The Big Bank Bloodbath: Losses Near Half a Trillion Dollars
July 06 2016 - 4:28PM
Dow Jones News
By David Reilly
Big banks are nearly half a trillion dollars in the hole.
Since the start of 2016, 20 of the world's bigger banks have
lost a quarter of their combined market value. Added up, it equals
about $465 billion, according to FactSet data.
Brexit isn't all to blame. True, bank stocks have plummeted
since the U.K. voted last month to leave the European Union. But
they have been losing value since the start of the year, when a
group of factors -- the Chinese economy, the path of U.S. interest
rates, oil prices -- weighed on the markets.
More than pride is at stake. Sharp share-price falls will make
it much more difficult, and expensive, for banks to raise capital
if that is what is ultimately needed to shore up their balance
sheets.
Just as bad, a serious decline in market value can breed
inaction among bank executives. Instead of selling equity when they
can, executives may wait for share prices to recover, only to find
themselves in a worse situation as stocks drop even further.
Another potential worry: As bank share prices decline, employees
get antsy. Compensation packages that include stock options or
restricted stock suddenly become a lot less attractive.
To get a handle on the severity of 2016 for banks, The Wall
Street Journal examined the biggest U.S., U.K. and Swiss banks,
some of the biggest European ones, as well as the biggest bank in
each of China and Japan.
The group included: J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. Wells Fargo
& Co., Bank of America Corp., Citigroup Inc., Goldman Sachs
Group, Morgan Stanley, Royal Bank of Scotland PLC, HSBC Holdings,
Barclays PLC, Standard Chartered PLC, UBS Group AG, Credit Suisse
Group AG, BNP Paribas SA, Credit Agricole SA, Société Générale SA,
UniCredit SpA, Deutsche Bank AG, Banco Santander SA, Industrial and
Commercial Bank of China Ltd. and Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group
Inc.
The biggest market-value losers, in dollar terms, so far this
year: Italy's UniCredit has lost nearly two-thirds of its value;
Royal Bank of Scotland has fallen around 56%; and Credit Suisse,
Deutsche Bank and Barclays have all about halved.
Those who have lost the least: J.P. Morgan Chase and Industrial
and Commercial Bank of China, which are both down about 10%. In
local-currency terms, share prices for all 20 banks are down year
to date, except Standard Chartered, which is flat.
Despite such gloom, many banks say they don't need to raise
capital. Indeed, in the U.S. at least, the Fed's recent bank stress
tests asserted that big banks can weather particularly bad market
storms. The Fed also approved plans at all the largest U.S. banks
to return some capital to shareholders.
Valuations show investors aren't feeling so confident.
UniCredit, for instance, trades at about 21% of book value, a
measure of a bank's net worth, according to FactSet. Deutsche Bank
trades at about 26%, or where it was during the darkest days of the
financial crisis.
In fact, among the group of 20 big banks only one bank -- Wells
Fargo -- trades at a premium to its book value. Only one other,
J.P. Morgan Chase, trades near book value.
A bank trading below book value can signal that investors have
questions about capital strength. It can also show markets are
worried about future profitability and a firm's ability to generate
returns that exceed its cost of capital.
Plunging bond yields around the globe have exacerbated the
latter concern by pressuring banks' profit margins.
The fact that some banks are trading at less than half their
book value flags even deeper concerns. Among the likely issues: A
brewing battle within the EU over rules curtailing governments'
ability to bail out banks and whether those could be put on
hold.
All of this has many once-mighty banks looking like shadows of
their former selves. Deutsche Bank, Germany's national banking
champion and still a big player on Wall Street, now has a market
value that in dollar terms is less than that of SunTrust Banks
Inc., the regional U.S. bank focused on the Southeast. And the
market values of UniCredit, Deutsche Bank and Credit Suisse
combined wouldn't equal that of Goldman Sachs -- itself down about
20% this year.
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
July 06, 2016 16:13 ET (20:13 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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