Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Credit Suisse Writedowns to Cut Profit by $1 Billion

(Bloomberg) -- Credit Suisse Group discovered pricing errors on bonds that will cut first-quarter profit by about $1 billion, prompting the biggest share decline in more than five years.

Switzerland's second-largest bank took $2.85 billion of writedowns on asset-backed securities after an internal review found ``mismarkings'' by a group of traders and credit markets worsened. The Zurich-based bank said in a statement today that it's assessing whether 2007 earnings were also affected.

The announcement comes two days after Qatar said it was buying shares in Credit Suisse and a week after the company reported net writedowns of 2 billion Swiss francs ($1.8 billion) for 2007, a fraction of those disclosed by bigger Swiss competitor UBS AG. Chief Executive Officer Brady Dougan said on Feb. 12 that he was ``more optimistic than many'' about prospects for a debt market recovery.

``I'm speechless,'' said Georg Kanders, an analyst at WestLB in Dusseldorf with a ``buy'' rating on Credit Suisse. ``To announce this just a week after reporting earnings is a major blow. This will again put the whole sector under pressure.''

Credit Suisse fell as much as 10 percent, and was down 4.40 francs, or 7.7 percent, to 52.35 francs by 1:15 p.m. in Swiss trading, cutting the company's market value to 60.8 billion francs. UBS AG, the biggest Swiss bank, dropped 0.8 percent.

`Loss of Confidence'

Credit-default swaps on Credit Suisse's subordinated debt rose to a record, according to Deutsche Bank AG. Credit-default swaps, used to speculate on a company's ability to repay debt, rise as perceptions of credit quality worsen.

Credit Suisse blamed the writedowns on ``significant adverse first quarter 2008 market developments'' and pricing errors ``by a small number of traders'' in the structured credit trading business. The company estimated that it remained profitable so far in the first quarter.

The announcement may raise questions about oversight at the bank less than a month after Societe Generale SA reported the worst trading loss in banking history following unauthorized bets by trader Jerome Kerviel.

``The big question mark is about the bank's control systems,'' said Stefan Raetzer, who helps manage about $28 billion at Allianz Global Investors in Frankfurt. ``The writedown isn't as much of a problem here as the loss of confidence.''

Credit Suisse spokesman Marc Dosch said a ``small number'' of traders had been suspended, declining to provide their names or location. The internal review will be finished before the publication of the annual report, scheduled for March 18, he said. The company will hold a conference call for reporters and analysts at 3 p.m. Zurich time today.

Dougan

The loss is the biggest setback for Dougan, 48, since he took over as CEO from Oswald Gruebel in May after heading the investment bank for three years. Gruebel returned the bank to stable earnings after a decade of management turnover, bungled acquisitions and the first criminal conviction of a bank in Japan. Credit Suisse's writedowns follow about $19 billion in debt and loan markdowns at UBS.

``It unfortunately just reinforces the reputation that the large Swiss banks have generated over the last year for financial ineptitude,'' Peter Thorne, a London-based analyst at Helvea Ltd., said in a note to clients. ``Whilst we had received some assurance that the Credit Suisse balance sheet is not as laden with problem securities as UBS, this disclosure just raises the prospect that they may be simply bad at knowing what problems they do have.''
 

Cadbury profits dip, shares slip on no cash return

(Reuters) - The world's largest confectionery maker, Cadbury Schweppes (CBRY.L: Quote, Profile, Research), missed analyst forecasts with a 2 percent fall in 2007 profits and its shares dipped as it warned there will be no cash return from its drinks demerger.

Cadbury also gave a cautious outlook on Tuesday for the North American soft drinks business which is to be spun off at the end of the second-quarter, with profit margins down sharply in 2007 and unlikely to start to recover until 2009.

The London-based group had intended to return cash to shareholders on the demerger but has now decided against this in order to preserve investment-grade ratings for both companies. Cadbury shares slumped 6.1 percent to 575 pence, the FTSE 100's biggest loser, by 5 a.m. EST.

"There is unlikely to be a return of cash to shareholders as we have decided to maintain both companies on investment-grade ratings," Chief Executive Todd Stitzer told a conference call.

Cadbury decided last October to spin off its 7 billion pound ($13.7 billion) drinks business -- to be called Dr Pepper Snapple Group -- and list it in New York, after a world credit squeeze derailed a lucrative sale to private-equity buyers.

The group, which makes Dairy Milk chocolate, Trident gum and Halls cough drops, reported 2007 underlying pretax profit of 915 million pounds, below an analyst forecast range of 922 to 936 million and a consensus forecast of 929 million pounds.

Cadbury is raising the 2007 dividend by 11 percent to 15.5p.
 

Medtronic quarterly net falls

(Reuters) - Medical device maker Medtronic Inc (MDT.N: Quote, Profile, Research) on Tuesday said quarterly earnings fell on charges related to the acquisition of Kyphon.
 
Fiscal third-quarter net earnings were $77 million, or 7 cents a share, compared with $710 million, or 61 cents a share, a year earlier.