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Fitch downgrades BofA, Goldman and five others
Bloomberg / New York Dec 17, 2011, 00:11 IST

Seven banks, including Citigroup and Deutsche Bank, have had their long-term issuer default ratings cut by the agency.

Bank of America Corp, Goldman Sachs Group Inc and Citigroup Inc had their credit grades cut by Fitch Ratings as the impact of financial regulation and market turmoil weighed on the industry.

The lenders’ long-term issuer default ratings were cut one level to A from A+, Fitch said yesterday in a statement. Barclays Plc, based in London, Credit Suisse Group AG, Deutsche Bank AG and BNP Paribas SA also had their grades lowered.

The moves complete a review of financial firms by the three major rating companies. Moody’s Investors Service cut banks in September, citing a lower probability that the US will support the industry in an emergency. Standard & Poor’s lowered ratings last month. Lenders including Bank of America and Citigroup have said they may have to post billions of dollars in collateral and face higher funding costs in the event of downgrades.

“It’s hard to take anything positive from this; it speaks to the sentiment overall on global financial firms right now,” said Michael Nix, who helps manage about $925 million at Greenwood, South Carolina-based Greenwood Capital Inc, including Morgan Stanley shares. “It also validates what the other raters have already done, and to an extent was expected.”

Bank of America climbed 0.6 per cent to $5.26 yesterday, New York-based Goldman Sachs fell 1.5 per cent and Citigroup slid 0.5 per cent. The shares of all three were little changed in extended trading after Fitch’s announcement.

Biggest lenders
Credit ratings of the world’s biggest lenders have come under pressure amid weak economic growth and doubts about whether European regulators have done enough to end the sovereign-debt crisis. Lenders in the region must raise about ¤114.7 billion ($149 billion) in capital to help address the turmoil, the European Banking Authority said last week.

Fitch downgraded Barclays and Zurich-based Credit Suisse to A from AA-, while lowering France’s BNP Paribas and Deutsche Bank to A+ from AA-. Fitch corrected an earlier version of its statement to announce that Frankfurt-based Deutsche Bank was cut one level instead of two. Morgan Stanley’s long-term issuer default rating was affirmed at A.

The downgrades may increase pressure on firms facing stagnant revenue growth. Bank of America said last month that a one-level downgrade by all rating companies could amount to $5.1 billion in collateral demands as of September 30.

The full scope of damage from a credit rating downgrade is “inherently uncertain” because it depends upon the behaviour of counterparties and customers, the Charlotte, North Carolina-based firm said.

‘Strong liquidity’
“This decision is driven more by concerns about the global economy than the specific credit quality of Bank of America,” Jerry Dubrowski, a spokesman for the lender, said in an emailed statement. “We continue to maintain strong liquidity levels and to build capital.”

A one-level rating reduction for Citigroup’s deposit-taking unit could trigger an estimated $4 billion of collateral payments and other cash obligations, the company said in a regulatory filing.

Citigroup has made “enormous progress refocusing our business strategy to take advantage of our global network” Jon Diat, a spokesman for the New York-based bank, said in an emailed statement. “With a strong capital base, robust structural liquidity and ample reserves, Citi is well-positioned for the future.”

Representatives for Goldman Sachs, BNP, Deutsche Bank, Credit Suisse and Barclays declined to comment. Mark Lake, a spokesman for New York-based Morgan Stanley, said the firm was “gratified” that Fitch affirmed its ratings.

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