BLBG: Bank Investors Dismiss Moodyâs Cuts As Years Too Late
Downgrades of Morgan Stanley (MS), Credit Suisse Group AG (CSGN) and 13 other global banks, announced by Moodyâs Investors Service after months of speculation about dire fallout, were met instead by rallies in stocks and bonds.
The cost to protect Morgan Stanleyâs debt against losses dropped, and the shares rallied as much as 4.6 percent in extended trading yesterday after the ratings firm cut the bank by two levels rather than a threatened three grades. Credit- default swaps tied to Bank of America Corp., which was lowered to within two levels of junk along with Citigroup Inc. (C), also improved, along with those of Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (GS)
âAmerican banks are stronger today than they were three years ago,â said Gerard Cassidy, a bank equity analyst with RBC Capital Markets, adding that market prices have long reflected concerns raised by Moodyâs. âYes, their ratings are lower, but is Citi tomorrow going to have to pay an extra 50 basis points for commercial paper? I donât think so.â
The prospect of downgrades had weighed on banks since Moodyâs said Feb. 15 it was reviewing 17 banks with capital- markets operations because of fragile confidence and tighter regulations that pinched revenue. Pressure mounted as Europeâs sovereign-debt crisis intensified and cast doubt on the health of some of the continentâs lenders.
By the time the results came out four months later, investors such as Thornburg Investment Management Inc.âs George Strickland said, the worst-case scenario for downgrades was already reflected in securities prices.
Market âShruggingâ
âIf anything, the market is reacting with relief,â said Strickland, who helps oversee $14 billion of fixed-income assets as a managing director at Santa Fe, New Mexico-based Thornburg. Morgan Stanley bonds likely will rally, said Strickland, whose firm owns the bankâs debt. âThe market is shrugging it off.â
None of the financial firms was cut more than Moodyâs had forecast. Morgan Stanleyâs long-term senior unsecured debt rating was reduced two grades to Baa1, and nine other firms received two-level cuts, Moodyâs said yesterday in a statement. Credit Suisseâs rating was cut three levels to A2 and Zurich- based UBS AG (UBSN), the other firm singled out for a potential three- level cut, was lowered two instead.
HSBC Holdings Plc (HSBA), Europeâs largest bank, was lowered one grade instead of two, while Barclays Plc (BARC) was lowered two steps. Edinburgh-based Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc (RBS) was lowered one step, as was London-based Lloyds Banking Group Plc (LLOY), Britainâs biggest mortgage lender.
âSignificant Exposureâ
âAll of the banks affected by todayâs actions have significant exposure to the volatility and risk of outsized losses inherent to capital-markets activities,â Greg Bauer, Moodyâs global banking managing director, said in the statement.
The 43-member Bloomberg Europe Banks and Financial Services Index erased earlier losses and rose 1 percent to 73.63 as of 12:22 p.m. in London trading. Barclays was up 0.5 percent at 203.25 pence, RBS gained 0.6 percent to 244.80 pence and Credit Suisse advanced 0.3 percent to 18.11 francs in Zurich.
Credit-default swaps tied to Morgan Stanley dropped 20 basis points after the announcement to a mid-price of 370 basis points, said market participants familiar with the trades. The contracts, which decline as investor confidence improves, reversed an earlier increase to as high as 400 basis points, according to prices compiled by data provider CMA. A basis point is 0.01 percentage point. Morgan Stanleyâs swaps are still 14 percent higher than they were on Feb. 15.
âForget Moodyâsâ
âTo downgrade a BofA or Citigroup or companies that are sitting on hundreds of billions of dollars of cash in government-backed securities makes no sense,â Richard Bove, an analyst at Rochdale Securities LLC, said in an interview on Bloomberg Radio and Televisionâs âBloomberg Surveillance.â
âYou can forget Moodyâs,â Bove said. âYou should have forgotten them a long time ago.â
The new A3 rating on Goldman Sachsâs senior debt is the lowest in the history of the New York-based firm. Unsecured long- and short-term borrowing accounted for 25 percent of the companyâs liabilities at the end of March, while deposits accounted for just 6 percent, the bankâs first-quarter financial statement shows.
Goldman Debt
Goldman Sachsâs $4.25 billion in senior unsecured debt that matures in January 2022 yields 5.19 percent, or 362 basis points more than similar-maturity U.S. government debt, according to Trace, the bond-price reporting system of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority.
In March, a month after announcing its review, Moodyâs cut Sydney-based Macquarie Group Ltd. (MQG) and Tokyo-based Nomura Holdings Inc. (8604) one level each. Nomura is the lowest rated of the 17 firms at Baa3, one grade above junk.
âMoodyâs is not going to detect some problem in advance and move a rating to warn the public,â said Ken Fisher, chief executive officer and founder of Woodside, California-based Fisher Investments, which has about $44 billion under management. âWhether itâs a stock or a bond, the free market already did that. Moodyâs goes along afterwards and effectively validates what the marketâs already done.â
While higher-rated banks such as JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM) and HSBC received credit for retail businesses that serve as âshock absorbersâ from the volatility of capital-markets-related units, Bank of America and Citigroupâs consumer divisions were âthinner or less reliableâ cushions, Moodyâs said.
BofA, Citigroup
Bank of America, which incurred more than $40 billion in mortgage and foreclosure costs since 2007, may face more losses on home loans, Moodyâs said. New York-based Citigroup is still trying to wind down more than $200 billion of unwanted assets.
Large U.S. banks had ratings of Baa1 or lower -- similar to BBB at Standard & Poorâs -- in the 1980s and early 1990s, said David Hendler, an analyst at CreditSights Inc. in New York. That era followed Latin Americaâs sovereign-debt defaults of the 1980s, which forced lenders to set aside funds to cover bad loans to countries there.
âItâs almost like theyâve come full circle back to triple- B,â Hendler said. âThe industry has been through a triple-B phase before, and they will come back from it.â
While bank stocks and bonds initially climbed yesterday, the downgrades may have longer-term effects on operations, forcing banks to post more collateral to trading partners in derivatives deals.
Derivatives Trading
Citigroup and Bank of America, as the lowest-graded firms after Nomura, may be at a disadvantage in businesses such as trading derivatives that arenât centrally cleared. That market provides about 15 percent of the industryâs trading revenue, Kinner Lakhani, a Citigroup analyst, wrote in an April 30 note. Both firms lost market share among the top nine banks in fixed- income trading last year, according to Bloomberg Industries.
âFor the banks that are in the BBB category, Iâm sure that will have a negative impact on their ratings sensitive businesses, like derivatives,â Anil Lalchand, a credit analyst at DoubleLine Capital LP in Los Angeles, which manages $35 billion, said in a telephone interview.
All the U.S. firms remained on negative outlook, which means their grades could be cut again, because government support may wane, Bob Young, managing director of North American banking for Moodyâs, said in an interview.
Morgan Stanley
Morgan Stanley, owner of the worldâs biggest brokerage, avoided the largest potential downgrade because of possible support from Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group Inc., according to Moodyâs. Morgan Stanley CEO James Gorman also cited his firmâs capital ratios in meetings with Moodyâs to convince the ratings company that a three-level cut wasnât deserved.
âManagement teams will always present as strong a case as they can,â Young said. âWe undertake a very thorough, very thoughtful, very deliberate analysis of each individual institution.â
The rating cuts underscore how much less creditworthy Moodyâs views global banks compared with smaller lenders. Minneapolis-based U.S. Bancorp, the fifth-largest U.S. bank by deposits, is still rated Aa3 by Moodyâs, five levels higher than Citigroup or Charlotte, North Carolina-based Bank of America.
Citigroup said in a statement that the downgrade was âarbitrary and completely unwarranted.â Morgan Stanley said its ratings donât reflect the actions it has taken to cut risk. Credit Suisse said it was pleased to remain among the top-rated large banks, while Bank of America said it has strengthened its capital and risk management.
Credit Suisse
âFunding for Credit Suisse shouldnât be a problem, said Thornburgâs Strickland. ââTheir short-term rating is still money-market eligible and their long-term rating is mid-tier A and as good as almost any bank.â
The reductions by Moodyâs are âa mea culpa from 2007 and 2008,â said James Leonard, a credit analyst in Chicago at Morningstar Inc. (MORN) âThe banks have gotten so much better in the last few years in terms of capital, yet their ratings keep going down. What does that tell you? That the ratings were so wrong before.â
To contact the reporters on this story: Dakin Campbell in San Francisco at dcampbell27@bloomberg.net; Michael J. Moore in New York at mmoore55@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Rick Green at rgreen18@bloomberg.net