PNC Deal Highlights Challenges of U.S. Market for European Banks
November 16 2020 - 10:24AM
Dow Jones News
By Patricia Kowsmann and Margot Patrick
Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria SA's sale of its U.S. operations
to PNC Financial Services Group Inc. underlines that, for European
banks, America is a tough nut to crack.
The problem for BBVA was that while it grew in the U.S. over a
15-year period, particularly in the southwest, it didn't get big
enough that it made sense to stay in the country. The
second-largest Spanish lender lacked the capital to further expand
its footprint and couldn't ask shareholders -- already struggling
with its depressed share price -- to stump up.
BBVA's retreat from the U.S. also shows how the coronavirus
pandemic is making European banks more calculated about their
prospects for growth and survival, and comes amid an expected wave
of mergers and acquisitions involving lenders in Europe.
With the cash proceeds from the PNC deal -- worth 50% of BBVA's
entire market value -- the bank will be able to weather the
pandemic more comfortably. It also has the option to grow in its
other key markets, including Spain and Mexico, and to buy back
shares to boost its share price and satisfy shareholders. Shares in
smaller Spanish bank, Banco de Sabadell SA, soared 20% on investor
hopes that BBVA might buy it to enlarge its domestic business.
"BBVA lacked scale in the U.S. to enhance returns in a sustained
manner and hence make the local unit become a more transformational
part of the group," UBS analysts said in a note. They were among
analysts flagging Sabadell as a possible acquisition target, with
its shares down more than 60% this year.
BBVA was one of the European banks that spread out across the
world before the last financial crisis on a hunt for growth. It
bought a small California bank in 2004 and expanded across Texas,
Arizona and other Sun Belt states through a string of acquisitions.
It and larger Spanish rival Banco Santander SA both kept sizable
retail banks in both North and South America, even after other
foreign banks exited in recent years.
But while BBVA was the number four bank in Texas by deposits,
its market share, at 4.5%, was considered too small for strong
returns.
Pittsburgh-based PNC said it agreed to buy BBVA's U.S.
operations for $11.6 billion. "This is a great transaction, one
that is testament to our focus on generating value to our
shareholders" said Carlos Torres Vila, BBVA executive chairman,
adding the excess capital "provides lots of strategic
flexibility."
Shares of BBVA were up close to 20% in midday trading in Europe,
but are still down almost a quarter this year. European banks were
already struggling to make money under a low-interest rate
environment and have been hard hit by the pandemic. Spain's economy
in particular has suffered as the spread of the virus has triggered
months of lockdowns. A ban on dividend payments by banking
regulators further hit the stock.
Some European bank executives say their aim is to come out of
the current crisis with more viable operations than they started
with, by making long-postponed decisions and scissoring businesses
that can't compete in the long term.
Mr. Torres Vila declined to discuss potential targets, but said
in months ahead, and as economies recover from the pandemic hit,
"We believe that there might be opportunities to reinforce the
franchises where we have leadership positions."
Another duo of Spanish lenders, CaixaBank SA and Bankia SA,
agreed to merge in September.
Bank executives and industry consultants say there are still
benefits to being in different countries, such as diversifying
earnings in different economies. The offsets can be multiple layers
of regulation, local capital that can become trapped, and the
difficulty of attaining adequate scale in multiple markets.
BBVA continues to bet in markets where it sees itself as big
enough to succeed, including at home in Spain, and in Mexico and
Turkey. Its market share in lending in those countries is 13%, 23%
and 18%, respectively.
Other geographic retreats so far this year have included HSBC
Holdings PLC's shuttering of around one-third of its U.S. branches,
and ABN Amro Bank NV curtailing its lending to corporate customers
outside of Europe. Sabadell, BBVA's potential acquisition target,
has been considering ways to exit from the U.K. after buying a
midsize bank there five years ago that has struggled for scale.
Write to Patricia Kowsmann at patricia.kowsmann@wsj.com and
Margot Patrick at margot.patrick@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
November 16, 2020 10:09 ET (15:09 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2020 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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