Bank Shares Drop as Analysts Weigh 'Brexit' Impact -- 2nd Update
27 Junio 2016 - 8:44AM
Noticias Dow Jones
By Margot Patrick
LONDON--Shares in U.K. and European financial firms fell again
Monday as banks and asset managers faced existential questions from
Thursday's vote by Britons to leave the European Union.
Fears that volatile markets could delay if not undermine fragile
recoveries at many banks have rattled investors.
Most European banks are in far stronger shape than they were
before 2008's financial meltdown and subsequent eurozone crisis in
terms of their capital and ability to withstand shocks.
Jolts to their businesses could still come from political
turmoil, jittery markets and worried businesses and consumers in
the wake of the U.K.'s vote for "Brexit."
To help struggling lenders cope, the Italian government is
considering a EUR40 billion ($44.4 billion) capital infusion into
its banks, people familiar with the matter said. The sector has
suffered from chronically low profitability, thin capital buffers
and high costs.
U.K. banks remained on the front line in Monday's selloff.
Barclays PLC dropped 18% and trading in its shares had to be
suspended at one stage in the morning. Jefferies said Brexit
"changes everything" about how investors should view the bank, and
slashed its 2016 earnings estimate for the bank by a whopping 76%.
Barclays, along with Credit Suisse Group and Deutsche Bank AG, was
counting on relatively stable markets and economic conditions to
reshape its operations in the next few years. Shares in Credit
Suisse and Deutsche Bank were both down by around 9%.
Royal Bank of Scotland Group PLC slumped as much as 25% to 152
pence, its lowest level ever, as a slow path to independence from
73% state ownership extended far into the future. Stock in Lloyds
Banking Group PLC, the U.K.'s dominant mortgage lender, was down
10%, hurting a plan by the U.K. government to sell shares it still
holds in that bank from the financial crisis. Retail investors in
the U.K. were to have been offered Lloyds shares this fall in the
case of a "remain" vote.
Deutsche Bank analysts painted a gloomy picture for U.K. banks
Monday. Loan growth would likely be lower, bad loans higher, and
dividends at greater risk as the dust settles from Thursday's
historic decision, analysts at the German bank said.
"Political and economic uncertainty is here to stay, and we
expect the coming weeks and months will see significant volatility
in the share prices of U.K. financials and those with U.K.
operations," they wrote.
In a statement that did little to calm markets, Chancellor
George Osborne said the British economy "is about as strong as it
could be to confront the challenge our country now faces."
Investors also sought to make sense Monday of how badly insurers
and asset managers will be affected by a Brexit. After double-digit
falls Friday, asset managers Henderson Group PLC and Schroders PLC
were sharply down again Monday, as Citigroup analysts put them in a
"sit this out" category. They cut Henderson's rating to neutral and
said it might not meet its financial targets.
Asset managers have a morass of Brexit-related issues to sift
through including potentially sweeping regulatory change in
addition to fears of large outflows from their U.K. and European
stock and bond funds,
Money managers from BlackRock Inc, the world's largest, to U.K.
firm Hermès Investment Management, said they may have to make some
changes to their London businesses, with industry experts
predicting many fund-management jobs could relocate to other EU
country capitals.
Financial firms of all types are considering the potential loss
of the so-called "passport" that currently lets U. K-based banks
and asset managers conduct business and market products almost
seamlessly across the EU bloc.
Old worries over capital strength at Aviva PLC also flared up,
pushing its shares 6% lower after a 21% fall Friday. The insurer on
Monday said it has "one of the strongest and most resilient balance
sheets" in the U.K. insurance sector, and some analysts said the
stock may have been oversold.
Goldman Sachs analysts said the market turmoil since Friday
increases the risk of "a casualty" in the financial system, in a
hark back to the financial crisis when weak lenders fell like
dominoes.
'"Is this a Lehman moment?" was the most frequently asked
question on Friday, the bank analysts wrote.
They said anything of that magnitude is unlikely.
Mark Cobley in London and Giovanni Legorano in Milan contributed
to this article.
Write to Margot Patrick at margot.patrick@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
June 27, 2016 09:29 ET (13:29 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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