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U.S. banks go 23 for 23, passing this year's Fed's stress test, including Club names Wells Fargo (WFC) and Morgan Stanley (MS). KeyBanc downgrades Club name Disney (DIS) to sector weight from overweight (hold from buy) without a price target. Piper upgrades to neutral from underweight (hold from sell), Bank of America increases price target to $76 per share from $68. Piper Sandler initiates coverage on the off-price retailers, starting Club holding TJX Companies (TJX) with a buy-equivalent overweight rating and a $110-per-share price target. Cuts price target to $40 per share from $47.
Persons: Premarket, Wells, Morgan Stanley, KeyBanc, Sanjay Mehrotra, McCormick, Piper Sandler, Piper, Eli Lilly, Warren Buffett's Berkshire, Jim Cramer's, Jim Cramer, Jim Organizations: Dow, Nasdaq, Citi, Disney, Micron, Bank of America, Netflix, TJX Companies, Marshalls, Ross Stores, Burlington Stores, Pfizer, Credit Suisse, Occidental Petroleum, Warren, Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway, Berkshire, Energy, Halliburton, HAL, JPMorgan, Jim Cramer's Charitable, CNBC Locations: Big, Maxx, HomeGoods
Private credit goes Hollywood. A town that loves a good story has a leading role in the biggest one on Wall Street. So in that vein, private credit filling the gap left by banks reconsidering their lending decisions is great. Ratings agency Moody's has already raised the alarm, suggesting defaults among borrowers in private credit will rise. But I think it's fair to say that industry isn't as cut and dried as others private credit might be lending to.
Persons: Dan DeFrancesco, fanny, , we've, Maks, it's, Insider's Reed Alexander, Rebecca Ungarino, Reed, Rebecca, Moody's, Consuelo Vanderbilt Costin, Bryan Griffin, James, Jim, Crown, Henry Crown, Junius Myer Schine, David Sinclair, Jeffrey Cane, Hallam Bullock Organizations: Credit Suisse, Wall, Investment, Hollywood, Creators, The Vanderbilt, UBS, JPMorgan, Fidelity, Wall Street, LinkedIn Locations: Hollywood, Swiss, Aspen , Colorado, Silicon, Jersey Shore, New York, London
Under the "stress test" exercise, the Fed tests big banks' balance sheets against a hypothetical severe economic downturn, the elements of which change annually. WHY DOES THE FED 'STRESS TEST' BANKS? It announces the size of each bank's stress capital buffer in the subsequent months. For example, the 2022 stress test envisioned a 5.8 percentage point jump in unemployment under a "severely adverse" scenario. This extra test will not count towards banks' capital requirements but will allow the Fed to explore applying multiple adverse scenarios in future.
Persons: Banks, Wells, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Michael Barr, Pete Schroeder, Michelle Price, Andrea Ricci Organizations: U.S . Federal, Big, Fed, Citigroup, Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase &, Goldman Sachs, Deutsche Bank's U.S, JPMorgan Citigroup, Wells Fargo & Co, Bank, U.S, Treasury, Thomson Locations: Big U.S, Silicon
WASHINGTON, June 28 (Reuters) - Big U.S. banks' commercial real estate portfolios put in a surprisingly good performance during the Federal Reserve's annual health checks, with losses declining slightly on last year, the central bank said on Wednesday. With risks growing in the commercial real estate (CRE) sector globally, analysts and investors were looking to the Fed's "stress tests" for more insight on how exposed the country's lenders are to falling real estate prices. Commercial real estate (CRE), especially offices, has been hit by interest rates hikes and workers choosing to stay at home. The Fed's annual bank "stress tests" established following the 2007-2009 financial crisis probe how lenders would fare against an extreme scenario: a 40% decline in commercial real estate values. The average projected CRE loan loss rate across the group was 8.8% of average loan balances, compared with 9.8% last year, the Fed said.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Charles Schwab, Michelle Price, Pete Schroeder, Stephen Coates Organizations: Federal, Moody's Investors Service, Bank of America Corporation, of New York Mellon Corporation, Barclays US, BMO Financial Corp, Financial Corporation, Charles, Charles Schwab Corporation, Citigroup Inc, Financial Group, Inc, Suisse Holdings, DB USA Corporation, Goldman, Goldman Sachs Group, JPMorgan Chase & Co, T Bank Corporation, Northern Trust Corporation, PNC Financial Services Group, RBC US Group Holdings, Street Corporation, US Holdings, Truist Financial Corporation, UBS, Holding, . Bancorp, & Company, Thomson Locations: Big U.S
EU agrees deal on final leg of Basel bank capital rules
  + stars: | 2023-06-27 | by ( Huw Jones | ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +2 min
LONDON, June 27 (Reuters) - The European Union on Tuesday reached a deal to implement the final batch of tougher bank capital rules agreed internationally following the global financial crisis over a decade ago, with additions to contain risks from the crypto sector. The remaining leg of the 'Basel III' global accord, agreed among G20 and other nations, includes safeguards such as limits on big banks using their own internal models to calculate capital buffers. The collapse of Silicon Valley Bank and other lenders in the United States, whose fallout rippled through Europe, and the forced takeover of Credit Suisse by UBS has thrown a spotlight on bank capital and liquidity. The deal between EU states and the European Parliament phases in some elements in the Basel III accord from 2025, two years after the deadline agreed globally. The EU is the first major jurisdiction to reach a deal on the remaining Basel III rules, ahead of Britain and the United States.
Persons: Elisabeth Svantesson, Gilles Boyer, Huw Jones, Christina Fincher Organizations: European Union, Basel III, Silicon Valley Bank, Credit Suisse, UBS, EU, Thomson Locations: Basel, Silicon, United States, Europe, Sweden, Britain
UK banks are appropriate airbag for mortgage crash
  + stars: | 2023-06-27 | by ( George Hay | ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +4 min
Last year this was 2.9% on average for Lloyds, NatWest and Barclays. Hunt may be able to get banks to hike their savings rates merely by veiled threats. After all, the government would only be getting banks to do what they should be doing anyway. “It is taking too long for the increase in interest rates to be passed on to savers, particularly with instant access accounts,” Hunt told parliament. Around 60% of household deposits are held in instant access accounts, the committee said.
Persons: Banks, Jeremy Hunt, shouldn’t, it’s, Hunt, ” Hunt, , Neil Unmack, Oliver Taslic Organizations: Reuters, Monday, Banking Group, NatWest, Barclays, Lloyds, JPMorgan, NatWest –, Alpha, Treasury, Bank of England, Labour Party, National Savings and Investments, of, Lloyds Banking Group, HSBC, Barclays –, Thomson
A change to the board of directors at a top Wall Street bank has raised questions about what it means for the CEO. Goldman Sachs board is reportedly planning to add Tom Montag, a former longtime Goldman exec who became the No. And as a former partner at the bank, Montag also brings with him a certain cachet. Such is life on Wall Street, where the line between friend and foe is never quite clear. From Mark Zuckerberg's martial arts-led comeback to Jeff Bezo's hot yacht summer, tech bros are feeling themselves these days.
Persons: Dan DeFrancesco, you've, , we've, Tom Montag, Craig Barritt, Tory Burch, Goldman Sachs, Goldman, David Solomon, Montag, Solomon, Insider's Dakin Campbell, Merrill, Insider's Alex Morrell, Jeff Bezos, Clive Mason, Mark Zuckerberg's, Jeff Bezo's, Biden's, Jen Glantz, Pete Buttigieg, Jeffrey Cane, Hallam Bullock Organizations: Costco, Tory, Tory Burch Foundation, Bank of America, Bloomberg, Goldman, Solomon, BofA, Getty, Finance bros, Transportation, Starbucks, LinkedIn Locations: NYC, BofA, BlackRock, New York, London
Variable rate mortgages in Canada typically require borrowers to make regular payments in fixed amounts. WHAT IS THE EXTENT OF MORTGAGE AMORTIZATION EXTENSION? Both banks had no variable-rate mortgages with amortizations greater than 30 years prior to the start of rate hikes. If interest rates stay high over the next few years, as the central bank has warned, it raises questions about customers' ability to service bigger than anticipated debt at higher rates during renewals. The big banks said most customers are able to cope with higher interest rates as they had passed a rigorous stress test to handle higher interest rates.
Persons: Royce Mendes, Carolyn Rogers, OSFI, Nivedita Balu, Fergal Smith, Steve Scherer, Denny Thomas, Conor Humphries Organizations: TORONTO, Statistics Canada, Royal Bank of Canada, CIBC, Bank of Nova, National Bank, Bank of Canada, BoC, Thomson Locations: Canada, United States, Bank of Nova Scotia, amortization, Toronto, Ottawa
SHANGHAI/BEIJING, June 27 (Reuters) - China's major state-owned banks were seen selling dollars in the offshore spot foreign exchange market on Tuesday, four sources with knowledge of the matter said, suggesting authorities wanted to slow the pace of the yuan's recent slide. Such state bank dollar selling appeared as the offshore yuan weakened towards the psychologically important 7.25 per dollar level, two of the sources said. "The 7.25 (yuan per dollar) level remains a key threshold," said one of them, adding a breach of the level could quickly send the yuan to lows last seen in 2022. The yuan's value onshore hit a trough of 7.3280 per dollar in November, levels last seen during the 2008 global financial crisis, while the offshore yuan dropped to a record low of 7.3746. [CNY/]Several currency traders also said they saw state banks selling dollars on Monday just ahead of the onshore domestic close (0830 GMT) to shore up the yuan's closing price, as the rate could determine the next day's official guidance rate.
Persons: China's, Kim Coghill, Vidya Ranganathan Organizations: People's Bank of China, UBS, Federal Reserve, Thomson Locations: SHANGHAI, BEIJING, United States, Shanghai, Beijing
It's been a tough go for investment bankers recently. As if all that wasn't bad enough for bankers, The Wall Street Journal recently reported that even lawyers are now making more money than them. It turns out the culprit, as is often the case on Wall Street, is inflation. It's getting really tough these days to make the case for getting into investment banking. That begs the question: Why bother getting into investment banking at all?
Persons: Dan DeFrancesco, we've, Klaus Vedfelt, It's, , Robert Kindler's, Morgan Stanley, Paul Weiss —, hasn't, Seth Rogen, Nick Offerman, Paul Dano, Steve Cohen, Alexandra, Emily Oster, David Solomon, Goldman Sachs, Solomon, Jeffrey Cane, Nathan Rennolds Organizations: GameStop, Street Journal, Sony, Bloomberg, Harvard, JPMorgan, Economist Intelligence, LinkedIn Locations: Republic, Semafor, New York, London
FRANKFURT, June 22 (Reuters) - Deutsche Bank (DBKGn.DE) is drawing up plans to cut 10% of its 17,000 German retail jobs over the next few years as part of cost savings, a person with knowledge of the matter said on Thursday. The plans at Germany's largest bank come as Claudio de Sanctis prepares to take over the retail unit, known as the private bank division, on July 1. Deutsche Bank, which declined to comment on any cuts to retail jobs, has publicly said that it is identifying further cost savings and would be trimming jobs in certain areas to keep profits growing. The bank has been expected to continue to cut branches to curb expenses, Reuters has previously reported. S&P last month upgraded its outlook for the bank and said that the retail division has "considerable scope" to cut costs.
Persons: Claudio de Sanctis, Tom Sims, Matthias Williams, Madeline Chambers, Susan Fenton Organizations: Deutsche Bank, Deutsche, Reuters, Thomson Locations: FRANKFURT, Germany's, Germany
By one metric, Nasdaq paid around what Thoma Bravo spent on creating Adenza through the merger of two software firms, the sources familiar with the deal said. Nasdaq also hopes to cut overlapping costs, which would boost profitability and make the deal look cheaper, one of the sources said. With Adenza, Nasdaq's recurring revenues, which investors like for their predictability, will comprise around 77% of overall revenues, up from 71%. A director at one of Nasdaq's largest shareholders, whose firm supports the Adenza deal, said there were few good companies left that could be synergistic to Nasdaq. One of the sources said once Nasdaq also cuts out costs, the multiple will be closer to the mid-20s.
Persons: Thoma, Adena, Thoma Bravo, Friedman, Rosenblatt, Andrew Bond, Adena's, she's, Bond, Morningstar, Michael Miller, pushback, Adenza, Verafin, John McCrank, Paritosh Bansal, David Gregorio Our Organizations: YORK, Nasdaq, Thoma Bravo, Adenza, Rosenblatt Securities, BBB, Adenza's, Thomson Locations: United States, Europe, Adenza
But the plunge in the deal pipeline prompted soul-searching and job-hopping among investment bankers accustomed to a feast. Barclays, which has struggled to retain bankers following a shake-up in the management of its investment banking division, has lost at least nine top technology bankers in recent weeks. Traditionally, smaller firms have been reluctant to offer investment bankers guaranteed compensation, in order to have more of their pay tied to performance. Alan Johnson, managing director of compensation consultancy Johnson Associates, said that first-year guarantees were common practice in the hiring of investment bankers, but second-year guarantee used to be rare. "You get paid a higher percentage of revenue than in a big bank, but you have to generate the revenue with perhaps less help," Johnson said.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Sam Britton, Britton, Anthony Keizner, Goldman, Nick Pomponi, Rob Chisholm, Troy Broderick, Goldman's, Perella Weinberg, Laurence Braham, Richard Hardegree, Steve Markovich, Ron Eliasek, Jason Auerbach, Alan Johnson, Johnson, Milana Vinn, Anirban Sen, Greg Roumeliotis, Jamie Freed Organizations: YORK, Goldman, Bank of America, Barclays, Qatalyst Partners, Jefferies Financial, Technology, LSEG, Intelligence, Search, Evercore, UBS, Centerview, Jefferies, SVB Securities, Bank, Reuters, Johnson Associates, Thomson Locations: Qatalyst, New York
UBS's size will be taken into account - SNB Vice-Chairman
  + stars: | 2023-06-22 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: 1 min
ZURICH, June 22 (Reuters) - The Swiss National Bank will consider closely the size of UBS (UBSG.S) following the completion of its takeover of Credit Suisse, the central bank's vice-chairman said on Thursday. "Of course because it is such a big bank it needs to have higher capital requirements," Martin Schlegel told an news conference in Zurich. He also said the size and the importance of UBS, as well as its business model, will be taken into account from a financial stability perspective. Reporting by Noele Illien Editing by Tomasz JanowskiOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Persons: Martin Schlegel, Noele, Tomasz Janowski Organizations: Swiss National Bank, UBS, Credit Suisse, Thomson Locations: ZURICH, Zurich
Partners at big law firms now average upward of $3 million a year in compensation, reports The Wall Street Journal. As if all that wasn't bad enough for bankers, The Wall Street Journal recently reported that even lawyers are now making more money than them! It turns out the culprit, as is often the case on Wall Street, is inflation. Most large law firms increase their rates by about 4% annually, according to the WSJ. It's getting really tough these days to make the case for getting into investment banking.
Persons: It's, , Robert Kindler's, Morgan Stanley, Paul Weiss —, hasn't Organizations: Wall Street, Wall, Morning, Street Journal
WASHINGTON — Members of the Senate Banking Committee on Wednesday will consider a bill that would aim to hold banking executives accountable in the wake of the collapse of several big banks. The Recovering Executive Compensation from Unaccountable Practices Act, known as the RECOUP Act, would give regulators power to claw back compensation for executives of failed banks, institute penalties for misconduct and direct banks to beef up corporate governance, according to the committee. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, chairman of the committee, and ranking member Tim Scott, R-S.C., announced an agreement on the legislation last week. Brown is up for reelection next year, and Scott is running for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination.
Persons: Sherrod Brown, Tim Scott, Brown, Scott Organizations: WASHINGTON Locations: Ohio
House Democrats release wave of bank reform bills
  + stars: | 2023-06-21 | by ( Chelsey Cox | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +7 min
WASHINGTON — House Democrats on Wednesday will release a slate of reform bills in response to the recent bank failures that triggered the worst crisis for the sector since 2008. "The failures of Silicon Valley Bank, Signature Bank, and First Republic Bank make clear that it is past time for legislation aimed at strengthening the safety and soundness of our banking system and enhancing bank executive accountability," she said. President Joe Biden called for these actions shortly after the FDIC took over SVB and Signature Bank in March. The bill would have prevented SVB bank executives from cashing out after repeated warnings by regulators, according to Democrats. Neither Signature Bank nor SVB had a bank holding company before they collapsed.
Persons: Maxine Waters, Dodd, Frank, Waters, Joe Biden, Nydia Velazquez, Brad Sherman, Juan Vargas, David Scott, Al Green, Sylvia Garcia of, Emanuel Cleaver, Joyce Beatty, Steven Horsford, Rashida, Velazquez, Sherman, Cleaver, Beatty, Frank Act's, SVB, Vargas, Garcia, Tlaib, Banks, Sean Casten, Josh Gottheimer, Ritchie Torres, Wiley Nickel, Stephen Lynch, Brittany Pettersen Organizations: Financial Services, Washington , D.C, WASHINGTON —, Democrats, Financial Services Committee, Treasury Department, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, Silicon Valley Bank, Signature Bank, Banking Committee, Valley Bank, First Republic Bank, FDIC, Democratic, Sylvia Garcia of Texas, Republicans, Sound Banking, Prudential, prudential, Bank, Green, Sherman, Rep, Federal, Office, Federal Reserve, FAIR, Tlaib, Safety, Sherman . Locations: California, Washington ,, New York, Georgia, Missouri, Ohio, Michigan, Green, Horsford, H.R, Silicon, Illinois, New Jersey, North Carolina, Colo
Some of the biggest hedge funds in the world are facing a problem that's proving just as challenging as predicting the markets. The Wall Street Journal has a story on that very conundrum, reporting on the tension at the $60 billion hedge fund Two Sigma between cofounders John Overdeck and David Siegel. While the structure of the modern hedge fund dates back to the 1940s, the industry really hit its stride during the 1990s. But I imagine not every hedge fund will want to go that route. And here's more on how hedge funds like Citadel and Millennium are transforming themselves with the help of Goldman Sachs' alumni.
Persons: Dan DeFrancesco, we've, cofounders John Overdeck, David Siegel, Overdeck, Siegel, cofounders, Goldman Sachs, Tracy Gray, Zhenni Liu, Wil Chockley, Charlie Hanna, Peter Deaner, Jeffrey Epstein, Jes Staley, Epstein, CliffsNotes, Bill Ackman, We've, Jeffrey Cane, Hallam Bullock Organizations: Sigma, Citadel, MaC, Marcy Venture Partners, JPMorgan, Columbia, Bloomberg, Financial Times, Pershing Square Capital, LinkedIn Locations: NYC, Los Angeles, Swiss, New York, London
The team, led by Teresa Heitsenrether, will be critical in the bank's AI strategy. The D&A organization pulls together AI leaders from across the bank, from research to data use. JPMorgan is unifying its AI braintrust in a newly created unit that will drive strategy, governance, and adoption of the tech at the country's largest bank. Heitsenrether will have some of the bank's highest tech leaders and their respective teams as her deputies, including the bank's head of AI research and head of AI and machine learning transformation and engagement. The D&A organization will be critical to JPMorgan's AI use and strategy, as AI models and tools are computer-intensive and require vast amounts of data.
Persons: Teresa Heitsenrether, Lori Beer, Jamie Dimon, Daniel Pinto, Goldman Sachs, Heitsenrether, Pinto Organizations: JPMorgan, Wednesday, ChatGPT, Securities Services Locations: Heitsenrether
China's modest rate cut sends stocks lower
  + stars: | 2023-06-20 | by ( Joice Alves | ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +4 min
LONDON, June 20 (Reuters) - European stocks and U.S. futures fell on Tuesday after China cut interest rates by less than expected and the market awaited more detail on Beijing's plans to shore up a stuttering economic recovery. The People's Bank of China lowered the medium-term lending facility rate on Thursday last week. "The meeting helped improve sentiment, but the market also understands that there's strategic competition between the U.S. and China," said Redmond Wong, Greater China market strategist at Saxo Markets. A central banker on Tuesday also hinted there was room for policy adjustment from the current path of aggressive rate hikes. Gold edged up 0.1% to $1,951.74 as the dollar index eased at 102.45 but lacked clear momentum as traders awaited U.S. Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell's testimony later this week for more direction on the interest rate path.
Persons: Susannah Streeter, Hargreaves Lansdown, Xi, Rodrigo Catril, Issei Kato, Antony Blinken's, Redmond Wong, Jerome Powell's, Brent, Joice Alves, Selena Li, Anisha, Susan Fenton, Jason Neely Organizations: Hargreaves, People's Bank of, National Australia Bank, REUTERS, Citi, U.S, Saxo Markets, Reserve Bank, Australia's, Bank of England, Federal, Thomson Locations: China, Asia, U.S, Beijing, People's Bank of China, Tokyo, Japan, United States, Greater China, German, London, Hong Kong, Bengaluru
China cut its benchmark loan prime rates (LPR) for the first time in 10 months on Tuesday, with a smaller-than-expected 10-basis point reduction in the five-year LPR. China's benchmark CSI (.CSI300) slipped 0.17%, with the real estate index (.CSI931775) falling 1.9%, its biggest daily decline in a month. "I don't think they (the LPR cuts) are going to move the needle at all," said Redmond Wong, Greater China market strategist at Saxo Markets. He said a 15 basis-point cut would have sent a "stronger message" that could boost sentiment in China's property sector. The People's Bank of China lowered the medium-term lending facility rate on Thursday last week.
Persons: Redmond Wong, Xi, Rodrigo Catril, Antony Blinken's, Saxo's Wong, Brent, Selena Li, Joice Alves, Anisha Sircar, Susan Fenton Organizations: CSI, Saxo Markets, People's Bank of, National Australia Bank Senior, Citi, U.S, Reserve Bank, Australia's, Bank of England, Thomson Locations: HONG KONG, China, Asia, Pacific, Japan, Greater China, Beijing, People's Bank of China, United States, Hong Kong, London
Asia shares fall on China's modest rate cut
  + stars: | 2023-06-20 | by ( Selena Li | ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +3 min
HONG KONG, June 20 (Reuters) - Stocks in Asia fell on Tuesday as investors worried China's latest rate cut was not enough to boost confidence in the weakening economy and awaited a wider stimulus package by Beijing. China, in a highly anticipated move, cut two key benchmark lending rates for the first time in 10 months on Tuesday, with its one-year loan prime rate (LPR) lowered by 10 basis points to 3.55% and the five-year LPR cut by the same margin to 4.20%. "I don't think they (the LPR cuts) are going to move the needle at all," said Redmond Wong, Greater China market strategist at Saxo Markets. He said a 15 basis-point cut would be a "stronger message" to boost China's property sector. The People’s Bank of China lowered the medium-term lending facility rate on Thursday last week.
Persons: China's, Redmond Wong, Xi, Rodrigo Catril, Goldman Sachs, Antony Blinken, Saxo's Wong, Brent, Selena Li, Sonali Paul Organizations: CSI, Saxo Markets, People’s Bank of, National Australia Bank Senior, U.S, Japan's Nikkei, Treasury, Thomson Locations: HONG KONG, Asia, Beijing, China, Pacific, Japan, U.S, Greater China, People’s Bank of China, United States, Hong Kong
LONDON, June 19 (Reuters) - The Bank of England has launched its first system-wide liquidity 'stress test' to establish how big banks, insurers, clearing houses and investment funds respond collectively during extreme stresses in markets, it said on Monday. The BoE had said in December that investment funds and other non-bank financial institutions would face their first 'stress test' to apply lessons from the near-meltdown in Britain's pension fund sector in September. Liability-driven investment (LDI) funds, used by pension funds to ensure their long-term payouts, struggled to meet collateral calls after turmoil caused by the fiscal plans of Liz Truss's short-lived government in September. Money market funds also came under "dash-for-cash" pressure during market stresses following economy lockdowns to fight COVID-19 in 2020. "The exercise is not a test of the resilience of the individual firms participating.
Persons: The BoE, BoE, Jon Cunliffe, Liz Truss's, lockdowns, COVID, Huw Jones, Emma Rumney, Kirsten Donovan Organizations: Bank of England, Money, Thomson
High debts, rising interest rates and a wilting economy has produced a toxic cocktail for Sweden's commercial property companies, with several cut to junk by rating agencies. Sweden and Germany are among the worst affected by a widening property slump on the continent, according to Eurostat. Swedish officials are worried that banks could compound property companies' troubled by cutting credit, triggering firesales that would further drag down the market. Financial markets minister Wykman said he had held discussions with banks, property companies and investors about the entire commercial property market. This week, analysts at JP Morgan said big banks in Sweden, which had 1 trillion Swedish crowns of property exposure, were 'ill-prepared' for losses.
Persons: Niklas Wykman, Wykman, Ilija Batljan, Batljan, JP Morgan, Finland's, SEBa.ST, Chiara Elisei, Sinead Cruise, John O'Donnell, Toby Chopra Organizations: Organisation for Economic Cooperation, Development, Financial, Reuters, Eurostat, OECD, Reuters Graphics, SBB, JP, Thomson Locations: STOCKHOLM, FRANKFURT, Europe, Sweden, Germany, Stockholm, Swedish, Spain, Ireland, London
A spokesperson for the hedge fund declined further comment on Thursday. Big banks typically agree terms with hedge funds that allow them to cut ties at short notice, five sources from prime brokerages and hedge funds told Reuters. Prime brokerages may now refine due diligence processes and perform more thorough background checks on hedge funds, said Jim Neumann, chief investment officer of Sussex Partners, which advises investors on how they give their money to hedge funds. But many of these agreements mainly focus on the financial viability of the hedge fund, two of the sources said. One hedge fund manager said he was asked in his due diligence with the bank if he was approved by the UK regulator, the Financial Conduct Authority.
Persons: Banks, Crispin Odey, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, MS.N, Odey, Epstein, Michael Oliver Weinberg, JPMorgan Chase, JPM.N, Jeffrey Epstein, Bill Hwang, brokerages, Jim Neumann, Neumann, Archegos, Erika Kelton, Phillips, Cohen, Nell Mackenzie, Kirstin Ridley, Carolina Mandl, Dhara Ranasinghe, Elisa Martinuzzi, Matthew Lewis Organizations: Wall, Odey, Management, Financial Times, Tortoise Media, JPMorgan, Odey Asset Management, Reuters, CMT, Archegos Capital Management, Sussex Partners, UBS, Financial, Authority, Thomson Locations: London, New York
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