Showing posts with label raise capital privately. Show all posts
Showing posts with label raise capital privately. Show all posts

Monday, April 20, 2009

banks acknowledging that "self-help" is a preferable option to taxpayer cash and selling non-core assets may be the best route to take.

TO BE NOTED:From the NY Times:

"
U.B.S. Sells Brazilian Unit as Banks Step Up Disposals

ZURICH/LONDON, April 20 (Reuters) - Two European banks on Monday stepped up efforts to raise capital privately and reduce their reliance on state funding.

Switzerland's UBS AG agreed to sell its Brazilian business for about $2.5 billion while Allied Irish Banks pledged to raise $2 billion possibly through disposals.

Recent asset sales by Britain's Barclays (NYSE:BCS) and Royal Bank of Scotland showed a reluctance to sell assets at low prices may have shifted, with banks acknowledging that "self-help" is a preferable option to taxpayer cash and selling non-core assets may be the best route to take.

UBS said on Monday it was selling Brazilian arm Banco Pactual back to its original owners just three years after buying it. It will make a small loss, but lift its tier 1 capital ratio by about 0.6 percentage points.

UBS surprised investors when its capital ratio fell to 10 percent from 11 percent in just three months, at a time when all lenders are being encouraged to build up a bigger capital cushion to prepare for rising bad debts.

"We consider this operation neutral as it is attacking the most urgent problem (low tier 1 ratio) but on the other hand a leading position in an important market has to be given up," said Georg Kanders, analyst at WestLB.

That dilemma faces many banks. Dozens of lenders in Europe and the United States have been shored up with rescue funds from governments, but many are keen to limit their reliance on the state and selling profitable units is the most realistic alternative.

Barclays this month sold its fast-growing iShares (NYSE:TUR) (NYSE:THD) (NYSE:EIS) (NYSE:SCJ) (NYSE:ECH) (NYSE:BKF) (NYSE:AIA) (NYSE:EWZ) asset management business for $4.4 billion to bring in a net gain of over $2 billion.

RBS last week sold half of a Spanish insurance joint venture for $560 million as the part-nationalised bank pulls back to its core markets and cuts risk.

RBS is also set to sell assets in Asia, and rivals including Lloyds Banking Group and ING are expected to sell non-core businesses, bankers reckon.

UBS, one of the European banks hit hardest by the credit crisis, said its Brazilian sale was part of its strategy to reduce its risk profile and strengthen its balance sheet.

Activist investor and former UBS chief executive Luqman Arnold called last year for UBS to sell the highly profitable Brazilian investment bank to help the Swiss bank return to profitability and rebuild its brand.

By 0920 GMT UBS shares were up 0.6 percent at 14.05 Swiss francs, outperforming a 2.7 percent fall by the DJ Stoxx European bank sector, which has surged over 80 percent since early March.

AIB ASSET SALE

Allied Irish Banks, Ireland's largest bank by market value, plans to raise 1.5 billion euros of core tier 1 capital by the end of this year to supplement a 3.5 billion euro state injection, it said on Monday.

It said the extra capital could come from the sale of assets, in a move seen by analysts as preventing a slide towards nationalisation. The Irish government took control of rival Anglo Irish Bank in January.

AIB said the state injection had turned out to be insufficient to end public uncertainty about its capital adequacy.

Also on Monday, Norway's largest bank DnB NOR said it might tap state financing to help it reach its core capital ratio target but only if the terms were attractive and existing shareholders not penalised.

An improved mood across the bank sector was underpinned by better-than-expected results last week from Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS) , JPMorgan Chase (NYSE:JPM) and Citigroup. (NYSE:C) Bank of America is tasked with maintaining that tone when it reports later on Monday.

Analysts remain wary that an improved first quarter will be sustained, although optimism has built that the global economy has turned a corner, sending world stocks on a six-week climb.

U.S. President Barack Obama warned of more pain ahead and European Central Bank chief Jean-Claude Trichet said it was dangerous to read too much into recent data suggesting signs of life in major economies.

Greater stability could encourage some bargain hunters to be on prowl.

Libyan Foreign Bank said on Monday it planned to raise its capital 10-fold to $10 billion to finance expansion in Europe and Africa."