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Aug
11

Don’t Bet on Canada’s Banks

Posted by stockexpert

In the last 18 months, Strategic Short Report readers had the chance to make 432% when Lehman failed, 162% when Allied Capital came clean, and 220% on PNC Financial… This month my subscribers are poised to make money on the next bank drop.

And I’m going to give you a chance to join them.

If you think Canada escaped the downward trend in U.S. banking, think again. While the country may not have plunged headfirst into subprime mortgages, it did dip heavily into risky derivatives. The leverage it took on generated impressive returns on equity in good times, but that same leverage is set to wipe out equity today.

Shareholders in one “safe” Canadian bank will have to rethink their loyalty. Its looming solvency crisis practically guarantees a dividend cut. And that’s our catalyst for this month’s short play action - offering us a chance for 200% profit potential.

Accounting secrets have not yet obliterated Canadian bank earnings - like those of U.S. banks - because the Canadians have not yet accounted for the coming tsunami of mortgage, consumer loan, and corporate loan losses.

Here’s how they loaded those loan books with hidden risk.

The Basics of Bank Accounting

Bank shareholders leverage their capital by borrowing short-term money, primarily from depositors. Your bank account is an asset for you, but it’s a liability for your bank. For every dollar of capital, bank shareholders borrow 15, 20, or even 30 dollars from senior creditors - otherwise, they could not afford to own their huge portfolios of loans and securities. Here’s the core problem: Bank shareholders and their agents (bank executives) are lending other people’s money. So bankers are looser with lending than if they were lending their own savings.

The accounting process to determine commercial bank profits is inherently speculative, as well. Banks book an upfront profit on every new loan they make, minus a small “provision” for loan losses - just in case some loans wind up going bad. These upfront profits have the habit of disappearing when loans “season,” and banks discover how many deadbeats owe them money. In case you’ve been wondering what has wiped out the majority of the S&P 500’s trailing earnings, here’s your answer: Banks and brokerages reversing most of the profits they booked on loans made and securities bought at the peak of the bubble.

Banks claimed to make good money loans to every borrower. But somebody sure was lying, since they’re taking charges against these older vintage loans and securities left and right. And the industrywide provision for loan losses, which is the single most important - and unpredictable - cost in a bank’s income statement, has been soaring. Once these provision expenses soared on the backs of delinquent loans, the banking sector’s earnings plunged deep into negative territory.

Throw in a few more explosive ingredients like deposit insurance, central bank lending facilities, loan syndication, and securitization and we’re left with a system for which sales volume - not risk management - is priority No. 1.

Those who claim the banking system is well capitalized - including those who designed the unstressful “stress test” - hold rosy assumptions about how many loans will go bad and how much banks will earn from existing loans to have a shot at outrunning their credit losses.

Lots of bank stocks remain in a fragile state. This month, we’re going to buy puts on the Canadian bank most ready to fall. And now’s your chance to join us. If you want the name of my latest play, just click here to learn more about Strategic Short Report.

Regards,
Dan Amoss

August 10, 2009

Post from: Penny Sleuth

Don’t Bet on Canada’s Banks

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