The World’s Safest Banks by Region 2010

In an earlier post we looked at the The World’s 50 Safest Banks based on rankings by the Global Finance magazine. In this post lets take a quick look at the safest banks for 2010 by region.

a) The World’s Safest Banks in Asia 2010

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b) The World’s Safest Banks in Australasia 2010

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c) The World’s Safest Banks in Middle East 2010

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d) The World’s Safest Banks in Latin America 2010

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e) The World’s Safest Banks in North America 2010

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f) The World’s Safest Banks in Central & Eastern Europe 2010

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g) The World’s Safest Banks in Western Europe 2010

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Some interesting points from the above lists:

  • JPMorgan Chase (JPM), Wells Fargo (WFC) and U.S. Bancorp (USB) have dividend yields of less than 1%.
  • CorpBanca SA(BCA) and Banco De Chile(BCH) have high yields of 5.91% and 4.85% at current prices.
  • Based on Friday’s close, National Australia Bank(NABZY) and Westpac Banking Corporation (WBK) have dividend yields of over 5% while Commonwealth Bank of Australia (CMWAY) pays a 6.53% dividend.

 

The World’s 50 Safest Banks 2010

The Global Finance magazine has published its list of the world’s 50 safest banks for this year. These banks were selected “through a comparison of the long-term credit ratings and total assets of the 500 largest banks around the world. Ratings from Moody’s, Standard & Poor’s and Fitch were used.” The magazine has published this annual listing for 19 years.

The World’s 50 Safest Banks 2010:

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Source: Global Finance

Some notable points from the ranking are:

  1. Of the six major Canadian banks, five are in this list.
  2. The “four pillar” banks of Australia – National Australia Bank (NABZY), Westpac Banking Corporation(WBK), Commonwealth Bank of Australia(CMWAY) and Australia and New Zealand Banking Group (ANZBY) have made it to the top 50.
  3. The tiny city state of Singapore is represented by three banks confirming the strength of the Singapore’s banking system.
  4. Some of the major British banks such as Llyods Group (LYG), Royal Bank of Scotland(RBS) and Standard Chartered did not make it to the list.
  5. Among the “Too-Big-To-Fail” US banks, Bank of America(BAC) and Citigroup(C) are also absent in the table above.
  6. Overall most of the safest banks are from developed countries.Despite the growth of many emerging market banks as global players such as the Chinese banks, none of them appear in the ranking.

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The Importance of Dividends

Recently fellow blogger Random Roger wrote a post an on how to construct a portfolio with one high yielding stock and one ETF for each sector. In the post Roger listed a few of the high yielding stocks current available in the market.

Dividends are an important component of total returns especially in the long-run. The following chart from a study by Credit Suisse shows that 72% of US returns and 92% of UK returns since 1900 have come from dividends:

Click to Enlarge

Dividend-Returns-since-1900

The graph below from  GMO’s recent newsletter also shows the importance of dividend yields in the U.S. and overseas markets.

Dividend-Returns-SP500

“Exhibit 3 shows the contribution that dividends have made to total returns over various periods. On average, over the very long term, dividends have accounted for some 90% of total return.”

Dividend-Global-Returns

“The importance of dividends over the long term isn’t just a U.S. phenomenon. The same patterns hold true across a wide variety of global equity markets. For instance, in
Europe, 80% to 100% of the total returns achieved since 1970 have come from dividends (combining yield and real dividend growth).”

According to FT market data, the current yield of the US market is just 2.0% while the yield of the UK market is 3.1%. Other countries such as New Zealand, Australia, Israel, Finland,  etc. have yields exceeding 3%. Hence investors looking for high yields have a wide variety of choice from foreign markets.

Update: From Bloomberg BusinessWeek

The-Importance-of-Dividend-Payouts

The Top 50 U.S. Banks and Thrifts

This week SNL Financial released the list of the biggest 50 U.S. banks and thrifts based on assets as of 2Q, 2010. The list is shown below with tickers included for banks that are public traded:

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Some of the key points from the rankings are:

1. First Niagara Financial Group Inc jumped to 38th position after its recent takeover of NewAlliance Bancshares Inc.

2. Bank of America(BAC) and JPMorgan & Chase(JPM) are the only banks with assets of over $2 Trillion each.

3. TD Bank US Holding Co and RBC BanCorp are US subsidiaries of Canadian banks Toronto-Dominion Bank(TD) and Royal Bank of Canada(RY) respectively.

4. Other US subsidiaries of foreign banks in the list are: HSBC North America Holdings Inc. of HSBC Holdings (HBC) of UK,
ING Bank FSB of ING Groep(ING) of The Netherlands, Santander Holdings USA Inc of Banco Santander (STD) of Spain and BBVA USA Bancshares Inc. of Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria (BBVA) of Spain.