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Investorman

07/10/10 9:59 PM

#669 RE: MrBankRoll #668

It would have been hard to foresee the oil spill but it looks like it is going to have a serious impact on BP.

That's why we divirsify our holdings............
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Investorman

07/19/10 7:33 PM

#672 RE: MrBankRoll #668

Bank bailouts bleeding Ireland
The Irish are finding a bit of belt-tightening can't pay the freight for a giant bank bailout.

Moody's downgraded Ireland for the second time in a year Monday. In a familiar refrain, the rating agency pointed to deteriorating government finances and weak growth prospects as the country cleans up after a massive real estate bust.


Tight enough for you?
Ireland's economy contracted 7% last year, and the nation's debt load as a share of economic output could quadruple by the time the crisis peaks, Moody's said.

"Today's downgrade is primarily driven by the Irish government's gradual but significant loss of financial strength, as reflected by its deteriorating debt affordability," said Moody's Dietmar Hornung.

A major contributor to that loss of strength is the rising cost of propping up the banking sector. The government moved aggressively during the crisis of 2008 to backstop lenders such as Allied Irish Banks (AIB) , adopting policies including a blanket deposit guarantee that kept funds from fleeing the country.

The moves succeeded in stabilizing up the banks, but at a staggering cost. Moody's said Ireland has already committed to spending some 25 billion euros ($32 billion) to recapitalize the banks and free them of some of their bad loans.

That doesn't sound like much, given that the United States at one point had extended 10 times that amount in support of Citigroup (C). But Ireland's expected outlay amounts to 15% of last year's gross domestic product – and Moody's warns that the figure could yet rise should another bailed out bank, Anglo Irish, need more support as it expects. (Update: Earlier, I mistakenly wrote Moody's thought Allied Irish might need more support.)

The rating agency says that in a moderately stressed scenario the government's losses could approach 25% of last year's GDP, and notes that "the uncertainty surrounding final losses would exert additional pressure on the government's financial strength."

For comparison's sake, 25% of last year's GDP here would be $3.56 trillion.

The grim tidings come in spite of the aggressive moves the Irish government has taken to set its house in order after a long and wasteful property bubble. The government has raised taxes and slashed public sector pay in a bid to restart the economy.

"Ireland attacked its problems pretty aggressively pretty early," Barry O'Leary, who runs the Irish trade promotion group IDA Ireland, told Street Sweep in May. He says falling construction costs and dropping wages will restore competitiveness to an economy that grew bloated during the boom, which will boost Ireland's appeal to big multinationals seeking access to European markets.

But that sort of investment may remain muted with the rest of Europe up to its ears in debt as well, and many investors aren't willing to wait around to see what happens.

The spread on 10-year Irish bonds over their German counterparts was nearly 3 percentage points Monday, which is nearly double the spread seen in April before the latest round of sovereign debt-related stress.

Meanwhile, unemployment has hit 13%, compared with 10% in the rest of the European Union. Financial services and construction, two of the growth drivers during Ireland's long boom, "will not contribute meaningfully to overall growth in the coming years," Moody's said Monday.

That leaves the Irish, like so many others, searching frantically for something that will contribute to overall growth.

"It's going to be a long haul no matter what," said O'Leary.
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Investorman

07/27/10 11:28 PM

#679 RE: MrBankRoll #668

5 Banks to Buy Before Goldman Sachs
http://www.fool.com/investing/general/2010/07/27/5-banks-to-buy-before-goldman-sachs.aspx

Anand Chokkavelu, CFA
July 27, 2010


Too many investors get excited and jump into a stock without looking at comparable companies within the same industry or exploring other possibilities.

So, before buying shares in Wall Street dominator Goldman Sachs (NYSE: GS), read on as I give you one (hopefully) compelling reason to consider one of these five banks.

JPMorgan Chase (NYSE: JPM)
Lawrence G. McDonald, a former Lehman Brothers employee and author of A Colossal Failure of Common Sense: The Inside Story of the Collapse of Lehman Brothers, likes JPMorgan's CEO, Jamie Dimon. When I say likes, I'm understating. In a recent Motley Fool interview, my colleague Andrew Bond asked him his thoughts on the highest-quality management on Wall Street. His answer:

Well, the best is clearly Jamie, but JPMorgan, followed by Goldman Sachs, and Deutsche Bank (NYSE: DB) also did a good job navigating through the crisis.

Wells Fargo (NYSE: WFC)
Warren Buffett got a sweetheart deal on preferred shares of Goldman with warrants. He bought plain old common shares of Wells Fargo with no extra inducements way before that, and at one point during the financial crisis declared that when Wells fell to $9 a share in March 2009: "If I had to put all of my net worth into stock, that would be the stock."

Allied Irish Banks (NYSE: AIB)
If pure upside is what you're after, Allied Irish Banks is trading at a price-to-book ratio of 0.1. There are very good reasons for that, including the eurozone debt crisis and company-specific holes in Allied's balance sheet. However, it did pass the admittedly lax European bank stress tests last week.

National Bank of Greece (NYSE: NBG)
Another eurozone bank to consider is National Bank of Greece, which also passed the stress test. On the plus side, its balance sheet appears more solid than Allied's. On the minus side, it's priced that way. Buying this bank is a play that the Greek woes aren't as bad as they're made out to be.

Community Bank System (NYSE: CBU)
Finally, I'm going deep tracks with my favorite small bank. Community Bank System is located in upstate New York. It's pricey, but it's one to keep on your radar if you like straightforward management, conservative lending, a nice dividend, and a business model free of Wall Street shenanigans. OK, that's more than one reason, but I get a little carried away about this bank.

As you decide between Goldman Sachs and these other alternatives (or none of the above), remember that one compelling reason does not an investment thesis make. Each reason is merely a starting point.

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Investorman

08/06/10 8:09 PM

#681 RE: MrBankRoll #668

Current dividend = 6.2%

This Is One Bank You Want to Own Today
http://www.fool.com/investing/general/2010/08/06/this-is-one-bank-you-want-to-own-today.aspx

Jordan DiPietro
August 6, 2010


When the sovereign debt crisis first swept through Europe, almost every stock got pummeled, but the banking sector got hit especially hard. And rightfully so -- almost no one knew what was on the balance sheets of the big institutions, and billions of dollars of federal liabilities had to sit somewhere.

As such, countries such as Greece, Italy, Spain, and Ireland saw stocks drop quicker than a Tony Romo fumble. But oh how things have changed; the bank I'm about to suggest may absolutely shock you.

Introduce yourself to Spain
Banco Santander (NYSE: STD) is Spain's largest bank, one that has a 153-year history. It has more than 192 million customers and is the largest euro-denominated bank. Although it has seen a nice rebound in the past few months, its shares are down 17% so far this year.

But this is one bank you want to own -- today, if possible.

Santander managed 2008's financial crisis without so much as a flinch, experiencing not even one unprofitable quarter -- compare that to America's banks, and you get a sense of how amazing that really is. One of the reasons is that the bank, as part of Spain's mandatory regulations, is forced to hold very high reserves to cover any unforeseen losses. It also avoided U.S. subprime debt as part of its inherently conservative nature. In 2009, it earned $10.9 billion in profit and is expected to earn at least the same amount in 2010; in comparison, JPMorgan Chase (NYSE: JPM) earned just more than $11.7 billion that same year.

In addition, it recently passed the EU stress tests with flying colors. Its core tier 1 ratio was reported to be 10% at the end of 2009. Under the adverse scenario, it rose to 10.2%, and in the adverse scenario plus a sovereign debt "shock," the ratio only fell back down to 10%. That's pretty impressive. Did I mention that the bank's price-to-earnings multiple is a paltry 10.2, and it's only trading slightly above book value? Sure, there are other European banks that are cheap as well -- National Bank of Greece (NYSE: NBG), Bank of Ireland (NYSE: IRE), and Allied Irish Banks (NYSE: AIB) all come to mind. But Allied Irish, despite passing the stress tests, still needs to raise $9.7 billion by the end of the year. Failing to do so would mean the government would have to act as a backstop. Bank of Ireland has said that in the worst-case scenario, its tier 1 would be 7.1%, nowhere near as good as Santander's. National Bank of Greece actually trades slightly above Banco Santander's prices and also has quite a bit more uncertainty surrounding it.

Head and shoulders above the rest
Despite the naysayers and the doubters, Banco Santander is marching ahead like it's nobody's business. It's currently bidding for 300 U.K. branches of Royal Bank of Scotland. A few months ago it agreed to buy back almost 25% of its Mexican unit from Bank of America (NYSE: BAC), and it also purchased $3.2 billion of auto loans from Citigroup (NYSE: C).

It has added $36.6 billion in deposits this year, just as its largest competitor, Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria, saw deposits drop by 6.9%. It's stealing market share left and right by offering above-average interest rates, and it continues to expand in its home country as well as abroad. This year will be the first time that the bank will earn more profit from Brazil than from Spain.

The Foolish bottom line
Banco Santander is on an absolute tear right now. Neither the financial crisis that crippled our entire economic system nor the Spanish recession has been able to keep it down. Emilio Botin, the 75-year-old CEO, doesn't seem to care what the markets think or expect of him. He just keeps being the aggressive executive that he has always been, having grown the bank from one with 700,000 customers to the near 100 million that it has today. Juan Inciarte, the bank's head of strategy, put it best by saying that growth and diversification are "in the DNA" of the bank.

Clearly, that DNA has created one successful bank. I suggest you scoop up shares before it's already too late.