El temor retorna para la banca
El miedo debido a la salud de la banca Americana retorna de manera muy grande.
La banca cayo 11% el Lunes en su peor caida de un dia desde Abril del 2009, los inversionistas cuestionan que tan bien la pasaran las gigantes financieras si la economia desacelera mas y a las turbulencias del mercado ante el downgrade de la deuda de US.
BAC fue la mas afectada, cayo 20% y el costo para asegurar su deuda subio 50%.
Fear Returns for U.S. Banks
By DAN FITZPATRICK
Fears about the health of the U.S. banking system are back in a big way.
Bank stocks plunged 11% Monday in their biggest one-day drop since April 2009, as investors questioned how well giant financial firms will weather a slowing economy and tumultuous markets after an unprecedented downgrade of U.S. debt.
Hardest hit was Bank of America Corp., which saw its stock tumble 20% and the cost of insuring its bonds against default surge 50%. Earlier this year, the bank was dangling a higher dividend before investors, but it has since dropped plans for a 2011 increase, people familiar with the matter said.
Also swooning were shares of Citigroup Inc., off 16%, and Morgan Stanley, down 14%.
The selloff sent regulators scurrying to reach out to bankers and investors, seeking to make sure markets continue to function smoothly. Plunging bank stocks can unnerve policy makers, because banks serve as a crucial link between savers and borrowers. Any pullback in bank lending could undermine what is already a weak recovery, raising the possibility of another recession.
"This is not Lehman II," said James Bianco, president of Bianco Research LLC, referring to the 2008 collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings that sent markets into a tailspin. But "if banks' function is to facilitate credit, this makes it harder for them," he said.
For now, the damage appears confined to financial markets. Falling stock prices don't affect bank customers, and there are no imminent worries about big banks' access to funds. BofA, for instance, has the second-biggest U.S. branch network—which pays off by giving the bank ample, low-cost funding via its $730 billion in federally insured consumer deposits.
What's more, the biggest banks—including BofA; Citi; Morgan Stanley; J.P. Morgan Chase & Co.; Wells Fargo & Co., with the biggest U.S. branch network; and Goldman Sachs Group Inc.—have more liquidity and capital than they had when the financial crisis erupted in 2008. They didn't report any problems obtaining funding Monday.
But doubts about their health weighed heavily on stocks, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average sliding 5.5% to 10809.85.
In Washington, D.C., bank supervisors reached out to large financial companies Monday to ensure the U.S. debt downgrade didn't upset financing markets. Officials also closely watched the vital repurchase, or "repo," market, where banks, companies and money-market mutual funds lend cash overnight in exchange for Treasurys and other securities that are returned the next day.
Several bankers in contact with government officials said the sentiment conveyed was a higher level of concern than at other times in recent weeks, but well short of the near-panic of 2008 and early 2009.
At the Treasury Department, officials reached out to investors and others, domestically and internationally, to monitor markets, with Secretary Timothy Geithner receiving regular updates, an official said.
The negative news hits banks at a weak point. Bank analyst Mike Mayo, of Crédit Agricole Securities, predicts U.S. banks are facing their slowest revenue growth since 1938, as shareholders fret over the impact of U.S. regulatory reform, higher capital requirements from regulators and weak loan demand.
For Bank of America, its problem heading into Monday's trading was that no U.S. bank was more closely tied to the performance of an ailing U.S. economy. Particularly weighty for investors is BofA's 2008 purchase of troubled mortgage lender Countrywide Financial Corp.
On Monday, investors woke up to more bad news when insurer American International Group Inc. sued the bank for $10 billion, seeking to recover the money it lost on poor-performing mortgage-backed securities. AIG also said it would challenge a recent $8.5 billion bank settlement regarding mortgage bonds. More untimely disclosures haunted the bank throughout the day. Hedge-fund manager David Tepper, who had been a champion of financial stocks, sold half of his shares in the bank, according to a securities filing. Mr. Mayo, the analyst, put out a note saying he had downgraded the bank, and that it "can't rule out" a new capital raise.
In echoes of 2008, rumors began to circulate about funding problems, said John McDonald, an analyst with Sanford C. Bernstein & Co. But Bank of America didn't have problems Monday attracting funding or rolling over commercial paper, said three people close to the situation. "So far, so good," one of these people said.
Banks have more capital and liquidity than they did in 2008. But many banks, including Bank of America, are restricted from returning that capital to shareholders because of lingering regulatory concerns about their strength.
The Charlotte, N.C., bank recently filed a new capital plan with the Federal Reserve that doesn't ask for a dividend increase in 2011, said people familiar with the situation. The move represents another retreat for Chief Executive Brian Moynihan, who earlier hinted that a second-half increase was likely. A bank spokesman declined to comment about the capital plan.
Despite the steep decline in Bank of America shares, Mr. Moynihan isn't in trouble with his board, nor is there any discussion among the management team about breaking up the institution or selling off some of its prized assets, said a person close to the situation.
The bank this fall is expected to announce some job cuts and expense savings as a way of showing investors Mr. Moynihan is getting a handle on the company.
A spokesman said there is "no change in business strategy as a result of the events of the last several days."
—Liz Rappaport, Damian Paletta and Aaron Lucchetti contributed to this article.
Write to Dan Fitzpatrick at
dan.fitzpatrick@wsj.com