Credit Suisse takes an additional $850 million provision

Darren Sinden

Royal Bank of Canada recently published a sector-wide note and flagged significant growth in investment banking fees at Credit Suisse, which Dealogic estimates suggest grew by 77% year over year.

Credit Suisse

Credit Suisse said it will post an unexpected 4th quarter loss thanks to an additional $850.0 million provision.

That money is being set aside in relation to a possible settlement of a court case that dates back to the global financial crisis and is relating to the sale of residential mortgage-backed securities, or RMBS.

The latest set back comes on top of the $450.0 million that the bank set aside in November against the winding down of York Capital Management, a hedge fund in which it had invested.

In November York Capital announced it would return money to clients, wind down its European operations and focus solely on managing internal money. Credit Suisse had been an investor in the fund since 2010 and took the hit to offset a related markdown in the value of its common equity tier one or CET1 capital ratio.

Today’s news is the latest development to frustrate attempts by the recently appointed CEO, Thomas Gottstein, to refocus the business by streamlining the structure at both the investment bank and the asset management division.

The bank’s guidance on Q4 investment banking revenue suggests it should grow by around 15% when measured in US dollar terms, and despite the increased provisions, Credit Suisse will press ahead with a $1.70 billion share buyback program.

Credit Suisse is one of a number of banks that are still defending claims related to the sale of mortgage-backed securities, which suffered sharp falls in value during the market turmoil seen in 2008. Peers Morgan Stanley, UBS and Nomura are also facing similar claims.

However, it’s not all bad news for the bank despite its shares trading almost 3% lower this morning, Credit Suisse believes it has strong grounds for appeal should any judgement in the case go against it.

Earlier this week JP Morgan upgraded the Swiss bank to overweight from neutral and raised its price target to CHF 14.00 from CHF 12.70. At the time of writing, Credit Suisse stock was trading at CHF 12.20.

Royal Bank of Canada published a sector note on global investment banks this week and was generally bullish of the sector prospects. RBC flagged significant growth in investment banking fees at Credit Suisse, which Dealogic estimates suggest grew by 77% year over year in 2020. However, despite assuming that larger provisions would be necessary at the Swiss lender, the Canadian bank kept its rating on the stock at sector perform.

We don’t have long to wait before we find out how US investment banks fared in the final three months of last year. Goldman Sachs and Bank of America will report Q4 2020 earnings on January 19th, whilst Morgan Stanley will publish results the following day.

We have already had seen how smaller rivals Jefferies Group LLC performed as they published their Q4 2020 results on Tuesday this week.

Their figures showed that net revenues were up by more than 115% in the 4th quarter, over the same period in 2019 and investment banking revenues had jumped by 133.0% on the same basis. Looking at the full financial year 2020 IB revenues were up 69.7% and sales and trading revenues by 69.7% when compared to 2019.

Shares in the parent company Jefferies Financial Group have rallied by 8.50% over the last week as a result.

Read this next

Retail FX

Exclusive: Prop firm Funded Engineer faces $50M lawsuit from FPFX

Retail trading tech provider FPFX Technologies, LLC (FPFX Tech), has filed a lawsuit against the prop firm Funded Engineer and its associated operatives for alleged breaches of contract exceeding $50 million in damages.

Market News, Tech and Fundamental, Technical Analysis

USDJPY Technical Analysis Report 26 April, 2024

USDJPY currency pair can be expected to rise further toward the next resistance level 160.00, target price for the completion of the active impulse sequence (C).

Digital Assets

US crypto miner and founders hit with $5.6 million fraud charges

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has filed charges against Texas-based cryptocurrency mining and hosting company Geosyn, and its co-founders Caleb Ward and Jeremy McNutt.

Chainwire

BloFin Sponsors TOKEN2049 Dubai and Celebrates the SideEvent: WhalesNight AfterParty 2024

Platinum Spotlight: BloFin dazzles as the top sponsor of TOKEN2049 Dubai, elevating its status with the electrifying WhalesNight AfterParty 2024. Celebrate blockchain innovation and join the night where industry leaders and pioneers connect.

Institutional FX

Eddid helps HK crypto platforms with Bitcoin and Ether ETFs

The brokerage firm will help SFC-licensed virtual asset trading platforms with Bitcoin and Ether ETFs in Hong Kong.

Digital Assets

Cboe can save up to $15 million by closing crypto exchange

“Refocusing our digital asset business enables us to refine our strategy, leveraging our core strengths in derivatives, technology excellence and product innovation to help maximize opportunities for our business and deliver efficiencies for Cboe and our clients.”

Fintech

Sumsub adopts Europe’s new KYC standards for crypto

“Businesses are facing a rising regulatory tide where properly preparing for compliance is crucial. There is now a simple choice, whether to implement solutions that can deliver this, or instead risk significant financial and reputational damages.”

Chainwire

Bybit Web3 Launches Industry’s First Bitcoin Layer 2 Airdrop Campaign, Paving the Way for a New Bitcoin Era

Bybit, one of the world’s top three crypto exchanges by volume, is excited to announce that Bybit Web3 is launching the industry’s first Bitcoin Layer 2 Airdrop campaign through its Airdrop Arcade.

<