Friday, February 6, 2009

“Nomura’s stock is trading with at a price-to-book ratio of 0.6

From Alphaville:

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How the ‘Lehman shoku’ could morph into the ‘Nomura shoku’

Nomura, which is still digesting big chunks of Lehman Brothers’ Asian, European and Middle East operations that it bought last year, would probably be the first to deny it has bitten off more than it can chew. But perhaps even Nomura can see the irony in the “curse of the Lehman acquisition”.

The Lehman deal, although it came with a bargain price tag, has proven far more costly than Nomura envisaged - estimates of $2bn of integration costs are probably on the conservative side - while the timing of its acquisition strategy (to expand beyond its mature home market and compete head-on with Western rivals) has proven unfortunate.

Hence, Japan’s biggest investment bank had to warn on Friday it may raise as much as Y300bn ($3.3bn) selling stock to replenish capital after posting a record quarterly loss of Y342.9bn ($3.8bn) for the three months to December 31.

That is less than two months after Nomura raised about Y410bn ($4.4bn at today’s exchange rates) in debt from local investors.
The latest $3.3bn is equity, which roughly equates to about 25 per cent of Nomura’s market cap. According to Reuters, which quotes sources “with knowledge of the plans”, Nomura wants to issue the equity by the end of March, although it registered to issue the new stock over one year from February 19.

Ostensibly, the reason for this move is to “put the money towards growth opportunities, including the Lehman business” and “invest in its consolidated subsidiaries”, Reuters noted.

The truth probably has a more resounding ring of urgency: the bond sale in December boosted Nomura’s Tier 2 capital by 40 per cent to Y1,000bn, but did not lift its higher-quality Tier 1 capital, which dropped by about 20 per cent to Y1,47obn following the bank’s massive loss in the quarter to December.

And there are other reasons for concern. Nomura’s CEO, Kenichi Watanabe, recently estimated costs of about $2bn to integrate the units bought from bankrupt Lehman Brothers in Asia and Europe, which includes the absorption of about 8,000 Lehman employees, reports Bloomberg. And top executives including Watanabe are forgoing bonuses and taking pay cuts of up to 30 per cent after Nomura’s shares slid 63 per cent in the past 12 months.

Nomura sources told Reuters the bank may limit the issue or cancel it altogether if market conditions are too weak, but if - as it would dearly like to do - Nomura does rush the entire amount of new shares out by March 31, it risks a significant dilution effect. Already, as Reuters noted, “Nomura’s stock is trading with at a price-to-book ratio of 0.6, indicating the market is valuing it at far less than what it theoretically could be liquidated for”.

In Lex’s view, Nomura wants to be the financial services firm that flourishes in the crisis. “But building up an investment bank, even when others are retreating, is a costly business, especially in these markets”:

After its December debt issue, Nomura insists the fresh money in the form of new stock is all about growth – seeding investments in new opportunities – rather than about bolstering its capital base.

If so, investors can only hope that these will subsequently prove better prospects than past investments in Iceland or in Bernard Madoff’s funds, and more tightly-focused than the Lehman acquisition, which has been followed by cost-cutting and job cuts.

Me:

Don the Libertarian Democrat Feb 7 01:40
“Nomura’s stock is trading with at a price-to-book ratio of 0.6, indicating the market is valuing it at far less than what it theoretically could be liquidated for”.

So,it has losses that haven't become apparent yet? Otherwise, wouldn't somebody else buy up this stock? Is there a day that goes by any more without some really odd and inexplicable number turning up? How low would this stock have to go for investors to overcome their fear and aversion to risk concerning it?

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