EU FINANCIALS: Financials: Week In Review

May-23 14:09

As earnings season comes to a close with Generali results, performance groupings were tight in a week where CDS was much more volatile than cash. 

 Results 

  • Generali's Q1 earnings were typically solid. Its bonds have outperformed through April volatility.
  • Banco Comercial Portugeus results were in line. This was enough for an upgrade at Moody's, putting the recent tier 2's into line for the IG index -as we highlighted early in May was a possibility.
  • Julius Baer results were in line, except for elevated provisions, which management believe should be a one off due to credit methodology changes.
  • Close Brothers results were somewhat of a non-event as we await the supreme court motor finance judgement
  • Toronto Dominion's top line was good, but expense and provision costs were elevated.
  • UNIQA insurance results were in line, the investment result being weaker was notable but not concerning

 Ratings

  • Bank of Ireland and Permanent TSB were upgraded by Fitch - further upgrades are now unlikely.
  • Novo Banco received a Moody's upgrade and remained on positive outlook. If it can maintain current profit/capital/asset quality levels for 12-18 months another upgrade should follow. Its tier 2 bonds move to IG at Moody's.     
  • Moody's moved BAWAG to a positive outlook as the company continues to make decent progress integrating acquisitions.
  • Fitch revised Volksbank Wien's outlook to negative at NPLs have climbed over the last 12 months.

 New Issues

AT1

  • Intesa issued a €1bn PNC8 AT1 deal at 6.375% vs our 6.25% FV. It came at 404bps over swaps and its currently trading 393bps over.
  • Banco BPM issued a € PNC5.5 AT1 at our FV of 6.25%. It is trading close to issue spread.
  • We thought the KBC €PNC5.5 AT1 was just a shade shy of FV at 6%. It has widened 5bps since issue.

 Tier 2

  • Groupama's 10Y € Tier 2 came at our FV of +190bps.
  • Aviva's inaugural € Tier 2 priced MS+205, we saw FV 15bps wider. It has tightened 2bps. 

 Senior

  • Kvika bank issued an inaugural € 4Y Sr Pref at MS+250 vs out MS+205-215 FV range.
  • Santander issued a 7Y € Sr Pref at MS+90, 3bps wide of our FV.
  • Credit Agricole 10Y Sr Non-Pref came 2bps inside our FV at MS+130.
  • Danske Bank's 8NC7 Sr Non-Pref priced at MS+115, 5bps inside our FV.
  • Nomura came to the EUR market with a 5Y pricing at MS+120, we saw Fv at MS+115, it is trading -2bps tighter.
  • Belfius Sr Non-Pref bonds priced at MS+115, our FV was MS+105. Trading I+111.
  • SMFG issued in a € 7Y bond at MS+115, our FV was MS+110. Trading I+112.
  • Monte issued a 6NC5 Sr Pref at MS+130, 9bps wide of our FV. Trading I+130.
  • Grenke issued a 5y € bond at MS+330, our FV - driven by secondary - was MS+300. We have highlighted the elevated provisions the business has experience of late, but the price point has proved attractive so far, with the bonds trading I+319 currently.

Historical bullets

TARIFFS: Proposal Last Year Eyed Tiered, Phased-In Approach To China

Apr-23 14:05

The WSJ article identifying a potential change in the White House's approach on China is most notable for bringing up potential for a tiered, phased-in approach to tariffs on Chinese imports. In particular, "a tiered approach similar to the one proposed by the House committee on China late last year". 

  • This is of course referring to a bill and not an executive order but it makes a certain amount of sense for the White House at this point, as it arguably reduces uncertainty for both Fed and businesses on the approach ahead (especially if it were codified as a bill), potentially avoids the worst of the near-term disruptions, and could provide a better roadmap toward the reshoring/supply chain restructuring the White House is looking for.
  • Below are the details of the "Restoring Trade Fairness Act"  put forward last year by the House Select Committee on the Chinese Communist Party (link).
    • "The bill would end PNTR [Permanent Normal Trade Relations] for China. There would be no annual Congressional vote for recertification. It would codify tariffs in statute and create a new tariff column for China.
    • The new column would create a minimum 35% ad valorem (in proportion to the estimated value of the goods or transaction) tariff for non-strategic goods and a minimum 100% ad valorem tariff for all strategic goods.
    • Phase-in period: The new tariff column rates would be phased-in over five years with 10 percent of the tariff increase implemented in year one, 25 percent of the increase implemented in year two, 50 percent of the increase implemented in year four, and 100 percent of the increase implemented in year five.
    • Strategic Goods: Strategic goods are listed in the bill by HS code.
    • They are based on the Biden administration’s Advanced Technology Product List and China’s Made in China 2025 plan.
      The bill would end De Minimis treatment for covered nations (including China) and require customs brokers for other de minimis shipments.
    • It would provide tariff revenue to U.S. farmers and manufacturers injured by possible Chinese retaliation. Additional revenue would be used to purchase munitions vital to deterring CCP aggression in the Pacific."

US: WSJ Reports to Raise Focus on Imminent Bessent Appearance

Apr-23 13:57

These WSJ reports likely to raise the focus on Bessent's imminent appearance at the IIF in 4 minutes.

  • He's set to be delivering keynote remarks and will "share his thoughts on the state of the global financial system". He will then hold a sit-down conversation with the IIF president. His remarks begin at 1000ET/1500BST and can be livestreamed here: https://vimeo.com/event/5054312/12805a306f
  • His appearance follow closed-door remarks at an investor conference yesterday, where he supposedly said he sees de-escalation with China, with the current trade situation "unsustainable". Comments that will come into sharper focus given that WSJ report suggesting a "slashing" of import tariffs on Chinese goods - as well as a follow-up piece from the WSJ citing Bessent's influence in Trump deciding not to try to fire Powell.

BONDS: /STIR: EU & UK Markets Unwind Some Downside Growth Risks After WSJ Story

Apr-23 13:55

The move lower in bonds, as well as hawkish repricing in EUR & GBP STIRs, follows the WSJ report pointing to a potential dialling back of some of U.S. tariffs imposed on China.

  • Those markets trade in a manner that points to less of a global growth shock, resulting in shallower central bank cutting cycles.
  • ~60bp of further ECB cuts now priced through year-end vs. ~70bp at yesterday’s close.
  • Meanwhile, ~85bp of BoE cuts are priced over the same horizon after showing over 90bp of cuts for much of today.
  • Oil moves away from lows in sync.