The next focusIR Investor Webinar takes places on 14th May with guest speakers from Blue Whale Growth Fund, Taseko Mines, Kavango Resources and CQS Natural Resources fund. Please register here.

Less Ads, More Data, More Tools Register for FREE

Pin to quick picksBarclays Share News (BARC)

Share Price Information for Barclays (BARC)

London Stock Exchange
Share Price is delayed by 15 minutes
Get Live Data
Share Price: 202.35
Bid: 202.15
Ask: 202.25
Change: 0.00 (0.00%)
Spread: 0.10 (0.049%)
Open: 0.00
High: 0.00
Low: 0.00
Prev. Close: 202.35
BARC Live PriceLast checked at -

Watchlists are a member only feature

Login to your account

Alerts are a premium feature

Login to your account

UK banks lining up to re-open AT1 market

Fri, 29th Jul 2016 15:35

By Will Caiger-Smith

NEW YORK, July 29 (IFR) - Several UK banks could reopen theAdditional Tier 1 capital market in the weeks ahead, asyield-starved investors find more to like in the risky assetclass.

AT1 issuance from European banks is down more than 50%year-to-date compared to 2015, and HSBC is the only UK bank tohave sold a deal in what has been a horrid year for the assetclass, pricing a US$2bn perpetual non-call five note at 6.875%in May.

But bankers say names including Standard Chartered, RoyalBank of Scotland and HSBC may have a chance in August to get newdeals over the line and shore up their capital buffers.

"There are a number of UK banks that have wanted to issueAT1 this year and have not been able to," one debt capitalmarkets banker focused on UK lenders told IFR.

"They have not much more than a week between [the end ofearnings] blackout and people going on holiday," the bankersaid.

"There is a window - and it has to be quite well timed."

HSBC and Standard Chartered report earnings on Wednesday,RBS on Friday.

The lenders are likely to benefit from strong demand inrecent weeks for higher yielding assets among US institutionalinvestors and Asian private banking clients.

"There has been a resurgence of demand for yield productsbecause of what central banks are doing," one syndicate bankersaid. "More investors globally are comfortable going down thecapital structure."

Supply in the sector has been scant since February, when AT1sold off sharply on worries that Deutsche Bank might have tosuspend payments on its AT1 debt.

US dollar-denominated UK bank AT1 paper traded out to anaverage yield of 10.93% at the height of the sell-off, accordingto data from MarketAxess.

There was also another burst of volatility in the sector inthe run-up to the UK referendum on whether or not to remain inthe European Union.

IMPROVED CONDITIONS

Yet AT1 prices have rallied overall - and marketparticipants say issuance conditions for the asset class are nowat their best since before February's sell-off.

While dollar-denominated UK bank AT1 yields were at 7.83% asof Wednesday, according to MarketAxess - more than 1.3% higherthan at the start of the year - buyers are clearly more positiveabout the asset class and on the outlook for UK banks.

Standard Chartered's outstanding US$2bn 6.50% perpetual thatis callable in 2020, for example, is trading at a yield-to-callof 8%, compared with 11% in the aftermath of the Brexit vote andnorth of 14% in mid-February.

RBS has a US$2bn 7.50% note, also callable in 2020, tradingat 8.39%, down from 11.5% post the referendum, while itsUS$1.15bn 8% bonds callable in 2025 are at 8.16%, about 160bplower than where they were on June 27.

Several recent deeply subordinated capital deals targetedtowards Asian private bank investors have shown buyers arereceptive to riskier instruments.

Zurich Insurance, Prudential and Da-ichi Mutual Life haveall sold capital paper in recent weeks, predominantly to suchinvestors.

If the UK banks do issue, they are likely to target thatdemand through a Reg S/144 A issue. "The Asian Reg S market hassprung back to life," said a bank capital structurer.

"It usually happens when the coupon is attractive comparedto other opportunities, or when private banks provide newleverage to investors to buy the paper."

To meet regulatory requirements, UK banks must hold at least2% of their risk-weighted assets in AT1 capital, which sitsabove common equity in the capital structure.

They are allowed to fill that buffer with cash and commonequity, but AT1 securities are generally cheaper to issue.

They are designed to absorb losses, with triggers for coupondeferral and permanent writedown or conversion to equity when abank's capital ratios become depleted.

HSBC said in its Q1 earnings call in May that it hadUS$10bn-$30bn of new debt and capital issuance to do to meet itscapital requirements by the 2019 deadline, but did not specifyhow much of that would be in AT1 format.

RBS has said it has an AT1 requirement of £4bn-£5bn. It madeheadway into that through those two dollar notes that raised anequivalent of £2bn. It has a target of £2bn of AT1 in 2016.

The issuance of AT1 securities is likely to become a moreimportant way of meeting those capital requirements as the UK'sdecision to leave the EU starts to bite into the economy, saidS&P analysts in a recent report.

"Economic uncertainty following the 'leave' result  couldslow banks' internal capital generation, making deleveraging andhybrid capital issuance the main drivers of future improvementsin the UK banks' capital positions," they wrote.

Lloyds Banking Group has already emerged as an early victimof the uncertainty around Brexit. It cut its forecast for a twopercentage point capital accumulation in 2016 to 1.6 points, dueto the exchange rate impact on assets. (Reporting by Will Caiger-Smith; Additional reporting by AliceGledhill and Tom Porter; Editing by Marc Carnegie, ShankarRamakrishnan and Sudip Roy)

More News
20 Feb 2024 16:52

LONDON MARKET CLOSE: Pound boosted after BoE's Bailey talks rate cuts

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London closed lower on Tuesday, whilst the pound bounced back, after the Bank of England's Andrew Bailey talked interest rate cuts.

Read more
20 Feb 2024 15:29

London close: Stocks finish lower on fresh China concerns

(Sharecast News) - London's stock markets closed in negative territory on Tuesday, with concerns over China's economic prospects exerting pressure on mining shares.

Read more
20 Feb 2024 11:57

LONDON MARKET MIDDAY: Banking stocks drag FTSE 100 into green

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London were mixed at midday Tuesday, after a busy morning of corporate updates and earnings.

Read more
20 Feb 2024 11:20

London midday: Stocks mixed after China makes bigger rate cut

(Sharecast News) - London's stocks were in a mixed state at midday on Tuesday, as concerns around China's economic outlook continued to weigh on mining stocks.

Read more
20 Feb 2024 08:52

LONDON MARKET OPEN: Stocks slide; banks rise as Barclays outperforms

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London opened in the red on Tuesday, as European markets failed to find upward momentum amid muted trading in Asia, and Monday's public holiday in the US.

Read more
20 Feb 2024 08:19

TOP NEWS: Barclays eyes GBP2 billion cost cuts and promises returns

(Alliance News) - Barclays PLC on Tuesday announced an efficiency drive, a new divisional reporting line-up and a plan to return GBP10 billion to shareholders over the next three years.

Read more
20 Feb 2024 07:47

LONDON BRIEFING: Barclays announces GBP1b buyback as 2023 profit falls

(Alliance News) - Stocks in London are called lower on Tuesday, following a US holiday, and a mixed performance in Asian markets.

Read more
20 Feb 2024 07:01

Barclays unveils massive overhaul as profits fall 6%

(Sharecast News) - Barclays Bank unveiled a swathe of changes on Tuesday, including a structural overhaul of operations, £2bn in cost cuts and a massive increase in shareholder payouts as annual earnings fell by 6%.

Read more
19 Feb 2024 16:10

Tuesday preview: China rate decision, Barclays in focus

(Sharecast News) - Investors' focus on Tuesday will be on the People's Bank of China's interest rate decision overnight.

Read more
18 Feb 2024 23:26

Sunday newspaper round-up: Currys, Barclays, Homebuilders

(Sharecast News) - China's JD.com has been looking at a possible acquisition offer for Currys. Just the day before the electricals retailer had rebuffed an approach by private equity. Exploratory talks between Currys and JD had been held over the preceding weeks. Additional bidders may appear. It was understood that Currys had been contacted by multiple private equity firms on an informal basis over recent months after it was forced to cut its dividend payout. It was but the latest example of a British business being taken out and for some showed that British businesses were being chronically undervalued. - Sunday Telegraph

Read more
16 Feb 2024 12:07

LONDON MARKET MIDDAY: Stocks up as UK retail sales soften GDP jitters

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London were up strongly at midday on Friday, buoyed by UK retail sales data that came in far better than expected and soothed worries about the economy after numbers on Thursday showed it entered recession last year.

Read more
16 Feb 2024 08:41

LONDON MARKET OPEN: Stocks climb amid UK retail sales surprise

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London opened higher on Friday morning, after a sentiment-boosting UK retail sales reading which calmed some nerves about the economy.

Read more
15 Feb 2024 11:59

REPEAT: Barclays bids to buy SocGen's UK private bank - Reuters

(Alliance News) - Barclays PLC is considering bidding to buy the UK private bank of France's Societe Generale SA, Reuters reported on Thursday.

Read more
15 Feb 2024 10:37

PRESS: Barclays bids to buy SogGen's UK private bank - Reuters

(Alliance News) - Barclays PLC is considering bidding to buy the UK private bank of France's Societe Generale SA, Reuters reported on Thursday.

Read more
15 Feb 2024 07:24

Barclays eyes SocGen's UK private bank - report

(Sharecast News) - Barclays is considering bidding for Societe Generale's UK private bank, it was reported on Thursday.

Read more

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.

Quickpicks are a member only feature

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.