Big Surprise: Most Big Banks Lack Capital [View article]
I saw somewhere that this took June 2009 balance sheets. DB with its 1.3 billions Earning should have boosted its ratio near 7% now. And others have mostly earned cash during this time. I think what is to be done is to say Okay, old system do not work well. In 2015 you need more than 8% Tier 1 calculated upon new norms and reporting during 2009-2015 will include ratios on old and new system.
I always tought that we are free and responsible. We have the choice to own the bank, home or both. And we have the responsibility to stay solvent in doing whatever we do. With this, I think the winner is always the bank, not the guy who is stimulated by the bank and social pressure to buy home. So I freely and responsibly endorse being a shareholder in bank. This way, I do not complain, nor do I suffer. I just have a small kick beside my job income.
Are Citi, Bank of America Pushing Prices Up? [View article]
I buy Allied Irish Banks. No securitization there, they issue a loan with the idea of holding it to maturity. Way more sane, even if there are bad loans there, the problem is much more manageable and less shadowed.
Tangible Common Equity: How Much Is Enough? [View article]
Well, I wonder if we should use the ratio of Tangible Common Equity / Risk Weighted Assets instead of TCE/Total Assets. If a Bank has a mega huge balance sheet such as Deutsche Bank but very much lower risk weighted assets, must we consider that such bank must hold TCE to cover for losses on its riskless assets (Treasuries as an example). Doing this ratio would possibly allow for a better comparison to take into account not only TCE but also the business profile of a financial company trough the risk associated to its balance sheet. For TCE, I found that Allied Irish Banks is a killer on this aspect, even if its getting so broomed by the market participants.
Eight Reasons Bank of America Is Going to $20 [View article]
When we consider the debt USA had before Obama came to the office was mostly badly spend on useless and damaging deeds such as wars which were not justified and which cost a lot. The supplemental debt issued by Obama is not going to be spent, it is going to be invested. Invested in such a way it can put America back on track to cover all the interest of the new and old debt while sustainably growing and developing itself for a bright future. The big luck is the flight to safety allowing USA to sell its debt and to pay almost no interests on it.
Nationalizing the U.S. Banking Sector: There's No Choice [View article]
Ireland did a good move in pushing for the stability of its banking system. This one is possibly not as rotten as USA's one but it did a good wrap up of the situation and then took action to pare weaknesses which were assessed. The stress testing in USA is akin to what Ireland did on its 2 banks who had a fighting chance by themselves. Everyone will benefit from this : society, banks, government and shareholders.
I am not very impressed by this article. Why not buy ICICI Bank directly. Read "Boomers, your crisis has come". India and China are not at the same stage as USA in their cycles. They are probably in the high zone right now, with everyone moving forward and raging trough unprecented opportunity for growth and development. Why try to stick with American banks whose share price seems low but quality seems to justify the situation ?
If you want to play low price with not too bad quality, try Allied Irish Banks. If you want a bank as big as BAC but who did not need government help and managed trough crisis unscathed and growing in Good Banking Business (Read buying Deutsche Postbank) and whose share price still plummetted 80% off highs, try Deutsche Bank. If you want a p/e around 8 in banking activities with a sustainable dividend of about 6% right now, look north, Canada is just there, with a debt load and budget deficit who will prevent your Canadian dollar dividend to lose value... This is Toronto Dominion Bank. No housing boom in most of Canada, no subprime mess at TD and core tier-1 at 9%. (USD may stand still or go down in the very long term)
You like insurance companies ? Try MFC, a losing AAA company for last quarter, but soundly managed and capitalized. It is suffering a normal downturn like in a classical recession. Its business viability is not called into question, and this is a reason why my wage insurance policy is with them.
Right now, Americans will drive a great benefit to hold assets in solvent countries with less bad fundamentals than what is offered in USA. Europe, Emerging and Canada are the place to protect yourself from fed's reckless dollar printing. Why
Three Financial Stocks Worth Holding [View article]
Three good stocks. The only problem is that 100% of em is American. Do you have any idea of foreign stocks (outside of Canada and USA) which could be bought reliably for long term fat dividend returns? What about DB ING and AIB ? No body talks about them, are they ignored bargains?
Big Surprise: Most Big Banks Lack Capital [View article]
Where's the Outrage at the Banks? [View article]
Which Banks Are More Risky, The Largest EU or U.S. Banks? [View article]
Are Citi, Bank of America Pushing Prices Up? [View article]
Tangible Common Equity: How Much Is Enough? [View article]
Foreign Bank Stocks: Irish, British Lead a Sea of Red [View article]
Eight Reasons Bank of America Is Going to $20 [View article]
Rating the Top 12 U.S. Banks - From Hidden Gems to Zombies [View article]
Thanks
Nationalizing the U.S. Banking Sector: There's No Choice [View article]
Time to Buy Bank Stocks [View article]
I am not very impressed by this article. Why not buy ICICI Bank directly. Read "Boomers, your crisis has come". India and China are not at the same stage as USA in their cycles. They are probably in the high zone right now, with everyone moving forward and raging trough unprecented opportunity for growth and development. Why try to stick with American banks whose share price seems low but quality seems to justify the situation ?
If you want to play low price with not too bad quality, try Allied Irish Banks. If you want a bank as big as BAC but who did not need government help and managed trough crisis unscathed and growing in Good Banking Business (Read buying Deutsche Postbank) and whose share price still plummetted 80% off highs, try Deutsche Bank. If you want a p/e around 8 in banking activities with a sustainable dividend of about 6% right now, look north, Canada is just there, with a debt load and budget deficit who will prevent your Canadian dollar dividend to lose value... This is Toronto Dominion Bank. No housing boom in most of Canada, no subprime mess at TD and core tier-1 at 9%. (USD may stand still or go down in the very long term)
You like insurance companies ? Try MFC, a losing AAA company for last quarter, but soundly managed and capitalized. It is suffering a normal downturn like in a classical recession. Its business viability is not called into question, and this is a reason why my wage insurance policy is with them.
Right now, Americans will drive a great benefit to hold assets in solvent countries with less bad fundamentals than what is offered in USA. Europe, Emerging and Canada are the place to protect yourself from fed's reckless dollar printing.
Why
If you really want to stick with US Financials
Three Financial Stocks Worth Holding [View article]
Finding Relative Value in Financial Services [View article]