  Delinquencies*/
Portfolio

 
12/31/01   $ 2.6   8.11 %
3/31/02     2.6   7.83  
6/30/02     2.7   7.13  

*
Two or more payments past due including nonaccrual

Asset Quality—Commercial

 
  Portfolio
(in billions)

  Delinquencies*/
Portfolio

 
12/31/01   $ 5.4   4.39 %
3/31/02     5.2   4.98  
6/30/02     5.0   4.50  

*
Two or more payments past due including nonaccrual

SFR*—NPA % Trend

         GRAPHIC


*
Excludes SMF portfolio

SMF—NPA % Trend

         GRAPHIC


CRE: Multi-Family—NPA % Trend

         GRAPHIC


Other CRE—NPA % Trend

         GRAPHIC


Commercial Loans—NPA % Trend

         GRAPHIC


Consumer Loans*: Banking Subsidiaries—NPA % Trends

         GRAPHIC


*
Includes second mortgages

Consumer Loans: WM Finance—NPA % Trend

         GRAPHIC


Nonperforming Assets

 
  12/31/01
  3/31/02
  6/30/02
 
  (in millions)

Nonaccrual Loans   $ 2,030   $ 2,391   $ 2,232
+ Foreclosed Assets     228     267     274
   
 
 
= Nonperforming Assets   $ 2,258   $ 2,658   $ 2,506

Foreclosed Assets

         GRAPHIC


Allowance for Loan and Lease Losses*

 
  (in millions)

Allocated   $ 1,154
Unallocated     511
   
Total reserves   $ 1,665

*
As of 6/30/02

Allowance for Loan and Lease Losses—3 Year Trend

         GRAPHIC


Net Charge Offs and Allowance for Loan and Lease Losses

 
  WM 6/30/02
  Thrift Peers(a) 3/31/02
  Bank Peers(a) 3/31/02
 
Net Charge Offs(b)/Average Loans(c)   0.31 % 0.32 % 1.39 %
ALLL/Total Loans(c)   1.14   0.89   2.07  

(a)
Most recent data available; thrift peer group consists of savings institutions with assets >$5 billion, bank peer group consists of commercial banks with assets >$10 billion. Source: The FDIC Quarterly Banking Profile

(b)
Annualized net charge offs

(c)
Represents loans held in portfolio

Allowance for Loan and Lease Losses

 
  ALLL
  Provision
  Net Charge offs
 
  (in millions)

Q2 2001   $ 1,170   $ 92   $ 75
Q3 2001     1,295     200     75
Q4 2001     1,404     200     97
Q1 2002     1,621     175     99
Q2 2002     1,665     160     116

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MARKET RISK MANAGEMENT

Second Quarter 2002

Bill Longbrake
Vice Chair, Enterprise Risk Management and
Chief Financial Officer


Forward-Looking Statements

        "This presentation contains forward-looking statements, which are not historical facts and pertain to future operating results. These forward-looking statements are within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These forward-looking statements include, but are not limited to, statements about our plans, objectives, expectations and intentions and other statements contained in this document that are not historical facts. When used in this presentation, the words "expects," "anticipates," "intends," "plans," "believes," "seeks," "estimates," or words of similar meaning, or future or conditional verbs, such as "will," "would," "should," "could," or "may" are generally intended to identify forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements are inherently subject to significant business, economic and competitive uncertainties and contingencies, many of which are beyond our control. In addition, these forward-looking statements are subject to assumptions with respect to future business strategies and decisions that are subject to change. Actual results may differ materially from the results discussed in these forward-looking statements for the reasons, among others, discussed under the heading "Business—Factors That May Affect Future Results" in Washington Mutual's 2001 Annual Report on Form 10-K and under the heading, "Cautionary Statements," in Washington Mutual's Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the period ended June 30, 2002, which include: changes in general business and economic conditions may significantly affect our earnings; the risk that our inability to effectively manage the volatility of our mortgage banking business could adversely affect our earnings; the risk that the impact of rising interest rates may result in an increase in our cost of interest-bearing liabilities, which could outpace the increase in the yield on interest-earning assets and lead to a reduction in the net interest margin; the risk that our inability to effectively integrate the operations and personnel of companies we have acquired could adversely affect our earnings and financial condition; the concentration of operations in California could adversely affect our operating results if the California economy or real estate market declines; competition from other financial services companies in our markets could adversely affect our ability to achieve our financial goals; changes in the regulation of financial services companies could adversely affect our business.

Business Segment Financial Information

        Business segment financial information is prepared for management information purposes and uses methodologies which do not conform to generally accepted accounting principles. These methodologies include internal allocations of the cost of funds, hedge gains or losses, loan loss provisions and certain overhead items.


Management Objective


Interest Rate Impacts


Impact of Rate Movements

         GRAPHIC


Interest Rate Risk Drivers—Net Interest Income


Net Interest Margin Throughout the Cycle

         GRAPHIC


Interest Rate Risk Drivers—Balance Sheet Size


Balance Sheet Grows as Rates Rise


Historical Rising Rate Scenario

  Q3 1999
  Q4 1999
 
Net Interest Margin     2.64 %   2.41 %
Ending Assets   $ 181 B $ 187 B

Balance Sheet Contracts as Rates Fall


Historical Falling Rate Scenario

  Q2 2001
  Q3 2001
 
Net Interest Margin     3.21 %   3.53 %
Ending Assets   $ 229 B $ 224 B

Strategies to Mitigate NII Sensitivity


Transactions to Mitigate NII Sensitivity to Rising Rates

2001 Transactions

2002 Transactions through June 30th

Purchased $22.1 billion in pay fixed rate swaps

Executed $5.8 billion in fixed rate financing with a maturity of one year or more

Net Income Sensitivity Results


Net Income and Net Interest Income Sensitivity

 
  Down 100 bps
  Up 200 bps
 
Net Income change for the one-year period beginning:          
  July 1, 2002   (0.76 )% 0.21 %
  January 1, 2002   2.19   (2.76 )

Net Interest Income change for the one-year period beginning:

 

 

 

 

 
  July 1, 2002   (0.44 )% (2.30 )%
  January 1, 2002   1.47   (5.18 )

Interest Rate Risk Drivers—Mortgage Banking


Changes in Mortgage Servicing Rights

         GRAPHIC


(a)
Includes $12 million of commercial real estate MSRs

(b)
$711 million of total represents sale of excess servicing in Q2 '02

Strategies to Mitigate MSR Fair Value Sensitivity


Strategies to Mitigate MSR Fair Value Sensitivity


Transactions to Mitigate MSR Sensitivity

        2002 Transactions as of June 30th


SFR Mortgage Banking Income (Expense) Adjusted for Financial Hedging Transactions

 
  Q2 2002
  Q1 2002
 
Loan servicing fees   $ 598   $ 555  
Amortization of MSR     (504 )   (479 )
MSR recovery (impairment)     (1,107 )   45  
Other, net     (78 )   (62 )
Loan related income     120     81  
Gain from mortgage loans     220     251  
Gain from sale of originated MBS     18     2  
   
 
 
Total SFR mortgage banking income (expense)     (733 )   393  

Gain from AFS securities

 

 

137

 

 

(298

)
Gain on extinguishment of securities sold under agreements to repurchase     121     74  
Revaluation gain (loss) from derivatives     857     (15 )

Total mortgage banking fees, net of financial hedges

 

$

382

 

$

154

 

Interest Rate Risk Summary




SIGNATURE

        Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereto duly authorized.

    WASHINGTON MUTUAL, INC.

 

 

By:

/s/  
WILLIAM W. EHRLICH      
William W. Ehrlich
Executive Vice President,
Corporate Relations

        Date: September 10, 2002





QuickLinks

OVERVIEW Second Quarter 2002
BANKING AND FINANCIAL SERVICES GROUP Second Quarter 2002
HOME LOANS AND INSURANCE SERVICES GROUP Second Quarter 2002
SPECIALTY FINANCE Second Quarter 2002
CREDIT RISK MANAGEMENT Second Quarter 2002
MARKET RISK MANAGEMENT Second Quarter 2002
SIGNATURE