Archive for the ‘Global Credit Quality’ Category

Europe’s Bank Says Financial Turmoil Largely Over

Wednesday, August 15th, 2007

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/08/15/business/worldbusiness/

15euro.html?ref=business

Published: August 15, 2007

FRANKFURT, Aug. 14 — The European Central Bank declared on Tuesday that recent financial market turmoil was largely over, a sign that the bank would probably proceed with a plan to increase borrowing costs in early September to curb inflation caused by a rising economy.

The liquidity problems in the last week, which central banks around the world smoothed over with large cash infusions, had led many investors to reassess whether the European Central Bank would tighten credit when it meets Sept. 6.

The president of the bank, Jean-Claude Trichet, said Tuesday in an unusual statement that “market conditions have gone progressively back to normal,” as private lenders were beginning to resume their normal routine of extending credit to worthy borrowers.

Mr. Trichet’s comments were made before markets in the United States fell sharply.

His statement highlighted how, within the European bank, decision makers saw no contradiction in supplying liquidity and then raising rates soon thereafter.

The first measure is short-term and largely technical, intended to strengthen trust among banks that had tightened their overnight lending to one another. But higher interest rates, while they tighten credit, work in the medium term to control inflation, the bank’s main priority.

Still, the bank has left itself an out. This month when Mr. Trichet first hinted at a September rate increase, he emphasized more than usual that the central bank would not “precommit” itself to a rate increase — least of all during uncertain times.

“It still depends on whether we return to stability in the markets,” Kenneth Wattret, chief euro-zone economist at BNP Paribas in London, said of the possibility of a September rate increase. “If we go back to a period of turmoil, it’s hard to believe they would raise.”

The European bank has lifted borrowing costs nine times since the end of 2005, to 4.25 percent. Higher interest rates have helped bolster the value of the euro, causing concern among politicians, mainly in France, that the central bank might be quashing a recovery.

Yet if the European bank abandons plans for lifting rates in September, it could fan concerns that it is privy to bad news not yet made public.

“If the bank now delays its rate increase,” said Kenneth Broux, an economist at Lloyds TSB in London, “it will create suspicions it knows something that the markets do not.”

Data released Tuesday showed that the pace of economic growth in the 13-nation euro zone slowed in the second quarter to 0.3 percent, about half the rate of the first quarter. France and Germany, the two largest euro members, registered 0.3 percent growth in the same period, less than economists had forecast, but in line with the central bank’s prognosis of steady growth that would allow it to raise its benchmark rate by a quarter-point.

Despite the slowing, Axel A. Weber, the president of the German Bundesbank, said that losses related to the collapse of the American subprime mortgage sector would be limited.

IKB Deutsche Industriebank, a small German bank, sent shudders through markets recently when a default gave rise to a government-engineered rescue. But Mr. Weber said other German financial institutions were sound.

“We have confirmed our impression that the increased risks in certain market segments are insulated and that the profit impact for credit institutions is limited over all,” Mr. Weber said. The recent problems at IKB are a one-time case, he said, specific to that institution.

Taken together, the statements by the Bundesbank and the central bank appeared to be a broad offensive aimed at closing the door on short-term concerns and easing the way for stability.

The European bank injected 7.7 billion euros ($10.4 billion) in one-day liquidity into the system Tuesday, a far smaller amount than the 94.8 billion euros it provided Thursday.

Mr. Weber’s statement was aimed at assuring markets that no more surprises along the lines of IKB were in the offing, since markets feared German lenders might be hiding greater losses.

Mark Landler contributed reporting.

Blankfein Apologizes for Goldman `Sell’ Rating on VTB

Wednesday, August 15th, 2007

Blankfein Apologizes for Goldman `Sell’ Rating on VTB (Update1)
By William Mauldin and Christine Harper

Aug. 14 (Bloomberg) — Goldman Sachs Group Inc. Chief Executive Officer Lloyd Blankfein apologized to VTB Group CEO Andrei Kostin for an analyst’s “sell” recommendation, a VTB spokesman said. Goldman helped underwrite the Russian bank’s initial public offering three months ago.

Jernej Omahen, a Goldman analyst in London, last week started coverage of VTB, saying in a note to clients that “we see better value elsewhere.” Blankfein told Kostin on a phone call he didn’t “share that point of view,” Sergei Kopytov, a spokesman for VTB in Moscow, said today, confirming a report in Kommersant newspaper.

The situation highlights the tension U.S. investment banks face wooing clients in developing markets while complying with regulations at home that compel them to publish independent research. Goldman, which lags behind competitors in Russia, is adding 25 bankers in Moscow this year to tap what it considers the country’s “huge potential.”

“It’s good to see that Goldman is allowing analysts to value companies independently, but in Russia research typically remains subservient to investment banking,” said James Beadle, a portfolio manager at Pilgrim Asset Management in Moscow who bought VTB shares in the IPO. “If Goldman is not prepared to support stocks post-IPO, there are plenty of other underwriters that will.”

Russian License

Blankfein said in June that the rapid growth of countries such as Russia means that “if you forgo the opportunities in emerging markets, you’re putting your global franchise at risk.” Goldman received a license for brokerage operations in Russia last year, joining Citigroup Inc. and Morgan Stanley in Moscow.

Goldman spokesman Lucas van Praag declined to comment on the conversation between Blankfein and Kostin.

Goldman in May helped manage state-run VTB’s $8 billion public offering, the world’s biggest IPO this year. The shares were sold for 13.6 kopeks apiece in Moscow and $10.56 per global depositary receipt in London.

Russians, who lost billions of dollars in multiple bank collapses and stock-market schemes in the 1990s, rushed to buy VTB stock in the so-called “people’s IPO.” President Vladimir Putin called the stock a “stable” investment during a news conference in February.

Omahen set a price estimate of $10.73 for the depositary receipts. The shares have since dropped from $10.50 to $9.62 in London, including a 1.5 percent decline today. Omahen’s recommendation hasn’t changed.

Independent Research

“The recommendation was about the attractiveness of investing in banks with ratings below VTB, which the analyst believed had considerable upside potential,” Goldman spokesman van Praag said. “Our research is completely independent of our advisory business.”

A message left at Omahen’s office after business hours wasn’t immediately returned, and an assistant who answered the phone said he’s not allowed to comment. Omahen didn’t reply to an e-mail seeking comment and no home number could be located.

Goldman was among the 10 firms that agreed in 2003, in a settlement with U.S. regulators, to erect barriers between research and investment banking after conflicts of interests tainted the securities industry.

To contact the reporters on this story: William Mauldin in Moscow at wmauldin1@bloomberg.net ; Christine Harper in New York at charper@bloomberg.net

Last Updated: August 14, 2007 18:48 EDT