Euro zone periphery bulls should be eyeing up Banco Espirito Santo. The troubled Portuguese bank's shares were at one point down 20 per cent on July 15, and it needs capital to stabilise itself. For hedge funds looking to profit from Europe's banking recapitalisation, or an acquisitive bank, this is the moment to pounce.
BES is cheap. An 11 percent fall in BES stock means its 2.2 billion euro market capitalisation is trading at only a third of tangible book value. Obviously there is a reason: BES's exposure to the Espirito Santo group (ESG) chain of companies, which previously controlled the bank and now face a painful debt restructuring. One of those companies is selling its BES shares to avoid default.
How bad could it get? BES has lent 1.2 billion euros to ESG, and may have to repay retail investors who hold 850 million euros of ESG debt it sold them. The bank also has a 2 billion euro loan to its Angolan subsidiary, and equity in that unit of 663 million euros.
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If it was as simple as that, private investors would be beating a path to BES's door. The snag is concern that the bank may have even more exposure to the Espirito Santo family, not just its companies. A chaotic restructuring could lead to more forced sales of BES equity, or delay a recapitalisation. And the Angolan business is a black box. Those uncertainties make BES a punt - but also a test of how far periphery bulls are prepared to go.