The resignations of Nomura’s two top executives may close the chapter on the Japanese firm’s plan to become a global player in investment banking. Departing Chief Executive Kenichi Watanabe and Chief Operating Officer Takumi Shibata led the opportunistic swoop on bankrupt Lehman Brothers in 2008. They are leaving mainly due to an unrelated insider trading scandal. But Lehman isn’t working, and the pair’s replacements have a chance for a dignified unwind.
Dismal quarterly numbers provide the immediate pretext for a strategic U-turn. Nomura’s wholesale bank, which includes the trading and corporate finance acquired from Lehman, reported a pre-tax loss in the April-to-June quarter, and revenues fell 24 per cent on the previous three months. That came on top of a bad quarter for the core Japanese brokerage business, where commission income fell 15 per cent quarter on quarter. Nomura’s overall earnings were down 91 per cent in the period.
The whole industry is suffering, but Nomura has more to prove. Alarmingly, fee income in investment banking was at its lowest since the Lehman deal. Nomura still rules in Japan, but strip out Japanese equity issues and the firm would have ranked 27th globally — below Qatar National Bank — according to Thomson Reuters data for the year to date. The group made a bigger pre-tax profit in the quarter from “other” activities like real estate, and accounting gains in the value of its own debt, than from brokerage and banking.
Watanabe and Shibata couldn’t have foreseen such mediocrity four years ago, when most large investment banks were in retrenchment. And some of the Lehman business is doing well. The fixed-income business, 59 per cent of wholesale revenue, turned a profit. Banker pay, once Nomura’s bugbear, is well under control, at 33 per cent of net revenue.
But if new Chief Executive Koji Nagai, who comes from the Japanese brokerage, really wants to regain shareholders’ trust, a clean break may be the best way. Nomura’s meagre return on equity of just 0.4 per cent is far below what investors have a right to demand. With a prevailing wind, Nomura could be a genuine east-meets-west global player a decade from now. But destroying more value to chase that dream no longer seems a reasonable trade.