The Three Riskiest Banks - American Banker [View article]
One thing: TCE is important (much more relevant to equity holders than Tier 1) but what's really important is how that balances against the types of assets the bank holds on (and off!) its balance sheet. Some banks with really conservative underwriting (and no toxic assets) can survive with lower TCE, and vise versa.
So, you must scrutinize the quality of the loans and other assets. TCE is just one important data point, but not the whole picture. For example, I'm not sure you should be buying JPM on the basis of its TCE because its got a boat load of nastiness on the balance sheet which'll be hitting TCE pretty hard in the upcoming quarters.
regarding JPM: if Whalen is correct and losses are 4% of loans (big if) and JPM is average (big if), then they'd loose $58B. JPM has $131B equity (not including the $11B they just raised or the $25B coming from Paulson), so i'm not sure how he sees them becoming insolvent.
personally, i think this guy is contracted by some funds who are/will be short. if he can scare enough investors he and the hedge funds could create a run on the bank. being short (whether in the CDS market, with Puts, and/or naked shorting the common), you'd make a lot of money...but they'd destroy an American institution in the process.
SEC Considering 'Market-Wide' Short Sale Rule [View article]
its about time. enforcing the law, gee what a concept. everybody knows that the hedge funds control the sec and gov. at this point. they are huge pools of unregulated captial that can do anything the want. buy off pols in washington (you better believe it!), pile on small caps and destroy companies. you bet, its called "death by short". not enforcing the naked shorting rule is yet another example of how the gov looks out for the big guys against the little ones.
but but wait, if the companies didn't have probs already, then the shorts wouldn't be there. look: all companies have probs from time to time. naked shorting causes moral to drop, employees to leave, customers to scratch their heads and say "hmm, i better hold off buying from these guys, they might not be around much long..." etc.
Dividends in Danger at Regional Banks? [View article]
also, USB said they will likely raise their dividend. i guess you can take them off your list.
USB's earnings increased last Q. they were down from 2007, but the were positive unlike a lot of other banks, like WFC. the company grew its asset base and shareholder equity.
The Three Riskiest Banks - American Banker [View article]
So, you must scrutinize the quality of the loans and other assets. TCE is just one important data point, but not the whole picture. For example, I'm not sure you should be buying JPM on the basis of its TCE because its got a boat load of nastiness on the balance sheet which'll be hitting TCE pretty hard in the upcoming quarters.
Bigger is Not Better in Banking [View article]
personally, i think this guy is contracted by some funds who are/will be short. if he can scare enough investors he and the hedge funds could create a run on the bank. being short (whether in the CDS market, with Puts, and/or naked shorting the common), you'd make a lot of money...but they'd destroy an American institution in the process.
SEC Considering 'Market-Wide' Short Sale Rule [View article]
but but wait, if the companies didn't have probs already, then the shorts wouldn't be there. look: all companies have probs from time to time. naked shorting causes moral to drop, employees to leave, customers to scratch their heads and say "hmm, i better hold off buying from these guys, they might not be around much long..." etc.
Dividends in Danger at Regional Banks? [View article]
USB's earnings increased last Q. they were down from 2007, but the were positive unlike a lot of other banks, like WFC. the company grew its asset base and shareholder equity.