Brazil banks Q4 seen firm, provisions may surprise
www.forbes.com Reuters, 01.31.03, 3:43 PM ET By Nicholas Winning
SAO PAULO, Brazil, Jan 31 (Reuters) - Brazil's top private banks are likely to post firm fourth quarter profits as high interest rates and trading gains help offset sluggish credit growth, although provisions could throw up some surprises.
Analysts say the recovery in confidence in Brazilian assets since the election of leftist Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva in October should help the balance sheets, while a 7 percentage point hike in the Central Bank's main interest rates over the period would support margins.
"While loan growth should remain stagnant and provisioning levels high, the Brazilian banks should nonetheless post strong profitability in 4Q 02 given high net interest margins resulting from high interest rates and solid trading gains," Jason Mollin, a banking analyst at Bear Stearns said in a note.
Itau <ITAU4.SA>(nyse: ITU - news - people), Brazil's second-largest private bank, is likely to post the highest profit again, beating market leader Bradesco <BBDC4.SA>(nyse: ITU - news - people) and smaller Unibanco <UBBR4.SA> (nyse: ITU - news - people).
Itau usually accounts for acquisitions on its balance sheet in one go, but analysts feel it may want to try to split up the $922 million acquisition of private banking specialist BBA-Creditanstalt SA in November because of its size.
There may also be a surprise one-time gain from cash it had stashed away over time to buy Banque Sudameris' Brazilian unit from Italy's IntesaBci <BIN.MI> before the deal fell through.
"Itau said the provision it made for Sudameris may be reversed in the fourth quarter -- about 500 million reais ($141 million)," said Rafael Quintanilha, a banking analyst at BES Securities.
Itau should post net profit in the region of 591 million reais, according to an average of 5 analyst forecasts. That is below the 639 million reais it made in the previous quarter, but higher than the 234 it made in the fourth quarter of 2001 when it bought a state bank.
The results are due on March 11.
PROVISION COULD HOLD SURPRISES
Brazilian banks stashed away huge trading gains from the sharp depreciation of Brazil's currency, the real