The latest Investing Matters Podcast with Jean Roche, Co-Manager of Schroder UK Mid Cap Investment Trust has just been released. Listen here.

Less Ads, More Data, More Tools Register for FREE

Pin to quick picksHSBC Holdings Share News (HSBA)

Share Price Information for HSBC Holdings (HSBA)

London Stock Exchange
Share Price is delayed by 15 minutes
Get Live Data
Share Price: 691.40
Bid: 675.70
Ask: 705.00
Change: 0.00 (0.00%)
Spread: 29.30 (4.336%)
Open: 0.00
High: 0.00
Low: 0.00
Prev. Close: 691.40
HSBA Live PriceLast checked at -

Watchlists are a member only feature

Login to your account

Alerts are a premium feature

Login to your account

French banks, pariahs no more, face new market test

Tue, 03rd Sep 2013 11:27

* Some investors positive re steps on eurozone, capital

* Uncertainty remains on business model, strategy

* Brainy "French touch" no longer a competitive edge

* Relatively benign regulator offers advantage

By Lionel Laurent

PARIS, Sept 3 (Reuters) - French banks, their metamorphosisfrom battered euro-crisis victims to European outperformerscomplete, now risk being outgunned as rivals take more radicalsteps to drive profits and deal with rules on capital.

Shunned as pariahs two years ago for their exposure totrouble spots such as Greece and Italy, French bank stocks havebeen the picks of Europe over the past year, outperforming thesector by around 30 percent after shedding risky assetsand boosting their capital defenses.

There may still be some share price upside left, someinvestors say, as the banks launch fresh plans to cut costs andas the eurozone hauls itself out of recession. But anyenthusiasm is tempered by concerns the French banks have yet tocarve out a competitive niche that can withstand increasedregulation and market jitters linked to higher interest rates.

"The Greek problem has been taken care of (and) exposure toItalian debt has been cut across the board," said FredericRozier, a fund manager at Meeschaert Gestion in Paris.

"The French banks have realigned themselves ... But withinterest rates on the rise, a potential property correctionahead and mounting regulation, there is still a question markover the business model to choose."

RADICAL CHANGE

Over the past 18 months, BNP Paribas, SocieteGenerale and Credit Agricole have cut acombined 100 billion euros ($131.9 billion) in assets from theirrisk-adjusted balance sheets.

But even as they broadly cut risk, the French - helped by aresilient home market and an accommodating regulator - haveavoided radical change of the sort carried out at the likes ofRoyal Bank of Scotland and UBS, who haveexited business lines and adapted to post-crisis conditionsunder pressure from regulators and investors.

The result is that French banks have stayed conservative ontheir outlook. While UBS and HSBC are targeting returnson equity of up to 17 percent and 15 percent respectively by2015, SocGen is eyeing 10 percent within the same timeframe. BNPhas declined to even set a profit target until next year.

"The French banks will soon have to start looking for growthlevers now that they are on the path to normalization," saidYannick Naud, portfolio manager at Glendevon King in London.

BNP and SocGen are talking up their geographic footprint:the former is seeking to expand in the United States, Germanyand Asia, while the latter is trumpeting its exposure tonon-euro economies like Russia and eastern Europe.

But some say that despite pockets of strength in equityderivatives and euro bonds, these banks lack a competitive edge.

"We don't think SocGen has a business model that isprofitable enough or differentiates itself enough," saidEspirito Santo banks analyst Shailesh Raikundlia. "As for BNP,which seems to be focused on growing the business ... I'm notsure the market is looking for banks to expand."

WHIZZ KIDS

Part of what used to set French lenders apart before thefinancial crisis was their access to pools of talent from thenation's elite engineering academies, who found they could makemore money building complex financial options and structuredproducts than making bridges and trains.

But over the past five years, the "French touch" has becomemore synonymous with market failures than lucrative equations:Jerome Kerviel's rogue trades at SocGen, Fabrice Tourre'sconviction for mortgage fraud at Goldman Sachs and BrunoIksil's alleged "London Whale" losses at JPMorgan Chase.

French banks themselves have become more risk-averse,shuttering proprietary trading desks and focusing instead onsleepy but cash-rich retail banking to boost profits. While thishas helped cushion losses from whipsawing financial markets,retail is now stagnating and branches are being shut.

"(SocGen's) line is radically different from what it used tobe ... The days when SocGen was the most aggressive in corporateand investment banking are over," said Bruno Bernstein, fundmanager at Keren Finance in Paris.

"What used to set the French banks apart was the maths-whizside, that ability to structure complex products," Bernsteinadded. "I don't see any appetite today from private orhigh-net-worth clients for that sort of thing."

Despite the recent run-up in their share price, French banksare still valued only broadly in line with the sector, withprice-to-tangible-asset ratios of between 0.6 to 0.8 versus aEuropean sector average of around 0.7.

RELAXED REGULATOR

French banks have also benefited from their regulator'srelatively flexible approach to capital and leverage.

Unlike whip-cracking watchdogs in Britain and Switzerland,France's ACPR has publicly opposed going beyond minimum capitalrules for its own banks and was seen as instrumental in wateringdown the government's bank-reform law last year.

While Britain's regulator has put banks under pressure tomeet new rules on leverage, prompting Barclays toannounce a 5.8 billion pounds ($9 billion) rights issue, theACPR has publicly slammed analyst reports that say CreditAgricole and SocGen face capital holes.

"French banks have reached or are not far from reaching theleverage ratio ... They should be able to avoid the scenario ofhaving to raise capital," top ACPR official Frederic Visnovskytold newspaper Les Echos in August.

Such a stance is good news for French banks, argues EspiritoSanto's Raikundlia. "You can see why the French banks arehappy," he said. "There is a very low risk of the Frenchregulator asking banks to raise capital."

But there is a question over whether the regulatory approachwill stay the same when the European Central Bank takes overdirect supervision of the bloc's top banks late next year.

In the meantime, French lenders run the risk of falling intocomplacency - until the market next tests them.

And with the U.S. Federal Reserve already signalling the eraof ultra-cheap cash may be coming to an end, some investorsbelieve now is the time for the French banks to make tougherdecisions on hiving off business lines and refocusing on lesscapital-intensive operations to appease market concerns.

"Banks have been basically getting their main commodity forfree," said Meeschaert's Rozier. "Choices will have to be made."

More News
9 Apr 2024 08:52

TOP NEWS: HSBC to take USD1 billion loss on sale of Argentina business

(Alliance News) - HSBC Holdings PLC on Tuesday said it will sell its business in Argentina to Grupo Financiero Galicia SA, which it called the largest private financial group in the South American country.

Read more
9 Apr 2024 08:44

LONDON MARKET OPEN: Stocks shaky ahead of US CPI data, ECB decision

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London opened mostly lower on Tuesday, as investors look ahead to a key inflation reading from the US, as well as the latest interest rate decision from the European Central Bank.

Read more
9 Apr 2024 08:37

HSBC takes $1 bln hit from Argentina sale as Asia pivot continues

Grupo Financiero Galicia to buy the business for $550 mln

*

Read more
9 Apr 2024 07:39

LONDON BRIEFING: HSBC sells Argentinian arm for USD550 million

(Alliance News) - Stocks in London are called to open lower on Tuesday, as investors nervously look ahead to US inflation data and the European Central Bank's latest interest rate decision.

Read more
9 Apr 2024 07:05

HSBC to take $1bn hit from Argentina unit sale

(Sharecast News) - HSBC Holdings on Tuesday said it was selling its Argentina business to Grupo Financiero Galicia for $550m and take a $1bn pre-tax loss in the process as it continued to pivot its operations towards Asia.

Read more
8 Apr 2024 19:45

West Virginia treasurer adds four finance firms to ESG blacklist

NEW YORK, April 8 (Reuters) - West Virginia added four financial firms on Monday to a list of institutions that may be barred from some state business because the state's treasurer deems they are boycotting the fossil fuel industry.

Read more
8 Apr 2024 07:00

HSBC targets wealthy expats, bullish Asian firms to drive Europe unit, exec says

Managers focused on growth after complex transformation

*

Read more
5 Apr 2024 07:29

Spain's Berge drops plans to list its Astara unit this year

MADRID, April 5 (Reuters) - Spanish privately owned logistics group Berge has dropped plans to list shares in its automotive unit Astara as market conditions are not the most appropriate for a flotation, the company said late Thursday.

Read more
3 Apr 2024 16:07

London close: Stocks reverse losses to finish slightly higher

(Sharecast News) - London markets saw modest gains by the close on Wednesday, following Wall Street higher in afternoon trading.

Read more
3 Apr 2024 13:19

Morgan Stanley commits to Canary Wharf home until at least 2038

LONDON, April 3 (Reuters) - Morgan Stanley's UK arm has extended a lease on its 547,000 square foot European headquarters in London's Canary Wharf to 2038, committing to the Docklands financial hub even as rivals relocate in search of smaller offices.

Read more
2 Apr 2024 17:28

London stocks dip in global risk off mood; commodity-linked stocks jump

FTSE 100 down 0.2%, FTSE 250 adds 0.9%

*

Read more
2 Apr 2024 15:22

London close: Stocks turn red on return from Easter break

(Sharecast News) - UK stocks experienced a downturn by the end of trading on Tuesday, as investors resumed activity following the extended weekend, with initial gains reversed by the close ahead of a week marked by a number of key economic data releases.

Read more
2 Apr 2024 11:50

LONDON MARKET MIDDAY: FTSE 100 buoyed by UK manufacturing growth

(Alliance News) - The FTSE 100 in London was up at midday on Tuesday, reacting to the UK manufacturing sector returning growth and further PMI data across the globe.

Read more
2 Apr 2024 09:09

LONDON MARKET OPEN: FTSE 100 up as oil majors and gold miners shine

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London opened higher on Tuesday, in confident trade following the long Easter weekend, ahead of a UK manufacturing sector reading later in the morning.

Read more
2 Apr 2024 08:44

TOP NEWS: HSBC to pay special dividend after completing Canadian sale

(Alliance News) - HSBC Holdings PLC on Tuesday said it would pay shareholders a special dividend after completing the sale of its Canadian business.

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.