Trading and Investing

August 5, 2007

What’s happening with the big banks?

Filed under: General — defo @ 6:01 pm

Well, the short answer is that they’re getting hammered in the stock market. And things are likely to get much worse before they get better. Take a look at the 5-year charts for six of the biggest New York investment banks (charts from www.marketwatch.com):

JPMorganChase:
jpm.JPG

Lehman Brothers:
leh.JPG

Merrill Lynch:
mer.JPG

Morgan Stanley:
ms.JPG

Goldman Sachs:
gs.JPG

And the crowd favorite, Bear Stearns:
bsc.JPG

Bear Stearns is getting hit the hardest after announcing that two of its largest hedge funds collapsed due to leveraged positions in subprime CDOs. The question in my mind is not whether these stocks will recover, but how and when they will collapse.

Take a look at these banks’ earnings per share from 1996 to present:

earnings.JPG
source: Valueline

Profits at these banks have shot through the moon since 2003, mostly due to inexpensive credit (think: fed funds rate down to 1% in 2003/2004) and the mass development of securitized derivative products. Who will buy these products now that the market is spooked (think: subprime mortgage products are just the tip of the default iceberg) and borrowing is much more expensive?

The answer, probably, is no one. From what I understand, there were no bids to buy Bear Stearns’ subprime mortgage securities. No more sales equals no more profits. And with American Home Mortgage (AHM) stock plunging 90% on news that they can’t pay their creditors, it’s unclear how much credit risks these banks face.

The banks are trading at P/E’s of 7-9, which seems affordable unless you consider that their earnings may soon be cut in half. Many of these stocks had earnings decline by 50% in the tech bust, and I’m thinking that the housing/credit bust will be around the same magnitude.

I was lucky enough to have bought a Bear Stearns put option two weeks ago after the hedge fund announcement but while the stock was still at $141. I sold it on Friday into the news of Bear Stearns’ stock being downgraded by S&P.

The question in my mind is how to keep playing this. I’ve been waiting for the big banks to turn, and now they’re doing it. I’m convinced that they’re going to drop by 25-50% in the short to medium term (1 month - 2 years?).

Will they (a) continue to crash, (b) hit a short-term bottom and then proceed downward, or (c) turn around for one last bull-charge before collapsing?

The other question is which banks will get hit the hardest. I think the whole sector will be damaged if market sentiment really changes, but who knows which banks will end up in the hurricane? Bear Stearns is definitely a sinking ship, but you never know which banks might survive and thrive.  It seems unlikely to me that any will survive and thrive in this environment, but I won’t rule it out.

If Bear Stearns recovers up to $120, I’m definitely buying more puts. My instinct is that a Goldman Sachs put could be a winner but I’m nervous that market sentiment may fail to turn on such name recognition.

Do you really think Bear Stearns was the only bank to have so much leverage in their hedge fund? I sure don’t…

I’ll be following the banks closely and may put something on tomorrow if the timing seems right.

- defo

1 Comment »

  1. Great post. On friday, I was actually trying to put together a similar post on “What’s happening to Goldman Sachs” but didnt have time to finish it.

    Its amazing to me how the banks allowed themselves to fall into this trap. I definitely think that GS will bounce in the short term, but I’m not confident in any recovery back to its highs from earlier this year. I could see a recovery back up to around $195. For the most part, I think these banks are done for the year.

    Comment by reblace — August 6, 2007 @ 1:48 pm

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