Trust in Global Financial Institutions Remains Negative
Trust in Global Financial Institutions Stronger Over 2013
but Remains Negative
- Thomson Reuters TRust Index
Fourth-Quarter Results Down on Third Quarter
· Trust in global financial institutions remains negative at the year end; regional differences narrow
· Regulatory activity up 43% on 2012, with 103 average daily alerts in 2013
· Divergence between strong analyst growth estimates and low investor expectations for growth continues
HONG KONG/LONDON/NEW YORK, January
17, 2014 – Thomson Reuters, the world’s leading source
of intelligent information for businesses and professionals,
today announced the latest results of its proprietary TRust
Index showing that trust sentiment in the Top 50 Global
Financial institutions finished the year stronger, but still
negative, with fourth-quarter sentiment below that of the
third quarter. Analysis of the Top 50 Global Financial
institutions for the fourth consecutive quarter of TRust
Index metrics revealed several trends observed throughout
2013, among them a regional convergence of news and social
media sentiment; continued confidence in analyst
expectations; and proliferation of regulatory activity.
“Throughout a year which saw dramatic improvement in
markets and numerous headline events impact the financial
industry, trust sentiment amongst news and social media,
whilst still modestly negative, had recovered from 2012’s
lows and stabilized,” said David Craig, president,
Financial & Risk, Thomson Reuters. “Our data reveals a
stronger industry, which enters 2014 within a much-changed
landscape and an ever-increasing regulatory focus.”
Tracking trust through news and social media sentiment shows that the Top 50 Global Financials ended the year with a fourth-quarter trust score of -1.75 percent, down from -1.5 percent in the third quarter. At the regional level, the top institutions in Europe/UK scored the highest trust sentiment in the fourth quarter, ending the year at -1.25 percent, down from -1.0 percent in the third quarter. Institutions in the Americas scored lowest with -1.85 percent in the fourth quarter, versus -1.6 percent in the third quarter. The Asian institutions, which had led in trust scores for most of 2013, were down at -1.5 percent (-1.0 percent in the third quarter).
Headline
events affecting trust sentiment scores over the fourth
quarter included:
· Record mortgage- and
LIBOR-related bank fines, penalties and settlements exacted
by US and European regulators
· The US
government shutdown; cuts to Asian GDP growth forecasts by
the World Bank
· IMF and ECB activities around
capital buffers, debt, leverage and risk
· The
release of the approved Volker Rule on December 10,
2013.
Other features of this quarter’s TRust Index follow below; please click here for further insight and data:
The Confidence of the Marketplace –
Investors and Analysts
Fourth-quarter earnings growth
estimates for the financials sector continue to show high
expectations by analysts. Sridharan Raman, senior research
analyst at Thomson Reuters, said, “At 22.4 percent
earnings growth estimates for the sector, financials are
just below telecommunications companies this quarter at 22.6
percent, but still well ahead of all other S&P 500
sectors.”
According to Thomson Reuters StarMine, analysts forecast forward 5-year growth rate for the Top 50 Global Financials at 9.0 percent, above the 8.0 percent expectations for the S&P 500. However, we are still seeing investors discount growth, with market-implied growth rates at -2.1 percent. This is further reflected by a 4.9 percent price appreciation in the Top 50 Global Financials stocks over the quarter, below both the S&P 500 (9.3%) and Thomson Reuters Global Index (6.7%).
Aggregate changes to analyst recommendations over the fourth quarter for the Top 50 Global Financial institutions reveal downgrades continued to outnumber upgrades across all regions, although only by a small margin. This quarter, the highest numbers of upward revisions were seen for the UK/Europe institutions, due in part to the improved UK housing market increasing loan demand.
Counterparties: Credit Spreads as an
Indicator of Trust
In the fourth quarter, credit default
spreads (CDS) continued a long-term tightening trend,
reflecting an overall increase in confidence among the Top
50 Global Financial institutions in pricing the relative
risk of doing business with each other. Institutions in the
Americas ended the year with tightest spreads, and Asia the
widest. With the average spread for the Top 50 Global
Financials at about 103 basis points, CDS ended 2013 far
below 2011’s high of nearly 350, demonstrating the
positive appetite in the bond market and reduced risk of
default.
Regulation as a Barometer of
Trust
According to Chris Perry, managing director of Risk
at Thomson Reuters, “The proliferation of regulatory
activity over the past several years must be seen as a
growing and permanent condition for the global financial
industry and a significant factor in the cost of doing
business”.
The average daily number of regulatory alerts tracked by Thomson Reuters Accelus was above 100 for the second consecutive quarter, roughly double the daily average in 2010, and at the end of 2013 stood at 26,898 alerts, an increase of 43 percent over 2012 (18,761). This increase reflects both increased activity by regulators and additional monitoring by Thomson Reuters.
Tracking
Controversy and Governance as Factors in Rebuilding
Trust
Thomson Reuters ASSET4 environmental, social and
governance data, shows that a high level of controversies
have been reported for the Top 50 Global Financials relative
to the Financial Sector as a whole, but that adoption of
processes and governance to address responsible marketing
practices, improve fair competition and avoid bribery and
corruption, all continue to be priorities.
Thomson
Reuters TRust Index leverages proprietary data analytics,
news and social media sentiment analysis. This latter
indicator draws on over four million business and financial
news and media sources to track the state of trust in the
Top 50 Global Financial institutions. This two-minute video
explains further how the measures in this quarter’s TRust
Index relate to the state of trust in the global financial
market place over the quarter. Please click on first
quarter 2013, second quarter 2013 and third quarter 2013 for
previous results.
Sources: Thomson Reuters ASSET4,
Thomson Reuters Business Classification (TRBC), Thomson
Reuters Datastream, Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S, Thomson Reuters
MarketPsych Indices, Thomson Reuters News Analytics (TRNA),
Thomson Reuters StarMine Quantitative Models
About
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ends