Thursday, April 16, 2009
Trust bank shares drop after share prices ran up * Investors worry about effect of new accounting rules
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Trust bank shares drop after share prices ran up * Investors worry about effect of new accounting rules
(New throughout, updates share prices) By Svea Herbst-Bayliss BOSTON, April 16 (Reuters) - Prominent trust banks' shares fell sharply on Thursday as investors worried about possible weaknesses in their servicing businesses and that new accounting rules might not help as much as hoped.
State Street Corp's (STT.N: Quote, Profile, Research) share price fell as much as 10.6 percent before paring losses to close the session down 3.92 percent at $34.29. Bank of New York Mellon (BK.N: Quote, Profile, Research), a main rival, saw its share price slip 8.4 percent before recovering some ground to end the day down 4.15 percent at $31.21.
The declines followed on the heels of a strong share price
gain for State Street and for Bank of New York Mellon in the last weeks. Analysts said a new rule that allows banks to apply new mark-to-market guidance in the first quarter of 2009 helped each company, even though the Bank of New York Mellon is seen to be more conservatively positioned than its rival.
"State Street was perceived to be a large beneficiary of the accounting rule changes, and now the market may be concluding that it overestimated that effect a little bit," said Murali Gopal, analyst at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods Inc. Analysts said Bank of New York Mellon's stock price was being pulled down for that reason as well.
For months investors had been worried about State Street's unrealized investment losses, which the company said in January had nearly doubled to $10 billion in the fourth quarter.
The new accounting rule, analysts and investors reasoned, would be especially helpful to State Street. But on Thursday news from JP Morgan Chase & Co (JPM.N: Quote, Profile, Research), which reported better-than-expected first-quarter profit but noted some weakness in the servicing business and little effect
from the accounting rule, threw some cold water on those hopes.
Boston-based State Street is one of the world's biggest institutional investors and also earns fees for providing accounting and record-keeping services to large pension and hedge funds around the world. Analysts and investors said State Street's share price decline is not a complete surprise considering that the stock had gained 19 percent in the first week and a half of April
after the accounting rule change was announced. "
The move in the stock today could be part of a normal trading cycle, with the stock retracing some its amazing recent gains," said Joe Kinahan, chief derivatives strategist at online
brokerage thinkorswim Group. In early February State Street said it would slash its
dividend 96 percent and eliminate bonuses to top executives to help increase its capital.
The company also unveiled a more conservative plan for its investment portfolio, moving money from maturing mortgage-backed securities to more conservative assets. Those steps helped support State Street's share price some after it had cratered as much as 55 percent on Jan. 20, when executives announced unrealized losses for the fourth quarter. State Street is expected to release first-quarter earnings on April 21.
(Additional reporting by Doris Frankel, editing by Gerald E.
McCormick and Matthew Lewis)
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