Global Currency Reset & BEYOND

Members Login
Username 
 
Password 
    Remember Me  
 

Topic: CREDIT SUISSE

Page 1 of 1  sorted by
Senior Member
Status: Offline
Posts: 252
Date:

CREDIT SUISSE

Permalink  
 

I have been writing about Deutsche Bank for about six months now.  My first post, back in October 2015, showed how DB, then trading above $29/share, was sitting on multi-decade support.  The chart was showing warning signs that bad things were on the horizon, particularly if it broke below $25.

Low and behold, price did indeed break below $25 which I noted in my December 11, 2015 post titled Deutsche Bank: Something is Seriously Wrong.  I showed again not only how broken the long-term chart was, but how DB had grossly underperformed relative to its financial peers (re-posted here):

Picture

 

Things went from bad to worse for the big German bank as it has plunged 40% since my December post and now sits in the low $15s. This is remarkable given the size of the bank.  Remember, it’s not only Germany’s largest bank (by a mile), but it also has nearly €55 Trillion in total derivative exposure. To put that in context, the entire German GDP is approximately €3.0 Trillion.  Long story short, here’s an updated monthly chart of DB with some support and resistance lines thrown in. That MACD is just atrocious…

Picture

ZeroHedge has been all over the Deutsche Bank story as well.  In their post from yesterday, they again compared DB’s price action to that of Lehman Brother’s from 2007-2008 right before they went under. It’s a compelling chart and worth noting the similarities:

Picture

Getting on to the point of this post, I want to show you that while all eyes are on Deutsche Bank, there’s another massive European bank that’s in exactly the same death spiral as DB.  It hasn’t received nearly the same amount of press, but the charts are nearly identical.  That bank is Credit Suisse – the Swiss bank with a $26 Billion market cap, negative earnings and over a $1 trillion.  Does this look chart remind you of anything?

Picture

While Credit Suisse isn’t as “systemically risky” as DB, it’s still a huge bank, the second largest in Switzerland in fact – only behind UBS in terms of assets.

OK, the chart looks terrible, so what?  Well, for one thing, when two of Europe’s largest banks are trading at or near 20 year lows while equity markets are just a stone’s throw from all-time highs, something must be seriously wrong.  I have a feeling there are major problems under the surface that smart money has already identified but the companies have yet to announce publicly.  What else could account for such poor price performance?  These banks are easily “too big to fail” so they will have an implicit central bank backstop – and yet they both still languish.  I think we’ll soon find out what kind of skeletons are hiding in the closet, but, unfortunately, by that time it will be too late.

 

http://slopeofhope.com/2016/04/deutsche-bank-isnt-the-only-sick-mega-bank.html

 



__________________
Page 1 of 1  sorted by
Quick Reply

Please log in to post quick replies.



Create your own FREE Forum
Report Abuse
Powered by ActiveBoard