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U.S. banks will have to raise fresh capital in 2009, and a sharp increase in credit-rating downgrades on mortgage-related securities will lead to further stresses on the companies' capital, according to prominent banking analyst Meredith Whitney.
"From July 2007 to date, over $5 trillion worth of securities have been downgraded, but our concern here is that the pace of downgrades has only accelerated through 2008," the Oppenheimer analyst wrote in a research note dated Jan. 6.
"Capital ratios will be meaningfully lower in the fourth quarter (of 2008) versus post TARP pro forma levels," she said.
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Bill Haber / AP |
Since the summer of 2007, Wall Street has been hammered by a sharp pullback in debt markets, which began with mortgage woes and escalated into a credit crisis, slowing economic activity around the world.
The U.S. Treasury's $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) was established in October 2008 primarily as a means to recapitalize banks and take bad assets off their books to help support creaking credit markets.
Apart from the more than $40 billion in fourth-quarter write-downs and loss provisions the analyst expects from the group of bank stocks under her coverage, Whitney also anticipates "capital strains to become apparent from ratings change pressures."
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JPMorgan Chase [JPM
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] will have the largest increase in fourth-quarter 2008 loss provisions at $6.2 billion, compared with $2.5 billion in the year-earlier period, the analyst said.
Whitney, who maintained a cautious stance on the U.S. banking sector, expects Bank of America [BAC
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] fourth-quarter loss provision will be $6.7 billion, compared with $3.3 billion a year earlier.
Citigroup [C
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] provision for the period will be $7.9 billion, while Wells Fargo [WFC
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] will be $4.4 billion, the analyst said.






