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S&P downgrades ratings of 34 Italian banks

Feb. 12, 2012 - 18:42 By Korea Herald
UniCredit SpA, Intesa Sanpaolo SpA and Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena SpA were among 34 Italian financial firms downgraded by Standard & Poor’s, after the credit-ratings company reduced the nation’s grade last month.

UniCredit, Italy’s biggest bank, and No. 2 Intesa had their long-term ratings lowered to “BBB+” from “A,” S&P said Friday in a statement. Monte dei Paschi, the No. 3 bank, was reduced to “BBB” from “BBB+.” All three have a negative outlook, S&P said.

Italy’s credit rating was cut two levels to “BBB+” from “A” on Jan. 13 as S&P said European leaders’ struggle to contain the region’s debt crisis would complicate the country’s efforts to finance borrowings. S&P Friday revised its banking industry country risk assessment, known as Bicra, for Italy to group 4 from group 3, citing mounting risks.

“Italy’s vulnerability to external financing risks has increased, given its high external public debt, resulting in Italian banks’ significantly diminished ability to roll over their wholesale debt,” S&P said in a separate statement on the country’s financial industry. “We anticipate persistently weak profitability for Italian banks in the next few years.” 
A pedestrian passes a branch of the UniCredit SpA bank in Rome. (Bloomberg)

European nations are grappling with a debt crisis now in its third year as they seek to restore budget order and shore up the region’s financial industry. Spreads on some Italian banks are trading as if they were rated at the cusp of investment grade.

“Banks in highly indebted countries have a greater potential vulnerability than in others,” Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti said Friday in a CNBC interview. “By and large, Italian banks have been less hit by the financial crisis than the banks in many other European countries.”

The extra yield investors demand to hold bonds of UniCredit and for Intesa rather than government debt was 508 basis points on Thursday, or 5.08 percentage points, compared with an average 306 basis points in the Bank of America Merrill Lynch Euro Corporates, Banking Index. European “BBB” ranked bonds are at 381 basis points and BB debt at 664, Bank of America Merrill Lynch index data show.

Fitch Ratings downgraded Intesa to “A-” from “A,” and Monte dei Paschi to “BBB” from “BBB+” in a statement on Feb. 6. The credit- ratings company affirmed its “A” rating on UniCredit.

S&P downgrades linked to Europe’s debt crisis haven’t necessarily led to shifts in bond prices, as investors anticipated declines in creditworthiness. The French 10-year bond was little changed in the five days after S&P lowered the nation to “AA+” from “AAA.” The response was the same last August, when financial markets dismissed the U.S.’s loss of “AAA” status by pushing the yield on the 10-year Treasury note to a record low of 1.6714 percent just seven weeks later.

Italian industrial production unexpectedly rose in December, even as quarterly data suggest that the euro area’s third-biggest economy may have entered its second recession since 2009 amid tax increases and budget cuts. Output increased 1.4 percent from November, when it rose 0.3 percent, national statistics office Istat said Friday in Rome. 

Output declined 2.1 percent in the three months through December from the previous quarter, suggesting Italy’s economy may have contracted in the fourth quarter after shrinking 0.2 percent in the period from July through September.

Bank of Italy Director General Fabrizio Saccomanni told reporters in Rome on Thursday that he expects the economy to shrink as much as 1.5 percent in 2012.

UniCredit said Friday in a press release on its website that S&P had aligned the bank with Italy’s credit rating and had maintained the lender’s stand-alone credit profile at a-.

Intesa’s long- and short-term ratings are capped at the same level as Italy’s and the bank’s stand-alone credit profile is “a-,” Intesa said Friday in a statement on its website.

UniCredit, Intesa and Monte dei Paschi didn’t respond to e- mails sent after normal business hours seeking comment. 

(Bloomberg)