Société Générale Retreats From Risky Investments -- WSJ
04 Agosto 2020 - 9:02AM
Dow Jones News
By Pietro Lombardi and Patricia Kowsmann
This article is being republished as part of our daily
reproduction of WSJ.com articles that also appeared in the U.S.
print edition of The Wall Street Journal (August 4, 2020).
French banking giant Société Générale SA, stung by
coronavirus-related trading losses earlier this year, plans a
retreat in its investment-banking unit and posted a surprise loss
Monday, even as rivals thrived on the increase in stock and bond
trading.
While competitors such as Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Morgan
Stanley have gained from customers moving their investments around
to adapt to market shifts under the pandemic, Société Générale took
losses in one of its specialties, creating and selling complex
investment products.
The bank on Monday reported a EUR1.26 billion ($1.48 billion)
net loss for the second quarter, compared with a profit of EUR1.05
billion in the same period a year earlier. Much of the loss was
related to EUR1.33 billion in charges related to the reduction in
value of its investment-banking business and deferred-tax assets
that it no longer expects to recover.
Net banking income, the bank's top-line revenue figure, fell
almost 16% to EUR5.3 billion. Analysts had forecast a small profit
and slightly higher revenue.
Revenue from equities trading fell 80% in the from the
year-earlier period, trailing rivals who showed gains in revenue or
more modest declines.
Société Générale, in addition to being a major French retail
bank, concentrates on producing and trading complex derivatives
related to the stock market. It took major losses in the first
quarter when the market panic related to the coronavirus pandemic
upended trades in that business.
The bank said it had concluded a review and will cut back on
risk-taking in such structured products tied to the performance of
stocks and bonds. Lower risk-taking at its trading operations will
mean it will be less likely to lose money when markets are
dislocated. But it will also result in a revenue decline of between
EUR200 million and EUR250 million, it said. It plans to counter the
fall with cost cuts worth some EUR450 million by 2022-23.
"The group will continue to adapt its activities to the new
post-Covid crisis environment, extending in particular the efforts
to reduce costs, " Société Générale's Chief Executive Frédéric
Oudéa said. Overall costs were down 10% in the second quarter.
Investment products tied to those structured trades promise
investors high returns when markets are calm, and generate strong
fees for the bank. But the wild and violent swings in markets in
March and April left the bank exposed.
Société Générale has suffered most because companies canceled
dividend payments to save money. Some of Société Générale's
structured products are tied to shareholder payouts.
The bank had been among the worst-performing major bank stocks
in Europe this year. Shares have fallen almost 60% since the
beginning of the year and were down 2% Monday. Investors are deeply
skeptical of its ability to generate profits and avoid trading
losses. Its shares are valued at just 16% of book value, compared
with 44% for rival BNP Paribas SA and 124% for JPMorgan Chase &
Co.
BNP Paribas, which also sells complex structured products to
customers, reported strong second-quarter profits last week,
attributing it to a diversified business model.
Mr. Oudéa said Société Générale has designed a new range of
products for clients that will be less risky for the bank, but
added it wants to retain its market share in equity structured
products. He said business improved in the second half of the
quarter when there was a rebound in activities from mid-May.
Like other European banks, Société Générale took substantial
provisions for soured loans, as the impact of the coronavirus
shutdowns rippled through the economy. It stowed away EUR1.28
billion for provisions, up from EUR314 million a year earlier.
Bank officials, however, said retail activity was back to normal
in June after falling sharply during the lockdown in France.
Write to Pietro Lombardi at Pietro.Lombardi@dowjones.com and
Patricia Kowsmann at patricia.kowsmann@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
August 04, 2020 02:47 ET (06:47 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2020 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
Grafico Azioni Societe Generale (PK) (USOTC:SCGLY)
Storico
Da Gen 2025 a Feb 2025
Grafico Azioni Societe Generale (PK) (USOTC:SCGLY)
Storico
Da Feb 2024 a Feb 2025