Bank Stress Test Results
Only one of the 19 financial institutions that received a bank stress test would
require additional capital, the controversial government initiative has reportedly concluded.
The identity of the bank that is alleged to have failed the
bank stress test was not revealed.
The bank-stress-test findings were reported yesterday (Sunday) by
CNBC.com, which said it
obtained the information from a source that it did not identify. The source did not identify the company,
CNBC.com reported.
“At least one firm – under the [bank] stress test assumptions – will require more
capital,” the source said.
The bank-stress-test results were contained in a two-dozen-page report that the
government released Friday. But the results had already been “conveyed” to the firms, meaning the bank in question
is aware of the U.S. central bank’s assessment, according to the published report.
This round of bank stress tests was essentially a two-step process. The first step –
outlining how the banks have been analyzed – was taken care of with the report released over the weekend. The
second step – releasing the results to the public – will be taken care of when the actual results are released May
4, which is one week from today (Monday).
Neither the U.S. Federal Reserve nor the U.S. Treasury Department would
comment.
The bank stress tests have a very specific purpose. Financial institutions that are
found to have inadequate capital will have six months to raise the money via the private sector. If that doesn’t
work, the government has said the financial institutions will be eligible for an infusion of capital via the
federal government’s so-called “Capital Access Program.”
U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner said he would be open to banks repaying
their Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) loans, as long as the availability of credit (borrowing) was not
adversely affected. As a Money
Morning special report detailed last week, the credit
markets don’t seem to be loosening up: Lending dropped by more than 20% from October 2008 to February 2009, despite
initiatives to encourage such activity.
According to the conclusion of the report released over the weekend, “most banks
currently have capital levels well in excess of the amounts needed to be well capitalized.”
However, as Money
Morning has reported, the tests have become a “no-win”
situation for the Obama administration.
“There are two things that are terribly wrong,” William M. Isaac, the Secura Group chairman who
served as head of the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corp. (FDIC) from 1981 to 1985, told
CNBC.com. The first
problem – and a big one – is the fact that the details were announced at all.
“I can't imagine what Treasury was thinking when it made that move. It has been
causing incredible angst in the markets,” said Isaac. “The second big problem is that the Treasury is directing the
stress testing, apparently with direct involvement of the White House at the highest levels. Bank regulation by law
is supposed to be carried out by the independent banking agencies without any political interference.”
Market Matters
As Money
Morning reported Friday – in a Wall Street version of the
old “he said/(s)he said” drama, Bank of
America Corp. (BAC) Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Kenneth Lewis claimed that ex-U.S. Treasury Secretary
Henry M. “Hank” Paulson Jr. and central bank Chairman Ben S. Bernanke threatened to remove him from office if
he backed out of the Merrill Lynch & Co. Inc.
(SQD) merger or (publicly) discussed the mounting
losses.
Paulson had previously testified that Lewis must have misinterpreted their
comments, but then seemed to blame Bernanke for the threat (Translation: Paulson tried to throw Bernanke “under the
bus.”).
New York Attorney General Andrew M. Cuomo has been investigating the
activities surrounding the merger to determine why shareholders were kept in the dark about the financial
“challenges.”
Shifting to autos, Italy’s Fiat
SpA (OTC ADR FIATY) emerged as a potential major global player as it attempts to forge a partnership with
(soon-to-be-bankrupt?) Chrysler LLC, and also has interest in buying General Motors
Corp.’s (GM) Opel unit. Meanwhile, GM will be closing 13
production plants over the summer to trim inventory and seems likely to miss a $1 billion debt payment due June 1
as it too moves closer to bankruptcy protection.
How bad is GM’s plight: GM may close its Pontiac division after 82 years of
operation, The Wall Street
Journal and MarketWatch.com reported over the
weekend.
While the earnings news of the week found plenty of winners and losers, ultimately
analysts perceived a bit of “cautious optimism.” Bank of
America and Morgan
Stanley (MS) failed to live up to the favorable showings
by Wells Fargo & Co. (WFC) and other financials, though techs like Texas
Instruments Inc. (TXN), Apple Inc. (AAPL) and
International Business Machines Corp. (IBM), beat Wall Street expectations, and brought new hope that the downturn was nearing an
end.
Unfortunately, Microsoft Corp.
(MSFT) posted the first quarterly revenue decline in its 23-year
history, though investors still cheered its ability to reduce costs during these challenging times for PC
sales. McDonald’s Corp. (MCD), AT&T Inc. (T), and Ford Motor Co.
(F) were among the diverse group of companies reporting
better-than-expected results, while United Parcel Service Inc.
(UPS), Caterpillar
Inc. (CAT), and Continental Airlines Inc.
(CAL) issued disappointing numbers.
Amazon.com Inc.
(AMZN), bucked the negative trend facing many retailers and
posted higher quarterly earnings and revenue.
Additionally, U.S. retailers J.C.
Penney Co. Inc. (JCP) and Coach Inc.
(COH) each expressed positive sentiment that sales activity seems
to picking up. Oracle Corp. (ORCL) snapped up Sun
Microsystems Inc.
(JAVA) for $7.4 billion after IBM chose to pass, and
PepsiCo Inc. (PEP) is
attempting to purchase two related bottling companies as corporate execs seek favorable deals in this
environment. Such merger-and-acquisition (M&A) transactions often signal boardroom confidence and
also indicate that the “worst” part of a downturn may be over.
Oil prices surged above the $51-a-barrel level late in the week as traders
overlooked the higher inventory levels and instead focused on some favorable signs that the economy may be closing
in on turnaround mode.
With a six-week winning streak on the line, investors offered their best “clutch
hitting” late Friday, pushing all major indexes to higher levels. Early in the week, after investors digested
negative news from the likes of Bank of America and GM, prognosticators said the weekly stock-market winning streak
was all but over. However, some better-than-expected earnings and economic reports brought out the “bulls” for one
final run. The Nasdaq Composite Index ended the week in positive territory, and the other equity indexes were virtually flat from
last week’s closing levels (with the Dow Jones Industrial
Average suffering a slight decline).
Market/
Index |
Year
Close (2008) |
Quarter Close (03/31/09) |
Previous Week (04/17/09) |
Current Week (04/24/09) |
YTD Change |
Dow
Jones
Indust. |
8,776.39 |
7,608.92 |
8,131.33 |
8,076.29 |
-7.98% |
| NASDAQ |
1,577.03 |
1,528.59 |
1,673.07 |
1,694.29 |
+7.44% |
| S&P 500 |
903.25 |
797.87 |
869.60 |
866.23 |
-4.10% |
Russell
2000 |
499.45 |
422.75 |
479.37 |
478.74 |
-4.15% |
Fed
Funds |
0.25% |
0.25% |
0.25% |
0.25% |
0 bps |
10 yr.
Treasury
(Yield) |
2.24% |
2.68% |
2.93% |
3.00% |
+76 bps |
Economically Speaking
According to the International Monetary
Fund (IMF), the global downturn will be far worse than previously
expected. For 2009, the IMF expects the world economy to contract by 1.3%, its first such decline in 60-years, with
over 10 million employees losing their jobs. Unfortunately, its projections for the United States are even more
dire (-2.8% for the year), with domestic financial institutions suffering $2.7 trillion in losses, almost twice the
IMF’s prior estimates from just six months ago.
While much of the economic data of the week confirmed the IMF’s weak projection,
analysts found a few positive signs that the downturn very well may have bottomed out. While both new home sales
and durable goods orders declined in March, the results beat the weaker Street expectations and came in the
aftermath of some (relatively) strong February numbers.
In another promising sign of stability within the housing sector, the median price
of an existing home sold in March actually rose for the second straight month. Still, the record unemployment
filings last week revealed the ongoing difficulties facing job seekers amid these tight labor conditions. Likewise,
leading economic indicators, a predictive report, dropped for the third consecutive month and many economists
expect the recession to last at least until late third quarter.
Weekly Economic Calendar
| Date |
Release |
Comments |
| April 20 |
Leading Indicators
(03 / 09) |
3rd consecutive
monthly decline |
| April 23 |
Initial Jobless Claims
(04 /18 / 09) |
Highest level of total
claims ever reported |
|
Existing Home Sales
(03 / 09) |
Larger than expected
decline in resales |
| April 24 |
Durable Goods Orders
(03 / 09) |
Larger than anticipated
fall in orders |
|
New Home Sales
(03 / 09) |
Drop in sales though
better than expected
results |
|