Economic Calendar

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

U.S. Stocks Little Changed After Apple Earnings

By Rita Nazareth - Oct 19, 2011 11:49 PM GMT+0700
Enlarge image U.S. Stock-Index Futures Pare Gains

A trader works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange in New York. Photographer: Scott Eells/Bloomberg

Oct. 19 (Bloomberg) -- Alvin Wilkinson, founder and principal portfolio manager at Surveyor Management, discusses market volatility and investment strategy. Wilkinson speaks on Bloomberg Television's "InBusiness With Margaret Brennan." (Source: Bloomberg)

Oct. 19 (Bloomberg) -- David Rosenberg, chief economist and strategist at Gluskin Sheff & Associates Inc., talks about the possibility of a U.S. recession and the European debt crisis. Rosenberg speaks with Betty Liu on Bloomberg Television's "In the Loop." (Source: Bloomberg)


U.S. stocks were little changed, after yesterday’s rally, as a decline in Apple Inc. (AAPL) shares overshadowed better-than-estimated housing data.

Apple, the world’s largest technology company, slumped 3.8 percent after profit missed estimates for the first time in at least six years. Citigroup Inc. (C) rose 1.8 percent as it agreed to pay $285 million in a Securities and Exchange Commission settlement. Morgan Stanley, owner of the world’s largest brokerage, gained 1.1 percent as earnings beat forecasts.

The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index fell less than 0.1 percent to 1,224.86 at 12:49 p.m. New York time. The benchmark gauge for American equities rose 2 percent yesterday to the highest level since August. The Dow Jones Industrial Average advanced 38.49 points, or 0.3 percent, to 11,615.54 today.

“There’s just no conviction that seems to survive,” John Carey, a Boston-based money manager at Pioneer Investments, said in a telephone interview. The firm oversees about $250 billion. “Apple’s results have disappointed some people. People are wondering where the economy is going, what earnings will look like and whether Europe will work its way through this crisis.”

The S&P 500 rose from the threshold of a bear market early this month amid optimism over corporate earnings and steps by European leaders to support banks. The rebound brought the gauge close to the top of a price range between 1,074.77 and 1,230.71, where it’s traded for more than two months. The S&P 500 briefly climbed above that range yesterday, reaching 1,233.10.

Earnings Season

Profit for S&P 500 companies will climb 17 percent in the third quarter and rise 18 percent to a record $99.76 for all of 2011, according to analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg yesterday. About three quarters of the S&P 500 companies which reported results since Oct. 11 beat analysts’ estimates.

U.S. stock futures pared losses before the start of regular trading as a Commerce Department report showed that builders began work on more U.S. homes than forecast in September. The cost of living in the U.S. rose in September at the slowest pace in three months, signaling inflation may moderate as Federal Reserve officials have predicted.

“The U.S. housing data is helpful,” Peter Jankovskis, who helps manage about $2.4 billion at Oakbrook Investments in Lisle, Illinois, said in a telephone interview. “That is one big hurdle that the economy needs to overcome. Apple’s figures are not too big of a shock and other names surprised on the upside. It’s shaping up to be a very good earnings season.”

‘Appropriately Easy’

James Bullard, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, said current central bank policy is “appropriately easy” and another recession is unlikely.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel is in “intense” talks with all partners on a debt-crisis solution for a European Union summit on Oct. 23, deputy government spokesman Georg Streiter said. German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble hasn’t specified how much additional firepower the European bailout fund may have, ministry spokesman Martin Kotthaus told reporters today in Berlin.

“Time is running out for Europe,” Paul Zemsky, the New York-based head of asset allocation for ING Investment Management, said. His firm oversees $550 billion. “The longer it waits to fix itself the more uncertainty there is. In the U.S., earnings are not bad, but we’re seeing a bit of erosion in positive surprises. We set the top of the range on the S&P 500. It would take a lot of good news to get through 1,230.”

Citigroup Gains

Citigroup gained 1.8 percent to $30.43. Citigroup agreed to pay $285 million to settle claims by the SEC that the lender misled investors about a $1 billion collateralized debt obligation tied to the U.S. housing market in which Citigroup bet against investors.

Some financial companies rose on earnings reports. Morgan Stanley (MS) increased 1.1 percent to $16.81. The owner of the largest brokerage reported profit that beat analysts’ estimates on a $3.4 billion accounting gain and higher revenue from stock trading.

Travelers Cos. posted the biggest gain in the Dow, rising 6 percent to $54.54, after the insurer reported an increase in third-quarter policy sales and said it was raising rates for clients.

Intel Corp. (INTC) added 4.1 percent to $24.36. The world’s biggest chipmaker forecast fourth-quarter sales that exceeded some analysts’ estimates, citing strong demand for laptop computers in emerging markets.

Yahoo! Inc. gained 4.5 percent to $16.17. Demand for advertising helped third-quarter profit at the Web portal exceed analysts’ estimates.

Apple tumbled 3.8 percent to $406.24. The company sold 17.07 million iPhones, less than the 20 million projected by analysts surveyed by Bloomberg, as consumers held out for the iPhone 4S, released after the close of the period that ended Sept. 24.

To contact the reporter on this story: Rita Nazareth in New York at rnazareth@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Nick Baker at nbaker7@bloomberg.net



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Morgan Stanley Beats Profit Estimates

By Michael J. Moore - Oct 19, 2011 11:11 PM GMT+0700

Oct. 19 (Bloomberg) -- Charles Peabody, an analyst at Portales Partners LLC, talks about Morgan Stanley's third-quarter earnings and outlook. Morgan Stanley said net income was $2.2 billion, or $1.15 a share, compared with $131 million, or a loss of 7 cents a share after preferred dividends, a year earlier. Peabody speaks with Erik Schatzker and Scarlet Fu on Bloomberg Television's "InsideTrack." (Source: Bloomberg)

Morgan Stanley Chief Executive Officer James Gorman. Photographer: Jin Lee/Bloomberg


Morgan Stanley (MS) rose as much as 6.7 percent in New York trading after the firm posted third-quarter profit that beat analysts’ estimates on an accounting gain and higher stock-trading revenue.

Net income was $2.2 billion, or $1.15 a share, compared with $131 million, or a loss of 7 cents a share after preferred dividends, a year earlier, the New York-based company said today in a statement. Earnings beat the 30-cent average estimate of 25 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg. The shares climbed for a fourth day, the longest such streak since February.

Morgan Stanley’s 20 percent gain in year-over-year equities-trading revenue was the biggest among the largest U.S. banks, excluding the accounting benefit. Fixed-income fell 17 percent. Chief Executive Officer James Gorman, 53, is trying to stem a 39 percent decline in the firm’s shares this year through yesterday that left the stock trading at a level last seen during the financial crisis in January 2009.

“We saw more activity on the cash equities side, particularly in electronic trading, and the derivatives business continued to do well,” Chief Financial Officer Ruth Porat said in an interview after earnings were released. “The more challenging part of the market was in the fixed-income market.”

Excluding the accounting gain, known as debt valuation adjustments, or DVA, profit was 3 cents a share, compared with estimates of a 9-cent loss from Citigroup Inc. analyst Keith Horowitz and a 23-cent loss from Barclays Capital’s Roger Freeman.

Share Performance

Shares of the company rose 40 cents, or 2.4 percent, to $17.03 at 11:50 a.m. in New York, the fifth-biggest increase in the 81-company Standard & Poor’s 500 Financials Index. They surged 9.1 percent yesterday.

The DVA gain stems from declines in the value of the company’s debt, under the theory that a profit would be realized if the debt were repurchased at a discount. Citigroup and JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM) each booked more than $1.5 billion of such gains as bank credit spreads widened in the quarter.

Revenue at Morgan Stanley climbed 46 percent to $9.89 billion from $6.78 billion a year earlier. Book value per share rose to $31.29 from $30.17 at the end of June. The firm’s return on equity from continuing operations, a measure of how well it reinvests earnings, was 14.5 percent.

“Morgan Stanley effectively navigated turbulent markets while consolidating our market share gains with institutional clients,” Gorman said in the statement.

Fixed Income

Third-quarter revenue from fixed-income sales and trading, which is run by Ken deRegt along with commodity trading co-heads Colin Bryce and Simon Greenshields, was $3.88 billion. Excluding DVA, fixed-income revenue was about $1.1 billion, down from $1.9 billion in the second quarter and $1.31 billion in the third quarter of 2010. The figure compared with $2.8 billion at JPMorgan, $2.27 billion at Citigroup and $1.43 billion at Goldman Sachs Group Inc.

Interest-rates trading revenue increased from the second quarter, and the firm saw share gains in foreign-exchange trading, Porat said on a conference call with analysts. Credit trading suffered from “illiquidity” in the corporate credit and mortgage markets, she said.

Losses from hedges tied to monoline insurers reduced fixed- income trading revenue by $284 million, and the bank booked $400 million on leveraged loan writedowns, Porat said.

In equities trading, headed by Ted Pick, Morgan Stanley’s third-quarter revenue was $1.96 billion. Excluding DVA, revenue fell 26 percent from the second quarter to $1.34 billion. That compared with $2.18 billion at Goldman Sachs and $289 million at Citigroup.

Investment Banking

Morgan Stanley generated $864 million in third-quarter revenue from investment banking, which is overseen by Paul J. Taubman. That figure, down 14 percent from a year earlier, included $413 million from financial advisory, $239 million from equity underwriting and $212 million from debt underwriting.

“Core trading and investment-banking revenue held up better than our muted estimates while expense control was good,” Ed Najarian, an analyst at International Strategy & Investment Group Inc., said today in a note to clients.

Global wealth management, overseen by Greg Fleming, posted pretax income of $362 million, up from $281 million in the third quarter of 2010. The division’s pretax profit margin rose to 11 percent from 10 percent in the first half. Gorman has said the unit should eventually post a pretax profit margin of more than 20 percent.

Asset management reported a pretax loss of $117 million, compared with profit of $279 million in the previous year’s period.

Compensation and Benefits

Compensation and benefits were unchanged from the year- earlier quarter at $3.68 billion, or 37 percent of the firm’s overall revenue. The ratio was lower than in the third quarter of 2010, when the bank set aside 54 percent of revenue.

Morgan Stanley increased its forecast for annual savings from an initiative to trim expenses to $1.4 billion, from $1 billion when the three-year project was announced in May.

Goldman Sachs Group Inc. yesterday reported its second unprofitable quarter in 12 years as a public company as the firm lost money on investments and revenue declined from trading, asset management and securities underwriting. JPMorgan Chase fell 4.8 percent on Oct. 13 as it reported trading revenue dropped 28 percent from the second quarter, excluding DVA. Both companies are based in New York.

S&P Downgrade

Slowing economic growth, Standard & Poor’s decision to downgrade the U.S. government’s credit rating and heightened worries that European sovereign debt issues could spread to its banks caused market declines and increased volatility in the quarter.

Porat said at a Barclays Capital conference last month that the fixed-income trading environment in the third quarter was worse than in 2010’s fourth quarter, when the five biggest U.S. investment banks posted their lowest trading revenue since the financial crisis.

The market turbulence affected the firm’s own shares, which fell 41 percent in the third quarter. The stock dropped further in the first week of October to $11.58, the lowest since December 2008.

The volatility prompted Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group Inc., Morgan Stanley’s largest common shareholder, to release a statement on Oct. 3 saying it’s “firmly committed” to its strategic alliance with Morgan Stanley. Gorman sent a memo to employees the same day, encouraging them to remain focused on their jobs and clients instead of responding to “the rumor of the day.”

‘Fragile Markets’

“There has been an enormous amount of confusion and misinformation about Morgan Stanley and others in our peer group,” he wrote in the memo, which was obtained by Bloomberg News. “In fragile markets, where fear triumphs over common sense, these things are bound to happen.”

The bank repurchased about $2 billion of its own bonds as prices fell, Porat said. The gain on the buybacks was less than $100 million, she said.

Morgan Stanley updated figures for risks linked to Europe in a presentation on its website today, saying the five countries at the center of Europe’s debt crisis totaled $2.11 billion in exposure including hedges against losses. The risks linked to France were negative $286 million.

To contact the reporter on this story: Michael J. Moore in New York at mmoore55@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editor responsible for this story: David Scheer at dscheer@bloomberg.net


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Housing Starts in U.S. Rise 15%, Beat Forecast

By Bob Willis and Alex Kowalski - Oct 19, 2011 10:24 PM GMT+0700

Builders began work on more U.S. homes than forecast in September and consumer prices climbed at the slowest pace in three months, supporting Federal Reserve forecasts for a pickup in growth and a moderation in inflation.

Housing starts jumped 15 percent to a 658,000 annual rate, the most since April 2010, the Commerce Department reported today in Washington. Data from the Labor Department showed the cost of living climbed 0.3 percent from August, in line with the median projection of economists surveyed by Bloomberg News.

The increase in building was led by a surge in construction of apartments and other multifamily dwellings that may continue to support the industry as the housing slump turns more Americans into renters. Less inflation gives the central bank the flexibility to take additional steps should the world’s largest economy stumble.

“The housing numbers are getting better,” said Brian Jones, a senior U.S. economist at Societe Generale in New York, whose estimate for starts was the highest in the Bloomberg survey. Policy makers “have to take some heart that the inflation numbers have come off. It leaves them more leeway to do what they have to do to support economic activity.”

Stocks were little changed as a rally in financial shares and the gain in construction offset a drop in Apple Inc. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index fell 0.1 percent to 1,223.87 at 11:21 a.m. in New York. The S&P Supercomposite Homebuilding Index increased 0.9 percent.

The median forecast for housing starts in a Bloomberg survey called for a 590,000 pace. Estimates of 75 economists ranged from 560,000 to 643,000.

More Apartments

Work on multifamily homes jumped 51.3 percent in September from the prior month to an annual rate of 233,000, the most since October 2008. New construction of single-family houses increased 1.7 percent to a 425,000 rate.

“People focus on the single-family portion of the market, but the problems in single-family activity represent a boon to the multifamily area,” said Jones.

The vacancy rate for apartments dropped in the third quarter to 5.6 percent, the lowest since 2006, according to an Oct. 6 report from Reis Inc. Effective rents, or what tenants pay after landlord giveaways are included, rose on a year-over- year basis in 81 out of the 82 metropolitan areas tracked by the New York-based property-research company.

Mortgage financing for multifamily housing of five or more units rose 31 percent to $68.8 billion in 2010 from a year earlier, a separate report today from the Mortgage Bankers Association showed.

Broad-Based Gain

Total starts climbed in all four regions, led by an 18.1 percent rise in the West and a 15.7 percent increase in the South, according to the Commerce Department.

A decrease in building permits, a proxy for future construction, took some of the shine off the housing numbers. The Commerce Department’s report showed applications dropped 5 percent to a 594,000 annual rate in September, a five-month low.

The report on consumer prices said costs excluding food and fuel, the so-called core measure, rose 0.1 percent, less than forecast and the smallest gain since March. The gauge climbed 2 percent from September 2010, the same as in the 12 months ended August.

Most Fed officials at the Sept. 20-21 meeting anticipated core and headline inflation was “likely to settle, over coming quarters, at or below the levels they see as most consistent with their dual mandate,” according to minutes released on Oct. 12. Policy makers aim for long-run core inflation of about 1.7 percent to 2 percent.

Clothing, Rents

The biggest drop in clothing prices in 13 years, lower costs for used cars and trucks and the smallest increase in rents in four months led to the moderation in core prices last month, the report showd. The slowdown in rents may not persist given the drop in apartment vacancies.

Companies like clothing retailer Gap Inc. (GPS) and supermarket chain Safeway Inc. (SWY) have said they are limited in how much they can raise prices to recoup raw materials costs as weak job and income gains squeeze consumers.

After adjusting for inflation, hourly wages dropped 0.1 percent in September on average, and were down 1.9 percent over the past 12 months, according to the Labor Department’s figures.

“Inflation is playing out according to the Fed’s script,” said Ryan Sweet, a senior economist at Moody’s Analytics Inc. in West Chester, Pennsylvania. “The economy is sluggish and businesses are very hesitant to pass on higher input costs to consumers. Consumers are very price sensitive right now.”

‘Tough Economy’

A jump in cotton expenses hurt Gap’s Old Navy stores that sell more clothing made of the material, yet it “chose not to raise prices commensurate with cost given the impact of the tough economy on our customers,” Chief Financial Officer Sabrina Simmons said on a conference call with analysts on Oct. 13.

Steven Burd, chairman and chief executive officer of Safeway, said inflation was “predominantly in perishable categories” and fuel, while there were “a couple of categories that actually had deflation,” or a persistent drop in prices. Shoppers at the Pleasanton, California-based company remain “very conscious” of the price tag, he said.

To contact the reporters on this story: Bob Willis in Washington at bwillis@bloomberg.net: Alex Kowalski at akowalski13@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Christopher Wellisz at cwellisz@bloomberg.net




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Second Miracle in 15 Years Needed for U.S. as Productivity Wanes

By Alexander Kowalski and Ilan Kolet - Oct 19, 2011 6:02 AM GMT+0700

The world’s largest economy may need its second miracle in 15 years as waning productivity growth sets the stage for slower income gains, fewer job opportunities and larger federal deficits in the U.S.

Worker output per hour has fallen for two consecutive quarters, the first back-to-back decline since 2008, and Labor Department revisions show the measure remains below levels typical for this point in a recovery. Going forward, business efficiency will advance at only about half the 3.4 percent pace during the so-called productivity miracle of 1997 to 2003, according to economists at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.

“This is not good news amid already dim prospects,” said James Kahn, chair of the economics department at New York’s Yeshiva University and a former central-bank economist who wrote about the deceleration on the New York Fed’s Liberty Street Economics blog. “An underlying trend of slow productivity growth has emerged, which means our baseline assumptions about economic growth may be a little too optimistic.”

A rise in worker efficiency of 1.5 percent a year would mean U.S. gross domestic product of $17 trillion by 2016 before accounting for inflation, said Kahn, who worked at the New York Fed from 1997 to 2008.

His estimate is $2.3 trillion less than the Congressional Budget Office forecast of $19.3 trillion. The difference is more than five times the $420 billion in output the U.S. lost during the 18-month recession that ended in June 2009, Bloomberg News calculations show. GDP was $15 trillion in the second quarter.

Contain Costs

As productivity growth fades, it will be harder for companies to contain costs, according to Julia Coronado, chief North America economist at BNP Paribas in New York. Slower growth also may stall a return to rising wages that boost consumer spending, low inflation that makes hiring new workers less expensive and corporate profits that propel stock values, she added.

Given the weakness, “I would not suggest drastically cutting fiscal policy in the near term,” said Rudy Narvas, a senior economist at Societe Generale in New York. If the government fails to extend the payroll-tax cuts and unemployment benefits that expire in December, it “could easily push the U.S. into recession next year.” A “credible” deficit- reduction plan also “needs to be in place for when economic growth stabilizes,” he said.

Diminishing Demand

To offset rising expenses and diminishing demand while productivity is low, U.S. multinationals will need to seek more business in emerging markets such as China and Brazil, where they can find “low-cost production without necessarily sacrificing quality,” said Mark Luschini, chief investment strategist at Philadelphia-based Janney Montgomery Scott LLC, which manages $54 billion.

He recommends consumer-staple and industrial companies including Procter & Gamble Co. (PG), 3M Co. (MMM) and Honeywell International Inc. (HON), which have growing shares of income from emerging economies where per-capita wealth and consumer spending are rising.

The deceleration in U.S. business efficiency contrasts with the booming period between 1997 and 2003, when investment in technology and a more educated workforce combined to create what economists and investors from Nobel laureate Paul Krugman of Princeton University to Pacific Investment Management Co.’s Bill Gross referred to as America’s “productivity miracle.”

Former Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan recognized early on that the acceleration could contain inflation, even as the economy gained strength and unemployment stayed low.

‘Unusual Era’

“The probability that we are in a very unusual era is rising,” which “argues that prices are in check for a while,” he said in the May 1997 meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee, according to the minutes. The Fed kept its benchmark federal funds rate between 4.75 percent and 5.5 percent from 1997 through 1999, while GDP increased an average 4.6 percent a year.

Ben S. Bernanke considered the gains “almost certainly the most important economic development in the United States in the past decade,” he said in a 2005 speech he gave as a Fed governor about a year before becoming chairman of the central bank. Surges in both consumer and investment spending followed the pickup, while employment rose and inflation remained “fairly stable” as advancing business efficiency held labor costs down, Bernanke said. Real disposable income rose by an average of nearly 5.6 percent annually, Commerce Department data show.

Budget Control

The expansion in the 1990s made it “an awful lot easier to get the budget under control,” Michael Hanson, a senior U.S. economist at Bank of America Merrill Lynch in New York, said in a telephone interview. The growth generated more revenue, and the annual budget deficit of $221 billion in 1990 became a surplus of $236 billion by 2000.

These benefits are scarce now, as the revised Labor Department figures underscore a loss of momentum. Worker output per hour rose at a 2 percent annualized pace between the fourth quarter of 2007, when the recession began, and the first three months of 2011. The original estimate was 2.7 percent. Productivity fell 0.6 percent and 0.7 percent in the first and second quarters of 2011.

This negative growth is another demonstration that the boom in the 1990s and a 2009-to-2010 burst of productivity growth “were more temporary than the start of a marvelous new age of invention,” Robert Gordon, a professor at Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois, said in an e-mail. Gordon is a member of the National Bureau of Economic Research committee that determines the start and end dates for economic declines.

Rising Probability

Following the revisions, the probability that the U.S. is in a period of low productivity growth has increased to 90 percent from 40 percent, according to the research by Yeshiva University’s Kahn, which was co-written by Robert Rich, an economist at the New York Fed.

The model they used, which also takes into account labor compensation and consumer spending, shows growth in employee output probably will remain under 2 percent for the next five years. The slowdown indicates that estimates underlying the severity of the fiscal problem may “turn out to be overly optimistic,” said Harvard University professor Dale Jorgenson.

The CBO anticipates potential worker output per hour will advance an average of 2 percent a year until 2016 and then 2.2 percent annually until 2021. Forecasters combine projections for productivity and labor-force growth to determine the extent to which the economy can expand.

Aging Workforce

“It’s pretty clear at this stage that we are running under” forecasts and “are likely to continue to do so,” Greenspan said Sept. 21 in a discussion hosted by the New America Foundation in Washington. Because of the aging workforce and lower productivity, the congressional supercommittee charged with trimming the budget deficit by about $1.5 trillion in 10 years should cut as much as $6 trillion, he said.

“The economy can’t shoulder too heavy a burden, so you have to design policies very carefully that will produce the maximum benefit and help create or support industries that will be the growth engines of the future,” said BNP Paribas’s Coronado, who is a former Fed economist.

Output per employee hour will continue to lag behind until companies start spending more on technology and ideas that boost production without requiring more input, said Michael Mandel, chief economic strategist at the Progressive Policy Institute in Washington.

Business Investment

While business investment on equipment and software has increased by an average annual pace of 13 percent each quarter since the recession ended, Mandel calculates it’s 19 percent below where it should be, based on the 10 year average pre- recession trend.

That’s partly because of economic uncertainty, he said in a telephone interview. After growing by 3 percent in 2010, gross domestic product expanded at an average of less than 1 percent in January-June and is projected to rise 1.7 percent for the full year and 2 percent in 2012, based on the median estimates of economists surveyed by Bloomberg News.

There are signs the U.S. is gaining strength: Private payrolls climbed 137,000 in September, and retail sales rose 1.1 percent, exceeding forecasts. U.S. companies have money to spend on boosting productivity if the outlook continues to improve. The amount of cash and cash equivalents on hand at businesses in the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index has increased by nearly 60 percent in the past four years and now exceeds $1.1 trillion, Bloomberg data show.

“We’ve got to focus on investment in physical capital, investment in human capital and investment in knowledge capital,” Mandel said. “We’ve got to get productivity up.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Alexander Kowalski in Washington at akowalski13@bloomberg.net; Ilan Kolet in Ottawa at ikolet@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Chris Wellisz at cwellisz@bloomberg.net




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U.S. Banks See Rising Investor-Refund Demands

By James Sterngold and Andrew Frye - Oct 19, 2011 7:00 PM GMT+0700

Bank of America Corp. (BAC) and JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM) reported more demands from investors to repurchase faulty mortgages made after 2008, when the banks said they upgraded their standards to curb defaults.

Claims from investors for loans originated in 2009 or later more than tripled to $153 million from a year earlier for New York-based JPMorgan, the biggest U.S. bank by assets, and almost tripled to $164 million for Bank of America, according to their third-quarter reports. The firms also said claims increased for loans made in 2005, before the housing bubble peaked.

The demands may signal that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the government-back mortgage finance companies, are becoming more aggressive in their quest for refunds as bad home loans spread to more recent years. Regulators have blamed record defaults and foreclosures on lax underwriting from 2004 through most of 2008. Lenders have said they’ve tightened standards since then.

“This is really surprising,” said Chris Gamaitoni, a mortgage and banking analyst at Compass Point Research and Trading LLC, adding that banks have been telling investors that delinquencies weren’t as bad for loans originated after the bubble years. “Maybe the banks didn’t really tighten until 2010,” Gamaitoni said.

The five largest mortgage lenders have absorbed more than $66 billion of costs tied to repurchases, litigation, foreclosure problems and other errors on faulty mortgages since 2007. Investors who buy the loans are entitled to ask for refunds or compensation if they find missing or inaccurate data on home values or the borrower’s income.

Biggest Claims

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have been among the biggest claimants, while Charlotte, North Carolina-based Bank of America has suffered the most damage, committing about $40 billion for refunds, litigation and foreclosures, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Bank of America reported repurchase demands for post-2008 loans jumped to $164 million in the third quarter from $158 million in the second and $56 million a year earlier. Repurchase demands on its 2005 loans declined from $957 million in the fourth quarter of last year to $431 million in the second quarter, then rose to $668 million in the third quarter.

“Some of this is simply driven by the ‘seasoning’ of claim volume as time passes, for the post-2008 volumes, and not an indication of underwriting,” said Jerry Dubrowski, a Bank of America spokesman. “Keep in mind the numbers are still at relatively low levels and are not necessarily going to result in a repurchase.”

BofA’s Reaction

In its 2010 annual financial report, Bank of America said changes made in operations and underwriting “reduced our exposure after 2008.”

Repurchase requests and resolutions involving Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have “become increasingly inconsistent with our interpretation of our contractual obligations,” Bank of America said yesterday in a slide presentation accompanying its third- quarter earnings report.

Chief Financial Officer Bruce Thompson told reporters on a conference call the bank has seen “some stuff come over the wall that’s older than what we historically have seen.”

JPMorgan said it received demands in the third quarter for $153 million of faulty mortgages made after 2008, up from $89 million in the second quarter and $46 million in the third quarter of last year. For the 2005 vintage, repurchase demands rose to $200 million in the third quarter from $67 million a year earlier.

Credit Performance

The bank’s annual report said that demands against loans issued before 2005 and after 2008 hadn’t been significant due to “the comparatively favorable credit performance of these vintages and to the enhanced underwriting and loan-qualification standards implemented progressively during 2007 and 2008.” Thomas Kelly, a JPMorgan spokesman, declined to comment.

Wells Fargo & Co. (WFC), the nation’s biggest home lender, didn’t disclose year-by-year data. The San Francisco-based company said in its third-quarter report that repurchase demands on loans made from 2006 through 2008 rose due to requests from Fannie Mae and that “newer vintage demands continued to emerge.”

Ancel Martinez, a Wells Fargo spokesman, declined to comment on whether the statement signals an increase in demands.

The housing-finance companies have increased repurchase demands on loans that are still current as well as those in default, said Guy Cecala, publisher of Inside Mortgage Finance, a trade publication.

Taxpayer Interest

“That is very, very unusual,” Cecala said. “My understanding is that the biggest reason for the demands on the performing loans is problems with the appraisals.”

Government-run housing-finance companies, which were bailed out and seized during the financial crisis, have said they’re acting to protect taxpayers.

Freddie Mac’s focus on loan quality is more important than ever since we are in conservatorship, and taxpayers shouldn’t have to pay for losses related to the sale of bad loans to Freddie Mac,” said Douglas Duvall, a spokesman for the McLean, Virginia-based firm.

Fannie Mae defended its practice of seeking the repurchase of performing loans as well as those in default.

“All lenders agree to sell us loans that meet our requirements,” Amy Bonitatibus, a spokeswoman for Washington- based Fannie Mae, said in an e-mailed statement. “When a lender fails to comply with this obligation, whether a loan is performing or not, we will pursue repurchase or other options.”

More Rigorous Reviews

Last month the inspector general for the Federal Housing Finance Agency, the regulator of and conservator for Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, criticized Freddie Mac for agreeing to a settlement of repurchase claims earlier this year with Bank of America without having thoroughly sampled older mortgages for faults. The inspector general, Steve Linick, encouraged the housing companies to conduct more rigorous reviews and increase recoveries for taxpayers.

“The level of fear around the lenders I talk to about getting these loans right is just unbelievable,” said Christine Clifford, vice president of Access Mortgage Research & Consulting Inc. in Columbia, Maryland. “There were so many mistakes made that we’re swinging from the extreme of not dotting any I’s or crossing any T’s to having eight people check every item.”

To contact the reporters on this story: James Sterngold in New York at jsterngold2@bloomberg.net; Andrew Frye in New York at afrye@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editor responsible for this story: David Scheer at dscheer@bloomberg.net




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Google Turns to Face Detection With Samsung to Take On Apple Speech Parser

By Mark Lee - Oct 19, 2011 4:09 PM GMT+0700

Google Inc. (GOOG) and Samsung Electronics Co. unveiled their new mobile-phone software, pitching facial recognition programs that enhance security and photo sorting to challenge Apple Inc. (AAPL)’s record-breaking iPhone.

The Samsung Galaxy Nexus runs Ice Cream Sandwich, the latest version of Google’s Android software, Matias Duarte, Google’s senior director, told reporters in Hong Kong today. Samsung will start sales next month. No price was disclosed.

The Samsung handset is Google’s latest salvo in the battle to control the $207 billion mobile-phone market. Apple’s iPhone 4S sold a record more than 4 million units in three days last week, helped by the addition of voice-recognition features in the company’s iOS software.

“In terms of technology and functionality, it’s hard to find a big difference between Android and iOS anymore,” said Kang Yoon Hum, an analyst at NH Investment & Securities Co. in Seoul. “They are neck-and-neck.”

Google and Apple are racing to upgrade their technology to lure users of smartphones. Mountain View, California-based Google controlled 43.4 percent of that market in the second quarter, while Apple’s iPhone had an 18.2 percent share.

In Ice Cream Sandwich, the face detection technology is being introduced as a safety feature. Still, that “opens up a lot of possibilities,” said Wouter De Meulemeester, a director at I.R.I.S., a Belgian company that provides such technology. Applications such as photo-sorting can be developed, he said after attending the event.

Demo Fails

Apple Chief Executive Officer Tim Cook unveiled the iPhone 4S earlier this month featuring a new camera and a faster processor. The device is capable of detecting up to 10 faces while taking a photograph, according to Cupertino, California-- based Apple’s website. The phone features the Siri voice assistant that marks calendars and sends messages using audio.

Matias Duarte, a senior director at Google, required at least two attempts to get access to his Galaxy Nexus phone while demonstrating the device on stage today, as the face-recognition technology initially failed to detect him. He showed off the voice-recognition feature of Ice Cream Sandwich by dictating instructions in English, including punctuation marks and smiley symbols.

He told the phone “I am a little busy now, let’s catch up later.”

Android Beam

Other features of Ice Cream Sandwich include Android Beam, which lets users quickly share web pages, apps and YouTube videos, improved multi-tasking, and an upgraded voice technology that converts dictation into text.

“People initially thought Siri was just talk-to-type,” said Wang Wanli, an analyst at RBS Asia Ltd. in Taipei. “Yet, we found it’s much more than that and has personality. Google would also want to have some personality in Android, and if this update lacks it, then they may want to upgrade it as soon as possible.”

Samsung, leading the Android platform in the fight with Apple, introduced the Galaxy Nexus phone fitted with a 4.65 inch display, a 1.2 gigahertz processor and a 5 megapixel camera, according to today’s statement. Apple’s latest iPhone has a 3.5- inch display, measured diagonally, and an 8-megapixel camera, according to the company’s website.

“The new features like facial recognition are improvements and will help attract more users,” said Richard Ko, who rates Google partner HTC Corp. (2498) “neutral” at KGI Securities Co. in Taipei.

Ice Cream Sandwich, an updated version of Google’s Android operating system, was designed for both phones and tablets. That’s a break from the past, where different devices ran on separate software, and it may encourage developers to write more applications for the platform.

The Android Market has more than 300,000 apps, according to today’s statement. Earlier this month, Apple said there were more than 500,000 applications in its App Store.

“Ice Cream Sandwich could provide the critical push in the race to catch Apple,” said Mark Newman, an analyst at Sanford C. Bernstein & Co., who is based in Hong Kong. “Apple’s software is still on the cutting edge.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Mark Lee in Hong Kong at wlee37@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Anand Krishnamoorthy at anandk@bloomberg.net




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Google Ice Cream Sandwich Android Debuts

By Mark Lee - Oct 19, 2011 5:38 AM GMT+0700

Google Inc. (GOOG) today will unveil the first device running the new version of its Android software, stepping up competition with Apple Inc. (AAPL) and seeking to win over developers by making it easier to write programs that run on both phones and tablets.

The new Android, dubbed Ice Cream Sandwich, will be unveiled at a joint event with Samsung Electronics Co. in Hong Kong today, according to Mark Newman, an analyst at Sanford C. Bernstein & Co. The debut would come less than a week after Apple started selling the iPhone 4S, which set a smartphone sales record of more than 4 million units in three days.

The latest Android incarnation will offer easier multitasking and a new way to access applications. With the update, Google Chief Executive Officer Larry Page aims to boost mobile-advertising sales and give customers an alternative to Apple’s iOS software, which runs iPhones and iPads. At stake is dominance in the $207 billion mobile-phone market, where iPhone is the top-selling device and Android is the most-used software.

“Ice Cream Sandwich could provide the critical push in the race to catch Apple,” said Newman, who is based in Hong Kong. “Apple’s software is still on the cutting edge.”

Matt Firestone, a spokesman at Google in Tokyo, and Nam Ki Yung, a spokesman at Samsung, declined to comment. Carolyn Wu, a spokeswoman at Apple in Beijing, cited statistics showing the iPhone is the best-selling smartphone while declining to comment directly on Google’s planned Android upgrade.

Ice Cream Invite

An Oct. 14 press invitation to the Hong Kong event sent by Google and Samsung included a graphic showing a brown Android mascot being sandwiched by layers of white ice cream. The death of Apple co-founder Steve Jobs prompted a product introduction event scheduled for Oct. 11 in San Diego to be delayed, Kim Titus, a spokesman for Samsung, said on Oct. 7.

Ice Cream Sandwich will bring to smartphones some of the features available through Google’s Honeycomb software, which was designed specifically for tablets, the company said in May.

Putting the same operating system in phones and tablets, a break from the past where different devices ran separate software, may spawn more applications on the Android platform.

“Users of Android tablets have had fewer applications to choose from, compared with Apple,” said Lu Chia-lin, an analyst at Samsung Securities Asia in Hong Kong. “Making an operating system for both smartphones and tablets will help Google close the gap.”

Earlier this month, Apple said there are more than 500,000 applications in the company’s App Store. Firestone said the Android Market had more than 200,000 apps as of May 10.

Defending Against Apple

The most recent iteration of Apple’s mobile software drew positive reviews for its new voice-recognition software, faster processing speed and improved picture-taking ability. The availability of new features helped Apple’s sales of iPhone 4S reach a record in its first days on the market.

Still, Google is able to defend against Apple’s inroads in part because it’s available on so many devices from multiple carriers, said Charles Golvin, an analyst at Forrester Research Inc.

“Android doesn’t need any help demonstrating its effect on the iPhone’s market share,” Golvin said. “It’s been doing extremely well.”

Motorola Mobility Deal

Ice Cream Sandwich is the first major rollout for Android since Google announced in August a $12.5 billion acquisition of Motorola Mobility Holdings Inc. That led to speculation that Google might become a competitor to its own handset partners.

Google Chairman Eric Schmidt said earlier this month that the company “won’t do anything with Motorola, or anybody else by the way, that would screw up the dynamics of that industry.”

Unveiling the software with Samsung, the biggest seller of Android phones, should reassure partners that Google won’t favor Motorola Mobility over other handset makers, said Song Myung Sup, a Seoul-based analyst at HI Investment & Securities.

“At the end of the day, you have to give good treatment to those who sell well,” Song said. “It wouldn’t make much sense for Google to discriminate against Samsung.”

The software debut comes as Suwon, South Korea-based Samsung faces legal battles with Apple over patents in the U.S. and Europe. Google will enter the hardware business and gain a trove of wireless patents with the Motorola Mobility acquisition.

Android controlled 43.4 percent of the global smartphone market in the second quarter, while Apple’s iOS had an 18.2 percent share, according to researcher Gartner Inc.

For tablets, Apple’s iOS dominated with 61.3 percent market share in the second quarter, according to research company Strategy Analytics. Android accounted for 30.1 percent of the tablet market.

Google offers Android for free and then makes money on mobile advertising, which is on pace to reach $2.5 billion on an annual basis, Google said earlier this month.

“This is an important announcement for Android,” said Nomura Holdings Inc. analyst Aaron Jeng, based in Taipei. “Apple’s software supports both phones and tablets, and it’s important for Android to have a common platform for both product categories.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Mark Lee in Hong Kong at wlee37@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Anand Krishnamoorthy at anandk@bloomberg.net





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EU Banks Vow to Slash Assets by $1 Trillion

By Anne-Sylvaine Chassany and Liam Vaughan - Oct 19, 2011 6:06 PM GMT+0700

European banks, assuring investors they can weather the sovereign debt crisis by selling assets and reducing lending, may not be able to raise money fast enough to prevent government-forced recapitalizations.

Banks in France, the U.K., Ireland, Germany and Spain have announced plans to shrink by about 775 billion euros ($1.06 trillion) in the next two years to reduce short-term funding needs and comply with tougher regulatory capital requirements, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Morgan Stanley bank analysts predict that amount could reach 2 trillion euros across Europe by the end of next year as banks curb lending and sell loans and entire businesses. A lack of buyers and the losses lenders face on loan sales are making those targets unrealistic.

“Asset sales are impractical in the current environment,” said Simon Maughan, head of sales and distribution at MF Global UK Ltd. in London. “Every bank is selling, and no bank is buying. It just won’t work. Beyond that, the magnitude of the cuts the banks are talking about is nowhere near the likely required amount of deleveraging. They need to reduce hundreds of billions more to adjust to the new world order. There has to be a recapitalization.”

Boosting Capital

European Union leaders are seeking to boost bank capital as investors prove reluctant to provide short-term funding, in part because of concerns that lenders face more writedowns of sovereign debt from Greece and other southern European nations. They may require that banks increase core capital to 9 percent of risk-weighted assets from 5 percent within six months, seven years ahead of the target set by the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, according to a person with knowledge of the plans.

Banks in Europe may need 100 billion euros to 230 billion euros of additional capital to meet the requirements, according to estimates by Morgan Stanley and JPMorgan Chase & Co. Those that can’t raise cash through share sales would be required to take capital from their governments or the EU and may face curbs on paying bonuses and dividends, European Commission President Jose Barroso said Oct. 12.

European leaders will consider the plans at a meeting in Brussels Oct. 23.

Ackermann, Botin

Banks, whose shares as measured by the 46-member Bloomberg Europe Banks and Financial Services Index have fallen 30 percent this year, oppose the plan partly because it would dilute the value of existing shares. In addition, Deutsche Bank AG (DBK)’s Chief Executive Officer Josef Ackermann and Banco Santander SA Chairman Emilio Botin say capital injections won’t address the real problem, which is sovereign debt.

“Since private investors will certainly not be providing the funds for such a recapitalization, governments would ultimately have to raise such funds themselves, thus only exacerbating their debt situation,” Ackermann, who’s also chairman of the Washington-based Institute of International Finance, said at a conference in Berlin on Oct. 13.

Avoiding government aid may require reducing balance sheets, he said. Such shrinkage would help lenders meet revised capital ratios.

The EU proposals “will produce a contraction of credit since many institutions will opt to reduce their balances,” Botin said in a speech at Santander’s headquarters outside Madrid yesterday.

Shares Rise

The Stoxx Europe 600 Index added 1.07 percent at 11:50 a.m. in London and the euro strengthened 0.7 percent to $1.3847 today amid speculation leaders will stem the region’s debt crisis. Analysts partly attributed stock gains to a Guardian newspaper report that said Germany and France agreed to boost the region’s rescue fund to 2 trillion euros, even after a person with direct knowledge told Bloomberg News no deal has been reached. Moody’s Investors Service cut Spain’s credit rating yesterday for the third time in 13 months.

French lenders BNP Paribas SA, Credit Agricole SA (ACA) and Societe Generale SA, whose share prices have fallen 35 percent, 47 percent and 51 percent respectively this year, were the latest to announce asset reductions after investors shunned their stocks in August on speculation France was facing a credit-rating downgrade and concerns that the banks were too reliant on short-term funding.

BNP Cuts Assets

BNP Paribas, France’s largest bank, said on Sept. 14 it will reduce risk-weighted assets by about 70 billion euros by the end of next year. This amounts to about 200 billion euros in gross assets, or about 10 percent of the lender’s balance sheet, according to estimates by Christophe Nijdam, a Paris-based AlphaValue analyst. It will include sales of investment-banking operations outside Europe, the bank said.

Societe Generale (GLE), the country’s third-largest lender by assets, said this month it will cut as much as 80 billion euros in risk-weighted assets by 2013, including 40 billion euros through asset disposals. This will decrease funding needs by as much as 95 billion euros, the bank said. The reduction amounts to about 150 billion euros in gross assets, said Nijdam.

Credit Agricole said it would cut as much as 52 billion euros in funding needs by the end of 2012, which equals about 30 billion euros in gross assets, according to Nijdam.

‘On a Diet’

“French banks had three years to downsize their balance sheet, and they’ve done little,” Nijdam said in an interview. “Today they don’t have the choice. They were so attacked this summer over their liquidity needs that the French regulator pressed them to go on a diet. And they want to avoid equity injections that would feel very punitive for their existing shareholders.”

BNP Paribas (BNP) had 1.93 trillion euros of gross assets as of June 30, compared with 2.08 trillion euros on Dec. 31, 2008, before purchasing Fortis’s Belgium and Luxembourg assets in 2009. Societe Generale had 1.16 trillion euros in assets in June, up from 1.13 billion euros at the end of 2008. Both banks say they can meet new Basel capital requirements.

“We’ve got a perfectly precise route plan to reach the level of shareholders’ equity corresponding to the new rules,” BNP Paribas CEO Baudouin Prot said Sept. 21 on France’s Radio Classique. Carine Lauru, a spokeswoman for Paris-based BNP Paribas, said the bank would be able to comply with Basel capital requirements six years ahead of schedule.

The bulk of the banks’ deleveraging, which could reach 5 trillion euros in the next three to five years, will come from running off lending rather than selling assets because of the lack of buyers, according to Alberto Gallo, head of European credit strategy at Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc. (RBS)

‘Uncertainty Is High’

Potential buyers of bank assets such as insurance companies don’t have the means to invest significantly, while others such as U.S. banks and sovereign wealth funds may be wary of making acquisitions in Europe, Gallo said.

“Uncertainty is high, buyers are conservative, valuations low and the pool of potential buyers is restricted because private equity has limited access to leverage,” Malik Karim, CEO of London-based Fenchurch Advisory Partners, which provides corporate-finance advice, said. “Selling your best business units may be feasible at attractive prices, but banks will need to decide how they will replace quality earnings, which underpin their dividends, an equity story and share prices.”

U.K. and Irish banks have been shrinking their balance sheets with mixed success since they were bailed out in the 2008 financial crisis.

RBS Shrinks

Royal Bank of Scotland, which received 45.5 billion pounds ($71 billion) in government funding, has cut about 1 trillion pounds from its balance sheet since 2008 to 1.4 trillion pounds at the end of the second half of 2011, said Sarah Small, a spokeswoman for the bank.

The sales include the European and Asian operations of commodities-trading business RBS Sempra to JPMorgan Chase for $1.7 billion, credit-card payment unit WorldPay to private- equity buyers Advent International Corp. and Bain Capital LLC for 1.7 billion pounds, and more than 300 branches to Santander for about the same amount.

RBS plans to sell or wind down another 113 billion pounds, Small said, including Churchill and Direct Line insurance units and aircraft-leasing operation RBS Aviation Capital.

“It’s obviously not the best market, but there are certain types of assets that will find buyers,” said Andrew Nason, a senior banker advising financial institutions at Societe Generale in London. “Banks may be able to sell custody assets and asset-management businesses, which have not been as badly affected by the downturn.”

Lloyds’s Sales

Lloyds Banking Group Plc (LLOY), which received 20.3 billion pounds in a government bailout, said on June 30 it had cut 48 billion pounds from its balance sheet since 2009, taking it to 979 billion pounds. The U.K.’s biggest mortgage lender has attracted only one formal bidder, NBNK Investments Plc (NBNK), for a sale of 632 branches. The 1.5 billion-pound offer is 1 billion pounds short of the 2.5 billion pounds the bank had sought to raise. Lloyds plans to reduce non-core assets by at least an additional 72 billion pounds by the end of 2014, said Sarah Swailes, a bank spokeswoman.

Other European lenders also have found it difficult to sell assets. UniCredit SpA, Italy’s biggest bank, in April abandoned an effort to find a buyer for Pioneer Global Asset Management SpA. KBC Groep NV (KBC), Belgium’s largest lender and insurer by market value, couldn’t get regulatory approval in March to sell its private-banking unit to India’s Hinduja Group for 1.35 billion euros. It announced a new buyer on Oct. 10 from the Middle East for 1.05 billion euros.

German lender Commerzbank AG, which is to disclose an asset-reduction target next month, still needs to find a buyer for its Eurohypo mortgage unit to satisfy EU antitrust regulators following its 2008 bailout.

Loan Portfolios

Banks also have had mixed success with loan portfolios, often selling at discounts. Bank of Ireland Plc said this week it had agreed to sell 5 billion euros of U.S. and U.K. real- estate assets at 9 percent below face value. Anglo Irish Bank Corp. and RBS said they are close to completing loan-book sales.

Other European banks have been unwilling to sell loans that are booked at a higher value than what buyers, mostly private- equity firms and hedge funds, are ready to pay, said Richard Thompson, a partner at PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP in London, which advises banks or buyers on those transactions.

“Selling loans reduces the size of the balance sheet, but quite often you’re selling to a financial investor, who’s asking for a big discount because its return requirement is greater than the return requirement of the bank holding the assets,” Thompson said. “This simple difference in cost of capital generates a loss.”

U.S. Buyers

Irish banks, which were ordered in March to offload about 70 billion euros in assets by 2013, have been able to sell loans at losses because they have been recapitalized, he said.

European banks have about 1.3 trillion euros of non-core loans on their balance sheets, PwC estimated in April. Lured by the prospect of buying those portfolios at discounts, U.S. hedge funds and private-equity firms such as New York-based Apollo Global Management LLC have raised about $7 billion for funds targeting European distressed assets since 2009 and are seeking another $7 billion, compared with about $400 million during the 2002 recession, according to London-based researcher Preqin Ltd.

“The expectation when the financial crisis came about in 2008 and 2009 was there would be lots of opportunities to choose from,” said Dilip Awtani, a managing director responsible for distressed investments in Europe at Los Angeles-based private- equity firm Colony Capital LLC. “But that didn’t materialize. There’s a huge price gap currently. A lot of the banks in a position to default or fail didn’t and are still around because the government supported them. We’ll see whether banks have gotten realistic about the pricing it will take for them to lighten their books.”

Wholesale Funding

European banks need to cut more assets than they are announcing to wean themselves from their reliance on wholesale funding, MF Global’s Maughan said. Of the 1.1 trillion euros in total funding required by euro-zone banks through next September, about 60 percent will come from the short-term money markets, Roger Francis, an analyst at Mizuho Securities Co. in London, said in a note to clients on Oct. 7.

“Banks think the funding costs will go back to the way they were as if by magic,” Maughan said. “But they will not, not in my lifetime, because the implicit sovereign guarantee of banks’ balance sheets is gone.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Anne-Sylvaine Chassany in London at achassany@bloomberg.net; Liam Vaughan in London at lvaughan6@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Edward Evans at eevans3@bloomberg.net.




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European Banks Vow $1 Trillion Shrinkage

By Anne-Sylvaine Chassany and Liam Vaughan - Oct 19, 2011 3:28 PM GMT+0700

European banks, assuring investors they can weather the sovereign debt crisis by selling assets and reducing lending, may not be able to raise money fast enough to prevent government-forced recapitalizations.

Banks in France, the U.K., Ireland, Germany and Spain have announced plans to shrink by about 775 billion euros ($1.06 trillion) in the next two years to reduce short-term funding needs and comply with tougher regulatory capital requirements, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Morgan Stanley predicts that amount could reach 2 trillion euros across Europe as banks curb lending and sell loans and entire businesses. A lack of buyers and the losses lenders face on loan sales are making those targets unrealistic.

“Asset sales are impractical in the current environment,” said Simon Maughan, head of sales and distribution at MF Global UK Ltd. in London. “Every bank is selling, and no bank is buying. It just won’t work. Beyond that, the magnitude of the cuts the banks are talking about is nowhere near the likely required amount of deleveraging. They need to reduce hundreds of billions more to adjust to the new world order. There has to be a recapitalization.”

Boosting Capital

European Union leaders are seeking to boost bank capital as investors prove reluctant to provide short-term funding, in part because of concerns that lenders face more writedowns of sovereign debt from Greece and other southern European nations. They may require that banks increase core capital to 9 percent of risk-weighted assets from 5 percent within six months, seven years ahead of the target set by the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, according to a person with knowledge of the plans.

Banks in Europe may need 150 billion euros to 230 billion euros of additional capital to meet the requirements, Kian Abouhossein, a JPMorgan Chase & Co. analyst in London, wrote in an Oct. 1 note. Those that can’t raise cash through share sales would be required to take capital from their governments or the EU and may face curbs on paying bonuses and dividends, European Commission President Jose Barroso said Oct. 12.

European leaders will consider the plans at a meeting in Brussels Oct. 23.

Ackermann, Botin

Banks, whose shares as measured by the 46-member Bloomberg Europe Banks and Financial Services Index have fallen 30 percent this year, oppose the plan partly because it would dilute the value of existing shares. In addition, Deutsche Bank AG (DBK)’s Chief Executive Officer Josef Ackermann and Banco Santander SA Chairman Emilio Botin say capital injections won’t address the real problem, which is sovereign debt.

“Since private investors will certainly not be providing the funds for such a recapitalization, governments would ultimately have to raise such funds themselves, thus only exacerbating their debt situation,” Ackermann, who’s also chairman of the Washington-based Institute of International Finance, said at a conference in Berlin on Oct. 13.

Avoiding government aid may require reducing balance sheets, he said. Such shrinkage would help lenders meet revised capital ratios.

The EU proposals “will produce a contraction of credit since many institutions will opt to reduce their balances,” Botin said in a speech at Santander’s headquarters outside Madrid yesterday.

Shares Rise

The Stoxx Europe 600 Index added 0.4 percent and the euro strengthened 0.3 percent to $1.3792 today amid speculation leaders will stem the region’s debt crisis. Analysts partly attributed stock gains to a Guardian newspaper report that said Germany and France agreed to boost the region’s rescue fund to 2 trillion euros, even after a person with direct knowledge told Bloomberg News no deal has been reached. Moody’s Investors Service cut Spain’s credit rating yesterday for the third time in 13 months.

French lenders BNP Paribas SA, Credit Agricole SA (ACA) and Societe Generale SA, whose share prices have fallen 35 percent, 47 percent and 51 percent respectively this year, were the latest to announce asset reductions after investors shunned their stocks in August on speculation France was facing a credit-rating downgrade and concerns that the banks were too reliant on short-term funding.

BNP Cuts Assets

BNP Paribas, France’s largest bank, said on Sept. 14 it will reduce risk-weighted assets by about 70 billion euros by the end of next year. This amounts to about 200 billion euros in gross assets, or about 10 percent of the lender’s balance sheet, according to estimates by Christophe Nijdam, a Paris-based AlphaValue analyst. It will include sales of investment-banking operations outside Europe, the bank said.

Societe Generale (GLE), the country’s third-largest lender by assets, said this month it will cut as much as 80 billion euros in risk-weighted assets by 2013, including 40 billion euros through asset disposals. This will decrease funding needs by as much as 95 billion euros, the bank said. The reduction amounts to about 150 billion euros in gross assets, said Nijdam.

Credit Agricole said it would cut as much as 52 billion euros in funding needs by the end of 2012, which equals about 30 billion euros in gross assets, according to Nijdam.

‘On a Diet’

“French banks had three years to downsize their balance sheet, and they’ve done little,” Nijdam said in an interview. “Today they don’t have the choice. They were so attacked this summer over their liquidity needs that the French regulator pressed them to go on a diet. And they want to avoid equity injections that would feel very punitive for their existing shareholders.”

BNP Paribas (BNP) had 1.93 trillion euros of gross assets as of June 30, compared with 2.08 trillion euros on Dec. 31, 2008, before purchasing Fortis’s Belgium and Luxembourg assets in 2009. Societe Generale had 1.16 trillion euros in assets in June, up from 1.13 billion euros at the end of 2008. Both banks say they can meet new Basel capital requirements.

“We’ve got a perfectly precise route plan to reach the level of shareholders’ equity corresponding to the new rules,” BNP Paribas CEO Baudouin Prot said Sept. 21 on France’s Radio Classique. Carine Lauru, a spokeswoman for Paris-based BNP Paribas, said the bank would be able to comply with Basel capital requirements six years ahead of schedule.

U.K., Irish Banks

Selling those assets won’t be easy, said Malik Karim, CEO of London-based Fenchurch Advisory Partners, which provides corporate-finance advice.

“Uncertainty is high, buyers are conservative, valuations low and the pool of potential buyers is restricted because private equity has limited access to leverage,” Karim said. “Selling your best business units may be feasible at attractive prices, but banks will need to decide how they will replace quality earnings, which underpin their dividends, an equity story and share prices.”

U.K. and Irish banks have been shrinking their balance sheets with mixed success since they were bailed out in the 2008 financial crisis.

Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc (RBS), which received 45.5 billion pounds ($71 billion) in government funding, has cut about 1 trillion pounds from its balance sheet since 2008 to 1.4 trillion pounds at the end of the second half of 2011, said Sarah Small, a spokeswoman for the bank.

The sales include the European and Asian operations of commodities-trading business RBS Sempra to JPMorgan Chase for $1.7 billion, credit-card payment unit WorldPay to private- equity buyers Advent International Corp. and Bain Capital LLC for 1.7 billion pounds, and more than 300 branches to Santander for about the same amount.

‘Not the Best Market’

RBS plans to sell or wind down another 113 billion pounds, Small said, including Churchill and Direct Line insurance units and aircraft-leasing operation RBS Aviation Capital.

“It’s obviously not the best market, but there are certain types of assets that will find buyers,” said Andrew Nason, a senior banker advising financial institutions at Societe Generale in London. “Banks may be able to sell custody assets and asset-management businesses, which have not been as badly affected by the downturn.”

Lloyds Banking Group Plc (LLOY), which received 20.3 billion pounds in a government bailout, said on June 30 it had cut 48 billion pounds from its balance sheet since 2009, taking it to 979 billion pounds. The U.K.’s biggest mortgage lender has attracted only one formal bidder, NBNK Investments Plc (NBNK), for a sale of 632 branches. The 1.5 billion-pound offer is 1 billion pounds short of the 2.5 billion pounds the bank had sought to raise. Lloyds plans to reduce non-core assets by at least an additional 72 billion pounds by the end of 2014, said Sarah Swailes, a bank spokeswoman.

UniCredit, KBC

Other European lenders also have found it difficult to sell assets. UniCredit SpA, Italy’s biggest bank, in April abandoned an effort to find a buyer for Pioneer Global Asset Management SpA. KBC Groep NV (KBC), Belgium’s largest lender and insurer by market value, couldn’t get regulatory approval in March to sell its private-banking unit to India’s Hinduja Group for 1.35 billion euros. It announced a new buyer on Oct. 10 from the Middle East for 1.05 billion euros.

German lender Commerzbank AG, which is to disclose an asset-reduction target next month, still needs to find a buyer for its Eurohypo mortgage unit to satisfy EU antitrust regulators following its 2008 bailout.

Dexia SA (DEXB), the French-Belgian municipal lender that is being dismantled as part of a government rescue, is planning to sell its stake in Turkish bank Denizbank AS and Dexia Crediop SpA, its Italian municipal lender, and its joint venture with Barcelona-based Banco de Sabadell SA.

Loan Portfolios

Banks also have had mixed success with loan portfolios, often selling at discounts. Bank of Ireland Plc said this week it had agreed to sell 5 billion euros of U.S. and U.K. real- estate assets at 9 percent below face value. Anglo Irish Bank Corp. and RBS said they are close to completing loan-book sales.

Other European banks have been unwilling to sell loans that are booked at a higher value than what buyers, mostly private- equity firms and hedge funds, are ready to pay, said Richard Thompson, a partner at PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP in London, which advises banks or buyers on those transactions.

“Selling loans reduces the size of the balance sheet, but quite often you’re selling to a financial investor, who’s asking for a big discount because its return requirement is greater than the return requirement of the bank holding the assets,” Thompson said. “This simple difference in cost of capital generates a loss.”

U.S. Buyers

Irish banks, which were ordered in March to offload about 70 billion euros in assets by 2013, have been able to sell loans at losses because they have been recapitalized, he said.

European banks have about 1.3 trillion euros of non-core loans on their balance sheets, PwC estimated in April. Lured by the prospect of buying those portfolios at discounts, U.S. hedge funds and private-equity firms such as New York-based Apollo Global Management LLC have raised about $7 billion for funds targeting European distressed assets since 2009 and are seeking another $7 billion, compared with about $400 million during the 2002 recession, according to London-based researcher Preqin Ltd.

“The expectation when the financial crisis came about in 2008 and 2009 was there would be lots of opportunities to choose from,” said Dilip Awtani, a managing director responsible for distressed investments in Europe at Los Angeles-based private- equity firm Colony Capital LLC. “But that didn’t materialize. There’s a huge price gap currently. A lot of the banks in a position to default or fail didn’t and are still around because the government supported them. We’ll see whether banks have gotten realistic about the pricing it will take for them to lighten their books.”

Wholesale Funding

European banks need to cut more assets than they are announcing to wean themselves from their reliance on wholesale funding, MF Global’s Maughan said. Of the 1.1 trillion euros in total funding required by euro-zone banks through next September, about 60 percent will come from the short-term money markets, Roger Francis, an analyst at Mizuho Securities Co. in London, said in a note to clients on Oct. 7.

If banks want to shrink, they could dispose of financial assets on their trading books, AlphaValue’s Nijdam said. That’s something they have been reluctant to do because some of those trading assets are more profitable than loans, he said.

“Banks think the funding costs will go back to the way they were as if by magic,” Maughan said. “But they will not, not in my lifetime, because the implicit sovereign guarantee of banks’ balance sheets is gone.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Anne-Sylvaine Chassany in London at achassany@bloomberg.net; Liam Vaughan in London at lvaughan6@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Edward Evans at eevans3@bloomberg.net.




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Stocks Climb, Euro Rises Before Debt Summit

By Stephen Kirkland and Shiyin Chen - Oct 19, 2011 4:22 PM GMT+0700

European stocks rose and the euro strengthened as leaders prepared to gather for a summit to stem the region’s debt crisis. U.S. index futures were little changed after Apple Inc. (AAPL)’s profit missed analyst estimates for the first time in at least six years.

The Stoxx Europe 600 Index advanced 0.7 percent at 10:17 a.m. in London and the MSCI All-Country World Index gained 0.5 percent. Standard & Poor’s 500 Index futures slipped less than 0.1 percent. Apple, the maker of the iPhone, sank 5.2 percent in European trading. Emerging-market stocks rebounded from the steepest loss in two weeks. The euro appreciated 0.4 percent to $1.3804. Spain’s two-year note yield climbed seven basis points after Moody’s Investors Service cut the nation’s credit rating. Copper retreated 1.5 percent and cocoa jumped 1.1 percent.

Europe’s leaders are set to meet Oct. 23 to discuss ways of increasing the region’s firepower in combating the credit crisis. The Guardian newspaper said yesterday Germany and France agreed to boost the area’s rescue fund, while a person with direct knowledge told Bloomberg News no deal has been reached. Apple’s income trailed the average estimate by 3.5 percent.

“Whatever progress we get out of the euro zone will certainly help add some calm to the market,” Kelvin Tay, the Singapore-based chief investment strategist at UBS Wealth Management, said in a Bloomberg Television interview. Investors will still remain “very wary” about finding a solution to the crisis, he said.

ING, Axa

Three shares advanced for every one that fell in the Stoxx 600, which snapped a two-day, 1.3 percent drop. ING Groep NV and Axa SA led gains in insurers, climbing more than 3.5 percent. Software AG surged 9.8 percent as Germany’s second-largest maker of business software said third-quarter operating profit rose.

Futures signaled the S&P 500 may give up some of yesterday’s 2 percent rally. Morgan Stanley and Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold Inc. are among 27 companies in the index scheduled to report earnings today. Among the 38 S&P 500 members that have released quarterly results since Oct. 11, more than 65 percent have beaten analysts’ profit estimates, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

The MSCI Emerging Markets Index rose 1 percent after yesterday’s 1.7 percent slide. Banks led the Hang Seng China Enterprises Index of Chinese shares traded in Hong Kong 1.2 percent higher as lower money-market rates signaled the nation’s central bank will inject more funds into the financial system.

Turkey, South Korea

Turkey’s ISE National 100 Index (XU100) rose 0.5 percent. Anadolu Efes Biracilik & Malt Sanayii AS jumped as much as 10 percent after SABMiller Plc (SAB) said it will get a 24 percent stake in the Middle East’s biggest brewer in return for its Russian and Ukranian businesses. South Korea’s won strengthened 1.2 percent to a one-month high after the nation agreed to increase a currency-swap accord with Japan to $70 billion.

The euro appreciated 0.4 percent versus the yen, rising against all but two of its most-traded peers monitored by Bloomberg. The Dollar Index, which tracks the U.S. currency against those of six trading partners, fell 0.4 percent.

The pound declined versus most major counterparts after minutes from the Bank of England’s meeting this month showed officials voted unanimously to expand the size of their asset- purchase program.

The cost of insuring debt sold by Germany fell, with credit-default swaps tied to Europe’s largest economy declining six basis points to 88, the lowest since Sept. 16. The Markit iTraxx SovX Western Europe Index of contracts tied to 15 governments dropped 10 basis points to 324.

Copper fell for a third day to $7,333.50 a metric ton, leading industrial metals lower. Cocoa climbed to $2,600 a ton after falling yesterday to a two-year low. Oil rose 0.1 percent to $88.43 a barrel in New York.

To contact the reporter on this story: Stephen Kirkland in London at skirkland@bloomberg.net; Shiyin Chen in Singapore at schen37@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Justin Carrigan at jcarrigan@bloomberg.net



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Spain Rating Cut for Third Time Since 2010

By Angeline Benoit and Sandrine Rastello - Oct 19, 2011 3:09 PM GMT+0700

Spain’s credit rating was cut for the third time in 13 months by Moody’s Investors Service as Europe’s debt crisis threatens to engulf the nation.

Moody’s yesterday reduced its ranking to its fifth-highest investment grade, cutting it by two levels to A1 from Aa2, with the outlook remaining negative. Standard & Poor’s downgraded Spain on Oct. 14 to its fourth-highest investment grade, and Fitch Ratings cut it to the same level on Oct. 7, the day it also downgraded Italy.

“Moody’s is maintaining a negative outlook on Spain’s rating to reflect the downside risks from a potential further escalation of the euro-area crisis,” it said in a statement. The company cited the “continued vulnerability of Spain to market stress” that is driving up the cost of borrowing, as well as weaker growth prospects. Spanish bonds fell.

Spanish and Italian bonds are being pummeled as European leaders fail to convince investors they can contain the debt crisis and shore up banks to withstand the risk of a Greek default. German Chancellor Angela Merkel said yesterday that an Oct. 23 European Union summit will mark an “important step,” though not the final one in solving the sovereign debt crisis.

‘Degree of Normality’

Spain’s 10-year bond yield rose to 5.38 percent today from 5.36 percent yesterday. Even as the European Central Bank has been propping up the bond market since August, Spain pays more than twice what investors demand of Germany to borrow for 10 years. That spread was 334 basis points today.

Spain’s Treasury said the decision wasn’t justified by the nation’s economic data and was more due to market tension over the euro crisis. Since Moody’s said in July any downgrade would likely be “limited to one notch,” the government has bolstered its credibility by including a budget-discipline clause in the constitution, the agency said in an e-mail obtained by Bloomberg News. Spain is committed to budget cuts and its bond auctions have proved “resilient,” it said.

“The Spanish Treasury believes that this rating action may be motivated more by a short-term reaction to negative news about the euro zone debt markets than by an analysis of Spain’s medium- and long-term fundamental outlook,” the note said.

European finance ministers and leaders are due to hold meetings in Brussels for three days through Oct. 23. Merkel cast doubt yesterday on the progress made in the run-up to the talks, telling reporters in Berlin that the weekend summit, while an “important step” that will make a “clear commitment” to defending the euro, will not be the last.

‘Underlying Fragility’

“Even if policy action at the euro-area level were to succeed in the short term in returning some degree of normality to bank and sovereign debt markets in the euro area, the underlying fragility and loss of confidence is deep and likely to be sustained,” Moody’s said.

A meeting of Group of 20 finance ministers and central bankers warned last week that the crisis threatens to endanger the world economy.

“It’s imperative that the Europeans do provide a comprehensive framework for addressing the crisis,” said Domenico Lombardi, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution in Washington and a former International Monetary Fund board member. Failure to do so, he said, will result in a spiral of further downgrades and rising borrowing costs, “which will trigger a fully blown fiscal and banking crisis.”

New Government

Spain’s rating would face more downward pressure if the government formed after November elections doesn’t commit to further measures to reduce budget deficits, Moody’s said.

“On the other hand, the implementation of a decisive and credible medium-term fiscal and structural reform plan coupled with a convincing solution to the euro-area crisis would trigger a return to a stable outlook,” it said.

Spain’s Socialist government is set to lose the general election on Nov. 20, opinion polls indicate. The opposition People’s Party, which has pledged deeper austerity, changes to labor rules and an overhaul of banks, may win as many as 190 seats in the 350-seat assembly, a poll by El Pais newspaper showed on Oct. 16.

Spain, the fourth-largest euro-area economy, had the best investment grade possible with all three rating companies in January 2009, when Standard & Poor’s was the first to cut.

Moody’s said it had lowered its growth forecast for Spain to 1 percent “at best” in 2012, from a previous estimate of 1.8 percent, “with risks mainly to the downside.” Slower growth makes it harder to reduce budget deficits, especially with regional governments likely to miss their target, the company said.

Growth slowed to 0.2 percent in the second quarter and Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero said on Sept. 14 that the quarterly growth rate would remain at similar levels for the rest of the year. The budget deficit for the general government will reach 5.2 percent of gross domestic product next year, compared with an announced goal of 4.4 percent, Moody’s estimated.

To contact the reporters on this story: Angeline Benoit in Madrid at abenoit4@bloomberg.net; Sandrine Rastello in Washington at srastello@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Craig Stirling at cstirling1@bloomberg.net




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