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European banks, bonds, CDS sell off
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Deutsche Bank CDS rise to highest since late 2018
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Confidence hurt, outlook dims
(Updates closing CDS prices, quote)
By Chiara Elisei and Amanda Cooper
LONDON, March 24 (Reuters) - Confidence in European
banks deteriorated further on Friday, with the cost of insuring
against a debt default rising sharply as the profit outlook for
the sector dimmed.
Global banking shares and broader markets have been rocked
since the sudden collapse this month of two U.S. regional banks
and a forced merger between Credit Suisse and UBS .
Policymakers have stressed the turmoil is different from the
global financial crisis 15 years ago because banks are better
capitalised and funds more easily available.
But this has failed to stem a selloff in bank shares and
bonds, with rising funding costs in fixed income markets adding
to the banking sector's woes and clouding their profit outlook.
Deutsche Bank's five-year credit default swaps
(CDS) jumped 19 basis points (bps) from Thursday's close to 222
bps, rising to their highest since late 2018, data from S&P
Global Market Intelligence showed. They later eased back to 208
bps.
UBS's five-year CDS shot up 23 bps from Thursday's
close to 139 bps, S&P data showed, before retracing slightly to
135 bps. CDS prices move up when the default risk is seen to be
rising.
"We'll probably see regulators look to act to restore confidence because what we do know is that confidence is key to the whole concept of banking and it is hard to win and it's easy to lose," said Mark Dowding, chief investment officer at BlueBay Asset Management. In the United States, the support could mean guaranteeing more bank deposits, Dowding said.
European Union leaders and the ECB sought to calm market jitters by presenting a united front on the banking sector on Friday, saying EU lenders are well capitalised and liquid thanks to lessons drawn after the 2008 Lehman Brothers collapse.
Banking stocks fell sharply across Europe, with heavyweights Deutsche Bank and UBS hit hard. The prospect that interest rates may be close to peaking, as financial markets are signalling, would also curb banks' profit margins on lending. "It seems that today’s sell-off is largely triggered by fear than by fundamentals," said Joost Beaumont, head of bank research at ABN AMRO.
BOND WATCH European banks' Additional Tier 1 (AT1) debt came under fresh selling pressure, with Deutsche AT1 prices down 7 cents, according to Tradeweb data.
UBS and Barclays AT1s fell roughly 2.5 and 2.7 cents in price, respectively, Tradeweb data showed. The selloff in AT1s highlighted concerns about rising funding costs for European banks and helped explain why the sector was facing renewed pressure on Friday, analysts said. With AT1 bond yields sitting at 12%, far exceeding the return on equity, the AT1 market was no longer a "viable funding source" for banks, said Saxo's head of equity strategy Peter Garnry. The implication is that banks would potentially have to issue new shares to raise cash. "The banking crisis is far from over and the impact on credit conditions and the economy will likely be felt over the next six months," said Garnry. Federal Reserve chief Jerome Powell on Wednesday said banking industry stress could trigger a credit crunch with "significant" implications for the economy. Markets are also pricing in U.S. rate cuts and a chance of easing in the euro area by year-end -- moves that would also eat into banking margins.
AT1s meanwhile have been hurt since the Swiss regulator
ordered 16 billion Swiss francs ($17.5 billion) of Credit
Suisse's AT1 debt to be wiped out as part of its rescue takeover
by UBS last weekend.
Shareholders, who usually rank below debt investors when a
company becomes insolvent, will receive $3.23 billion.
Authorities in Europe and Asia said this week they would
continue to impose losses on shareholders before bondholders -
unlike the treatment of bondholders at Credit Suisse - but
unease has lingered.
(Reporting by Chiara Elisei and Amanda Cooper; Additional
reporting and writing by Dhara Ranasinghe; Editing by Susan
Fenton and Louise Heavens)