by eXpat » Sun 12 Jul 2009, 13:19:08
Watch out for the second semester! a lot of banks are hanging solely on credit!
U.S. bank results to show who flunked credit class
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'N')EW YORK (Reuters) - For the largest U.S. banks, the second quarter and beyond may be all about credit.
With concerns about large lenders' capital levels on the wane after well over $60 billion of stock sales last quarter, investors will focus on how broadly credit is deteriorating, with particular emphasis on credit cards, commercial loans and commercial real estate.
At the same time, banks will need to demonstrate strong profitability before accounting for credit weakness, in the face of weak demand for loans as consumers worried about the recession and near 10 percent unemployment try to save more.
There is growing optimism for the sector, especially after the federal government in June let 10 of the largest lenders repay more than $68 billion of bailout money taken from the Troubled Asset Relief Program.
Yet there is no sense that the credit crisis, which set in roughly two years ago, is anywhere near over.
...
While results may be the best since the financial crisis exploded in September, Fox-Pitt Kelton analysts said profit could fall 67 percent from a year earlier.
Banks "are still in the early stages of realizing lifetime credit losses," they wrote.
Indeed, many lenders that have yet to repay more than $1 billion of bailout funds are expected to lose money in the quarter and over the rest of 2009, Thomson Reuters data show.
The roll: Citigroup, SunTrust Banks Inc (STI.N), Regions Financial Corp (RF.N), Fifth Third Bancorp (FITB.O), KeyCorp (KEY.N), Comerica Inc (CMA.N), Marshall & Ilsley Corp (MI.N), Huntington Bancshares Inc (HBAN.O) and Zions Bancorp (ZION.O).
Banks will report results on the heels of two months of investor indigestion from financial company stocks. The 24-member KBW Bank Index .BKX more than doubled from early March to early May, but has declined in six of the last eight weeks.
Results are likely to be noisy, with many banks incurring charges to repay TARP funds and support the FDIC, which found 305 "problem" lenders as of March 31, a 15-year high.
http://www.reuters.com/article/reutersEdge/idUSTRE5685I120090709?sp=true
"I learned long ago, never to wrestle with a pig. You get dirty, and besides, the pig likes it."
George Bernard Shaw
“You can ignore reality, but you can't ignore the consequences of ignoring reality.” Ayn Rand