Hated Euro Banks Are The New Turnaround Story

European financials have been one of the most hated areas of the market for years. Investors have been jumping ship and moving capital to a more productive place. It’s just too hard for these banks to make money with interest rates so low.

But the bear thesis dies once interest rates reverse trend. With higher interest rates, banks can lend again for a fat profit. If interest rates in the Eurozone reverse course, we could see a major rally in these beaten down banks.

Right now, there’s a huge disparity between where European interest rates are trading and the improving economic backdrop in the Eurozone.

The German 10yr is currently trading for a measly 50bps. This is over 200bps lower than comparable US rates. While at the sametime, it can be argued that the economy in Europe is just as good, if not better than the US.

The eurozone PMI recently came in at 60.6. This marks the strongest pace of economic expansion since the series began in 1997. And country specific PMI’s printed at all-time highs for Austria, Germany, Ireland, and the Netherlands.

The charts for Barclays (BCS), Credit Suisse (CS), Banco Santander (SAN), and Deutsche (BCS shown on the chart below) all look very constructive.

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Barclays reminds me of where Deutsche was in 2016. It was the most hated of the big banks. It was being investigated for a number of misdealings, it’s capital cushion was low, and it had a bunch of bad loans on its book. Everybody was predicting its collapse…

I remember tweeting in September of 16’ that I thought all the bad stuff was already priced into DB and the stock was now a great contrarian long. A number of people replied to let me know how ignorant and wrong I was… The stock put in its bottom that week and is now up 60%.

That’s where Barclays is now. It’s got a whole range of issues. It’s CEO, Jes Staley, is under investigation by UK and US regulators for attempting to unmask a whistleblower. And the bank faces potential heavy fines for possibly illegal fundraising for Qatar and mis-selling mortgage securities in the lead up to the GFC.

It recently completed a costly multi-year restructuring where it’s sold off a number of its operations, including its business in Africa, in order to refocus on its two core markets in the US and UK.

Because of all this, the bank has been one of the worst performers amongst its peers over the last few years. And in addition, it hasn’t helped that Barclays is a UK based bank and UK stocks are, and have been for a while, the most hated assets on the street. Just look at these two charts below from the BofA’s latest Fund Manager Survey.

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“The UK remains the consensus short amongst fund managers.”

So we have one of the most hated banks in one of the most hated markets (the UK). Is perhaps all the negative sentiment priced in already?

I think so.

Here’s the deal, BCS is trading well below its peers on valuation metrics. Selling for just over half of tangible book, it’s cheap.

And what’s great is that there are a number of positive catalysts on the horizon that can flip this negative narrative around and send the stock soaring.

  1. The company is finally done with its costly restructuring. And next quarter will be the first quarter in years that the company’s numbers haven’t been weighed down by these costs.
  2. Management hinted last quarter that they may raise the dividend next quarter after cutting it more than two years ago.
  3. Even though the bank is headquartered in the UK, a large portion of its operations are in the US. Barclays bought Lehman following the GFC and now runs its investment banking operations. This sets up the bank to be one of the main beneficiaries of the recent tax cuts. It also means the bank will benefit from rising interest rates in the US as well as the UK.

Apparently, Tiger Global, the successful macro hedge fund run by Chase Coleman, also agrees with this thesis. The fund recently made BCS one of its largest positions and now owns roughly 2.5% of the stocks float.

Purchasing some BCS here seems like an incredibly attractive way to play the European recovery narrative.

Disclaimer: All statements are solely opinions and are for educational purposes only.

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