
NYSE:BCS
Largely speaking, European equities and banks look interesting, but he would probably avoid some of the UK banks. The chart shows this flat lining, a lot of uncertainty surrounding this name in terms of what will happen with BREXIT. If you own, you might want to hold it for a little bit longer, but he wouldn’t add at this point.
Lloyds (LLOY-LN) and/or Barclays (BCS-N)? Some of the European banks will generally follow the US banks up a couple of years later. When the US went into Armageddon, they lowered rates and exported capital, and that caused rates globally to go down. The Europeans with the UK raised rates within a year. So, he thinks this will be the same, but if the US starts to raise rates aggressively, that could speed up the process where higher interest rates in Europe make sense. This one has a little more international exposure. He would consider looking at Banco Santander (SAN-N), which survived relatively well during the crisis.
A lot of European banks are suffering between regulatory problems and the US. They never really repaired themselves post the financial crisis, unlike the US banks. He would tread carefully. On the whole, with 1 or 2 exceptions, he prefers US banks. They have gotten rid of all their regulatory issues a long time ago. (See Top Picks.)
The difficulty with buying things before BREXIT is that you were buying it with a pound that was at its highest level in 18 months. It is up 15% post BREXIT because 75% of its revenues are from outside the UK, and it benefits from the weaker pound. However, the banks are really not a place you want to be if the UK housing market starts to pull back.
A UK based bank, and is being caught up in all the problems in Europe, especially in the downdraft that happened last month with Deutsche Bank. This bank is going through a lot of restructuring, and at some point will stabilize itself. They need to decide whether they want to be an investment bank or not. He would rather wait until that is over.
Primarily a UK retail bank with credit card businesses and wealth management and a global investment bank. Feels the global investment bank, especially on the fixed income side, which was their primary business before they bought Lehman Brothers, is having a really difficult time and they’ve had to cut back on that. It has taken away from the earnings on the retail side. The bank is restructuring and he felt the banking industry was getting a little bit more difficult, so he sold his position. Trading well below BV.
(A Top Pick Oct 30/14. Up 1.67%.) Got rid of their CEO and brought in a new one. Returns have been very low and the stock price is very poor. Have some really great assets including a great retail business in the UK, a great card business, a good African banking business and a great investment banking business, which is using a lot of their capital and they had to downsize it.
(A Top Pick Aug 14/14. Up 14.95%.) People disliked the stock, but they have some very important franchises. A great retail bank in the UK, good presence in Africa, great credit card business and a reasonable asset management business. They bought Lehmans Investment Bank, and that is the big issue with this company. There are a lot of capital issues that they face, but they are changing that and that is where the upside is.
He compared it to Deutsche Bank, which he also does not recommend. He thinks they rely on lines of business that will do worse in the future. They were a leading distributor and manufacturer of mortgage-backed securities. “We’re really talking here about Lehman Brothers.” The way the MBS works, conforming MBS doesn’t offer much margin. Subprime and Alt-A were so important because they attract a lot of margin, but those are now out of the mix. He likes the people who work at Barclays, but he would rather put his money in JP Morgan. All the non-American banks are subject to base erosion tax, which raises their costs. JP Morgan and other American banks are not. Brexit also puts the larger American banks into a good position to take share in the European market.