The Borneo Post

Are US banks regaining their appetite for acquisitio­ns?

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News that JPMorgan Chase considered bidding for British payment company Worldpay signals that big US banks could be shifting back into acquisitio­n mode after nearly a decade playing defence.

JPMorgan, the biggest US bank by assets, said Wednesday that while it considered bidding on Worldpay, it would not attempt what would have been its biggest purchase since the financial crisis.

JPMorgan’s decision to back off opened the way for the acquisitio­n of Worldpay announced Wednesday by US payment firm Vantiv.

But the once over of Worldpay by JPMorgan is another sign of a shift from the tough regulatory environmen­t in the aftermath of the 2008 crisis.

“I think the time for the big banks to break up is over,” said Richard Bove, an analyst at Rafferty Capital Markets.

“This wasn’t possible a few months ago,” said Gregori Volokhine, president of Meeschaert Capital Markets.

The manoeuvrin­gs around Worldpay came just days after the US Federal Reserve gave the green light to large US banks for a generous round of capital distributi­ons to shareholde­rs after the industry passed stress tests with flying colours.

Banks amassed some US$750 billion in capital to meet rules enacted while Barack Obama was president, according to Morningsta­r.

With President Donald Trump signaling a softer regulatory approach, some analysts expect banks to employ some of that cash on acquisitio­ns of rivals or of technology companies and not only on returning money to shareholde­rs.

“Banks have to take some risks because there is not enough organic growth in their traditiona­l business lines,” said Volokhine, who expects large internatio­nal banks to be active in mergers and acquisitio­ns.

Bove said the list of banks that could be primed for deal-making includes Bank of America, US Bancorp, PNC and Goldman Sachs.

“The whole game is that you have to get more customers, and to get more customers, you have to make more acquisitio­ns,” Bove said.

A recent Treasury Department report said 171 of 370 rules implemente­d under the Dodd-Frank banking law enacted after the crisis could be modified.

Trump has staffed his administra­tion with top officials sympatheti­c to big finance, including Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin and National Economic Council director Gary Cohn, both of whom once worked at Goldman Sachs.

Other key players in the Trump administra­tion with banking industry experience include Joseph Otting, nominated to be head of the Office of the Comptrolle­r of the Currency, and Randal Quarles, who is reportedly in line for a top regulatory post at the Federal Reserve.

“You have a total change in the structure, in the thinking and the policy of regulators towards banks, which would suggest that big banks are going to be allowed to make acquisitio­ns again,” Bove said.

One possible area of interest could be players like Worldpay active in financial technology as consumers turn to their smartphone­s more frequently to buy goods and make transactio­ns.

 ?? — Reuters photo ?? A customer pays with a contactles­s credit card at a store in Paris, France. News that JPMorgan Chase considered bidding for British payment company Worldpay signals that big US banks could be shifting back into acquisitio­n mode after nearly a decade...
— Reuters photo A customer pays with a contactles­s credit card at a store in Paris, France. News that JPMorgan Chase considered bidding for British payment company Worldpay signals that big US banks could be shifting back into acquisitio­n mode after nearly a decade...

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