Was UBS's the Last Major Writedown? Doubtful
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European banks exposed to the U.S. real estate market absorbed more massive writedowns yesterday morning. UBS (UBS) announced its third writedown from the carnage and it was the largest to date at $19b. UBS also plans to ask shareholders to approve $15b in new financing. UBS raised $13b after its last massive writedown through a large investment by the Singapore Sovereign Wealth Fund and an undisclosed Mid-Eastern investor.
Deutsche Bank (DB) followed the UBS news with a $3.9b writedown as well. Since the subprime mortgage market began to falter last summer, there have been about $200b in related writedowns globally. Considering estimates of the total toll that this crisis will cost range from $400b all the way to $1 trillion, it would seem to us a cause for concern that UBS and Deutsche Bank are unloading more bad debt. However, the U.S. stock market is rallying behind the hope that we have reached the nadir of the financial crisis.
While it is certainly nice to see a bit of optimism in the market, it is perplexing that it comes after news of a new wave of writedowns and emergency financing measures. Investors are hoping that at least in the short term the bulk of damage from the credit crisis is now at least known to the public. However, there is a good possibility of writedowns for banks and brokerages in the future; there is no reason to believe that UBS held risky subprime and Alt-A assets that are substantially different from those held by many other financial institutions. We sincerely hope that this is at least the last such writedown for UBS for some time, but even that is not assured. For example, even after the $19b UBS writedown they still have about $15b in subprime assets on their balance sheet, as well as $16b in Alt-A positions.
As we stated in the Razor’s Edge commentary from December 10th—after its second writedown—UBS is clearly heavily implicated in the subprime and credit mess. We continue to advocate a Hold rating on the stock because we are not willing to declare that it is in the clear just yet. There is simply too much uncertainty in this market climate for a bank with so much tied to very risky assets, even though (as you can see in the price chart) the value metrics we follow closely have shown UBS to be “undervalued” from time to time during its stock price decline.
We are unconvinced that the credit crisis is subsiding, yet we are still bullish on the stock market for the long term investor. Currently, 48% of our coverage universe is rated a Buy, and less than 10% is rated a Sell. By our methodology—which is heavily influenced by current cash and revenue valuations versus historical averages—there are many undervalued stocks in this slightly oversold market, which seems the real reason behind this morning’s rally.
Disclosure: None
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This article has 5 comments:
March 31
Fiscal Year 2007: Capital/Assets
US
Bear Stearns 3,0%
Morgan Stanley 3,0%
Merril Lynch 3,1%
Lehman 3,3%
Goldman Sachs 4,5%
Citigroup 5,2%
JP Morgan 7,9%
Wells Fargo 8,3%
Bank of America 8,6%
Wachovia 10,2%
Europe
UBS 1,9%
Barclays 2,6%
Commerzbank 2,6%
BNP Paribas 3,5%
Credit Suisse 4,4%
Royal B Scotland 4,8%
BBVA 5,6%
HSBC 5,8%
Santander 6,3%
What sort of investor would give UBS their money to invest when the company's own investment decisions have led to over $35 billion in writedowns in the last year.
You'd have to be NUTS.
Enough already!
short C and LEH on last friday party