10/05 08:32 U.S. money center bank Q3 EPS seen sliding 45 pct
By Mary Kelleher NEW YORK, Oct 5 (Reuters) - The biggest U.S. commercial banks could see their earnings plummet as much as 45 percent in the third quarter, after three months of painful trading losses, stagnant investment banking and slower loan growth. The banks, which had banner earnings growth last quarter, are now suffering in areas like capital markets that were once a boon to their results. At the same time, the core lending business is starting to slip, analysts said. Investors are already braced for the worst, after most big banks warned last month of weaker results this quarter. The banks blamed economic crises in emerging markets like Russia, and Latin America, which created trading losses and enough uncertainty in world markets to curb corporate finance. Charges from writing down Russian debt, which many banks have done after the paper was effectively devalued by that government, as well as the completion of several merger deals, including BankAmerica Corp. <BAC.N> and NationsBank Corp., could make quarterly releases messy, analysts said. Wall Street will also be paying close attention to loans the banks may have made to hedge funds, after a $3.6 billion bail-out by leading banks of large troubled hedge fund Long-Term Capital Management. "I think the third quarter is going to show the impact of the various market contagions and the mark-to-marketing of securities that have gotten hit by it," Joel Silverstein, an analyst at Prudential Securities said. "But we should not look at the quarter as indicative of the group's earnings power." The six money center banks -- Chase Manhattan Corp. <CMB.N>, Citicorp <CCI.N>, J.P. Morgan & Co. Inc. <JPM.N>, Bankers Trust Corp. <BT.N>, BankAmerica Corp. <BAC.N> and Republic New York Corp. <RNB.N> -- could see earnings drop as much as 45 percent in the quarter and 5 percent for the year 1998, according to First Call, which tracks analysts' estimates. The more money a U.S. banking company pulls from market-sensitive businesses -- like fixed-income and emerging markets trading, equity underwriting and other types of investment banking, and loan syndications and securitizations -- the worse it will fare this quarter, analysts said. The bread-and-butter bank lending businesses are more stable and should offset weaker results in fee-generating operations, but there also some signs of slower loan demand and margin pressure, they said. "The main problem has been that the residual damage of weak equity and bond markets has cut financings," Robert Albertson, banking analyst at Goldman Sachs said. "If you're a bank, you can also lend, and that's an offset." Commercial loans are strong, but consumer lending continues to lag and analysts point to margin and loan pricing pressure, even while asset quality is solid and the big banks keep expense growth under control. "This quarter should include continued net interest margin compression due to pricing pressures and a flat yield curve, modest balance sheet growth and strong mortgage banking activity," Chip Dickson, an analyst at Salomon Smith Barney wrote in a research report. Hardest hit will be Bankers Trust and J.P. Morgan, which rely heavily on market-related operations like investment banking and trading to turn a profit, analysts said. Bankers Trust, whose debt has been downgraded by Standard & Poor's rating agency, said last month it would post a net loss in the third quarter and as of September 1 it had a quarter-to-date trading loss of about $350 million. The bank pointed to writedowns of Russian government securities to 15 percent of face value, as well as tough U.S. and other financial market conditions. Its investment banking activity had also declined, the bank said. "J.P. Morgan and Bankers Trust will have a lot tougher time because they are much less diversified than Chase Manhattan Corp. and Citicorp, and a greater proportion of their revenues and earnings comes from trading," Stephen Biggar, an analyst at S&P Equity Group, said. Bankers Trust is expected to lose $3.39 a share in the third quarter compared with a profit of $2.16 a share in last year's third quarter, First Call said. At the start of the third quarter, analysts had expected Bankers would earn $2.20 per share, it said. J.P. Morgan, which said that at the end of August its financial exposure in Russia was about $160 million and that trading revenues were hurt by dealings in developed markets, is expected to earn $0.76 a share in the third quarter compared with $1.96 a share in last year's third quarter. While Wall Street has done little but punish financial stocks since these companies started revealing losses stemming from emerging market volatility, most analysts said they did not anticipate many new surprises in the quarterly reports. "For the quarter we expect banks to generally report earnings results not significantly different from what investors expected in early August," George Bicher, an analyst at Bankers Trust Alex. Brown said. ========================================================== BANK Q3 1998 FORECAST Q3 1997 Chase Manhattan $0.79 $1.13 Citicorp $1.51 $2.19 J.P. Morgan $0.76 $1.96 Bankers Trust loss $3.39 profit $2.16 Republic New York $0.05 $0.98 |