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Loan portfolio transactions to top Euro 100bn in 2014

Research published today by PwC shows that in the nine months to the end of September 2014 loan portfolios with a face value of Euro 67bn have been sold by Europe’s banks. PwC estimates there are transactions currently in process for portfolios totalling a further Euro 50bn.

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• ECB review will be a further prompt for continued European bank restructuring

Research published today by PwC shows that in the nine months to the end of September 2014 loan portfolios with a face value of Euro 67bn have been sold by Europe’s banks. PwC estimates there are transactions currently in process for portfolios totalling a further Euro 50bn.

The majority of these transactions are scheduled to complete by the year end which means that the total unwanted portfolios held by banks sold during the year will easily exceed Euro 100 bn.

The face value of loans transacted in 2012 totalled Euro 46bn and in 2013 Euro64 bn. Expectations for 2014 are an increase of at least 50% over 2013.

Commercial real estate lending continues to dominate current transactions and PwC estimates that in 2014 such lending will account for around 50% of total transactions. Whilst many of the transactions represent non-performing loans there is an increasing number of performing loans coming to market driven by an increased number of buyers looking to acquire performing pools of assets.

Along with increased appetite for performing mortgage pools, PwC is seeing increased interest in bundles of performing corporate loans, particularly in the BB to B- risk families. The combination of rapid deployment, in built risk diversity and significant yield to maturity is highly attractive to a number of funds who are increasingly driving both the primary and secondary market pricing for those rating categories.

The increased volume of performing assets coming to the market is attracting a diverse group of potential acquirers: some of the traditional financial investors are now firmly focused on building broader based financial services businesses across Europe and, in addition, PwC is seeing a small number of banks looking at portfolio acquisitions as a means of customer acquisition. There continues to be a high level of interest from a number of sovereign wealth funds but to date their impact on the market is limited.

Richard Thompson, global leader for portfolio transactions at PwC, comments: “Transaction levels have easily exceeded expectations for the current year. However, with European banks holding what we estimate to be at least Euro 2.4 trillion of unwanted assets, even these volumes represent a small drop in a very big ocean.

There has been much speculation concerning the impact of the recent ECB asset quality review and stress tests on likely transaction volumes. Whilst a number of the transactions to date have been prompted by the reviews I expect that, as the market digests the increased information available concerning the state of bank balance sheets, there will be an increased impetus for continued and much needed restructuring of the banking sector in many countries. We will therefore see a continuing high level of transactions for years to come.”

The research published by PwC also shows an analysis of transactions by country. In Italy transactions volumes are expected to more than double between 2013 and 2014. With the Italian banking sector in the spotlight following the ECB reviews, PwC expects the Italian loan portfolio market to be especially active in the next few years. The large global investors are looking at multiple markets, but as transaction volumes increase in some of the smaller markets, regional investors are honing in on particular country markets.

Richard Thompson, global leader for portfolio transactions at PwC, added: “There’s enormous interest from investors in the Italian market and with the Italian banking system holding non-performing loans totalling more than Euro 150bn it has been a recurring question over the last couple of years as to when the Italian market for non-performing loans will take off.”

Next Finance , November 2014

Article also available in : English EN | français FR

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