A bit OT but a follow up on our previous discussion and how capital flows can affect banks, even Chinese banks. the connection is complex but it can be foreseen.
Nov. 27 (Bloomberg) -- Russia’s biggest state-run banks are
seeing profits plunge, forcing some to seek government help,
after the U.S. and European Union slapped them with sanctions
over the conflict in Ukraine.
A drop in earnings led VTB Group, Russia’s second-largest
bank, to eliminate more than a third of its staff in Europe and
seek state support to replenish capital. OAO Gazprombank, the
nation’s third-largest lender, and Russian Agricultural Bank,
are also seeking government aid. OAO Sberbank, the largest,
yesterday cut its profitability forecast for 2014.
The conflict is saddling Russian banks with widening losses
in Ukraine, even as the sanctions restrict their access to
international capital markets. Sputtering economic growth at
home looks set to push up loan losses in Russia, further eroding
capital and profitability.
“Russian banking is moving slowly along the crisis path
with all classic aspects of capital, funding, asset quality and
liquidity feeling the stress as we go,” David Nangle, head of
research at Renaissance Capital, wrote in a note to clients.
“The main risk we see is on the longevity of sanctions and
specifically closed funding markets.”
Sberbank reported a 25 percent decline in third-quarter
profit after setting aside 104.5 billion rubles ($2.2 billion)
for doubtful loans, more than double the amount in the same
period of 2013. The bank, run by President Vladimir Putin’s
former economy minister, Herman Gref, said return on equity, a
measure of profitability, will be 15 percent this year, below
its previous forecast of 20 percent.
Ukraine Loan
Risks tied to Ukraine are hurting the three largest state-
controlled banks the most, a report from Standard & Poor’s said.
Their combined operating income will be reduced by about 420
billion rubles this year, or 25 percent, because of events in
Ukraine, analyst Sergey Voronenko estimated.
Sberbank expects to continue boosting corporate loan
provisions on Ukraine in the fourth quarter, Senior Vice
President Anton Karamzin said yesterday on a conference call.
Putin has asked why the U.S. and European Union are
limiting Russian banks’ access to global capital markets if
their aim is to help Ukraine.
“Russian banks have currently extended a $25 billion loan
to the Ukrainian economy,” Putin, 62, said in an interview with
German TV ARD earlier this month. “Do they want to bankrupt our
banks? In that case they will bankrupt Ukraine.”
VTB, which converted a more than 200 billion-ruble
subordinated loan from the government into preferred shares to
boost capital, asked for additional state support of 250 billion
rubles, Finance Minister Anton Siluanov said last week.
Curbing Lending
The Moscow-based lender, which posted a 90 percent slump in
third-quarter profit, eliminated more than 600 positions in
Europe in the three-month period and said it may review its
strategy. Losses related to Ukraine reached 14.4 billion rubles
in the quarter, Chief Financial Officer Herbert Moos said.
Banks will have to curb growth or turn to the state for
additional funding after the sanctions shut them out of foreign
capital markets, said Nadezhda Bozhenko, a fixed-income analyst
at UralSib Capital.
“Gazprombank needs to contain their loan-book growth or
rely on the government,” Bozhenko said by phone. “The state
has offered to convert existing loans into preference shares,
but the terms aren’t clear and it may be very expensive.”
Natalia Yalovskaya, a director of financial institution
ratings at S&P, said Gazprombank will “sooner or later”
convert its loans to increase capital. The lender’s press
service didn’t return calls or e-mails seeking comment.
Retail lending growth slowed to a 16.6 percent annual pace
in October from 18 percent in September, data published on the
central bank’s website show. Corporate lending growth
accelerated marginally to 13.4 percent in October.
Banks Stretched
“The financial system is going to be under a lot of
pressure in coming months,” Matias Pino, an emerging markets
analyst at GoldenTree Asset Management, which sold its holdings
in Russian banks’ bonds months ago, said in e-mailed comments.
“Bad loans, a slowdown in consumer demand for credit and a
need to support Russian companies with limited access to foreign
capital is stretching the banks,” Pino said. “Not to mention
the run on foreign currency and the devaluation effect on
inflation, which should lead to an increase in local rates.”
Sberbank raised its forecast for corporate loan growth in
2014 to more than 20 percent from between 12 percent and 14
percent, as more companies turn to state-run banks for funding.
Russia’s ruble has depreciated about 30 percent this year
against the dollar, the worst performance after Ukraine’s
hryvnia among about 170 global currencies tracked by Bloomberg.
The seven-company Micex financial index has tumbled 28
percent this year, compared with a 2.2 percent gain for the
wider 50-stock benchmark Micex index. Sberbank tumbled 27
percent and VTB dropped 4.9 percent.
‘Grim’ Prospects
Banks unaffected by sanctions have been able to tap capital
markets this month. Alfa Bank, Russia’s largest privately-owned
lender, raised $250 million by selling a subordinated bond
yielding 9.5 percent on Nov. 13. Promsyvazbank got a $120
million syndicated loan on Nov. 17, five days after Bank
Otkritie Financial Corp. borrowed a similar amount, according to
data compiled by Bloomberg.
Russia’s economy is set to expand 0.3 percent this year and
stagnate in 2015, according to the central bank’s main outlook,
which assumes oil prices will average $95 a barrel next year and
sanctions will stay in place through 2017.
Russia, the world’s largest energy exporter, has also had
to contend with a 31 percent slide in the price of crude oil
since June, leaving it on the brink of recession. Brent crude
oil futures fell as low as $77.30 a barrel in London yesterday.
“We see the macro prospects as relatively grim even in our
base-case scenario,” Natalia Berezina, a banking analyst at
UralSib Financial Corp., said by phone. “There are also
increasing risks that our more negative scenario of economic
recession could materialize. In this scenario, all banking
stocks would be much overvalued at the current levels.”
(08-10-2014, 05:22 PM)specuvestor Wrote: (08-10-2014, 04:57 PM)freedom Wrote: The problem in Argentina and Russia has no bearing on China. The economic structure and dynamic is so different. Sorry that you have to expand further on Russia devaluing its currency as I don't see anything related to banks yet. If you are talking about how bad the economy in Argentina and Russia, there are too many causes which does not relate to the banks there.
Your question was: "What reserves has to do with the solvency of the mega banks in China?"
Banks being part of the local financial system and global payment system will be affected when there is a cash crunch. Whenever there is a financial crisis the banks get hit first as their interest rate and asset/liablity gets mismatched by the volatility and the underlying counterparty risk increases, their leverage and dependence of capital markets exacerbates their problem.
http://www.valuebuddies.com/thread-5237-...l#pid96247
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