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Montepio's rating cut to 'junk' status

montepioPortugal's banking sector suffered another humiliating blow today as Moody’s cut its rating for Montepio (Caixa Económica Montepio Geral) by two levels, from B1 to B3.

This means the bank now is categorised as a ‘speculative investment,’ or ‘junk’ and is just one level above being considered a 'substantial debt risk.’

The high street lender is deemed unable to take any shocks to its system, despite a recent capital increase of €270 million.

"At the end of March 2016, Montepio’s bad debt had increased to 15.3%, significantly above the 12% reported a year earlier which was the financial system’s average at the end of last year," noted the agency.

By cutting Montepio’s rating, Moody's also took into account the "very limited capacity of the bank to generate recurring profits," and that the Montepio has a load of property assets acquired by the bank over the past few years which are affecting its performance.

Montepio issued a weak statement to the Stock market Regulator CMVM, claiming a recent rationalisation of the bank’s operational structure will yield benefits "in the medium term."

It does not help that the bank made a €242 million loss in 2015, worse even than the €185 million loss in 2014.

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Comments  

+1 #3 dw 2016-06-08 10:37
Quoting Maxwell:
How does the EU justify continuing to carry such a lame duck as Portugal? Running a bank in a developed country has only ever meant following the norms of behaviour of banking and generating profits through sensible, secured lending.


You must have missed the 2008 crash when the corrupt international banking system collapsed.
+3 #2 Maxwell 2016-06-08 08:11
How does the EU justify continuing to carry such a lame duck as Portugal? Running a bank in a developed country has only ever meant following the norms of behaviour of banking and generating profits through sensible, secured lending.

In not handing out billions of euros worth of freebies of other depositors money to 'friends and family' without any security. How is it that Portugal has now crashed all its own native Banks ? Not just causing mayhem in its own economy but the effects rippling out across the EU. Not least in overseas BES and BANIF pensioners having the retirements destroyed.
+1 #1 Mutley 2016-06-07 22:45
All under control. Nothing a bail out can't resolve.

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