samantaao
Forumer storico
ciaoPrezzo molto basso mi sembra. Io non ho in ptf questa.
Ho qlc della 2045.. La guarderò tra 20 anni, se esisterà ancora..
avete i 2 isin?
ciaoPrezzo molto basso mi sembra. Io non ho in ptf questa.
Ho qlc della 2045.. La guarderò tra 20 anni, se esisterà ancora..
tutti gli ZC, vivi e sepolticiao
avete i 2 isin?
azz quanti! grazie!tutti gli ZC, vivi e sepolti
XS1055501974 |
azz quanti! grazie!
sapete quali siano i più liquidi?
Novo Banco SA, Portugal’s fourth-biggest
bank by assets, plans to sell as much as 1.2 billion euros ($1.4
billion) of non-performing loans by the end of the year as it
seeks to post its first annual profit in 2021.
Most of the loans were part of a portfolio called Nata 3
that the lender had been preparing for sale before the pandemic
struck, Chief Executive Officer Antonio Ramalho said in an
interview at the bank’s Lisbon headquarters on Wednesday. Novo
Banco, controlled by Lone Star, now plans to adjust the sale to
reflect the adverse market conditions caused by Covid-19.
“Without the pandemic, it would have been natural for us to
sell Nata 3 through a single transaction,” Ramalho said. “We now
need to figure out a way of adapting to the current situation.”
The portfolio includes mortgages, consumer credit and bigger
loans.
Novo Banco, which emerged from the breakup of Banco
Espirito Santo SA in 2014, has been selling non-performing loans
and non-core assets as part of a plan to lower what was once one
of Europe’s highest bad loan ratios.
The Portuguese lender’s non-performing loan ratio was just
under 10% in July, down from around 33% in 2016. The goal is to
reduce that further this year so that it’s in line with other
Portuguese banks, Ramalho said. The average ratio across the
industry was 6.5% at the end of 2019.
Demand for NPL portfolios has remained “reasonably stable”
in Portugal, Ramalho said. Most buyers are long-term investors
based in the U.S. or the U.K.
Spanish Business
The bank is analyzing a further potential restructuring of
its operation in Spain, having already carried out cost cuts,
Ramalho said. One option would be to sell the unit, he added.
The self-funding operation has about 3.5 billion euros of
regulated assets and more than 200 employees, the 60-year-old
CEO said.
“It’s an adequate operation for someone who already has a
banking license,” Ramalho said.
Novo Banco is sticking to its goal of posting a profit for
2021, according to the CEO. The lender reported a 2019 loss of
1.06 billion euros.
The bank has already received about 3 billion euros from
Portugal’s Resolution Fund out of the maximum of 3.89 billion
euros allowed under the contingent capital agreement that was
set up when Lone Star bought 75% of the Portuguese lender in
2017.
Banco Espirito Santo, once Portugal’s biggest lender by
market value, got a bailout in 2014 after regulators ordered it
to raise more capital following the disclosure of potential
losses on loans linked to companies in the family-controlled
Espirito Santo Group. The Bank of Portugal then moved the
lender’s deposits and most of its assets to the newly formed
Novo Banco.
come sempre però la buona notizia non schioda le quotazioni.....Finalmente una buona notizia.