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Investment banks pay for the past. (By the Numbers).


After suffering through the worst equities market in more than 20 years, investment banks The following is a list of investment banks Financial conglomerates
Large financial-services conglomerates combine commercial banking and investment banking, and sometimes insurance.
 were hoping 2003 would be a year of recovery. The answer so far? Don't count on it.

According to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 IPO (Initial Public Offering) The first time a company offers shares of stock to the public. While not a computer term per se, many founders, employees and insiders of computer companies have found this acronym more exciting than any tech term they ever heard.  Monitor, the number of initial public offerings in 2002 declined to just 81--one-sixth the number at the market's height in 1999, and the fewest since 1979. This year may prove to be even more inhospitable in·hos·pi·ta·ble  
adj.
1. Displaying no hospitality; unfriendly.

2. Unfavorable to life or growth; hostile: the barren, inhospitable desert.
 to public debuts; the market had its first IPO-free January since the 1970s, while February brought just three new offerings.

"The IPO market is basically dead," says Richard J. Peterson, chief market strategist Noun 1. market strategist - someone skilled in planning marketing campaigns
strategian, strategist - an expert in strategy (especially in warfare)
 for Thomson Financial Thomson Financial

A major provider of information, analytical tools, and consulting services to the financial community. The firm, a division of Thomson Corporation, is best known to investors for its First Call segment, which publishes consensus earnings
, a research firm. "There are no deals to be made."

The news is almost as bad for mergers and acquisitions. With the equities market in the doldrums, the total value of transactions in 2002 was one-fourth the value of the two previous years, according to data compiled by Thomson Financial.

Like their brethren in the accounting industry, the big banks have been tainted taint  
v. taint·ed, taint·ing, taints

v.tr.
1. To affect with or as if with a disease.

2. To affect with decay or putrefaction; spoil. See Synonyms at contaminate.

3.
 by the recent rash of scandals, which have damaged the M&A market in particular. "Firms like Tyco, Enron and WorldCom were big acquirers in the '90s, and lot of their acquisitions are suspect," says Peterson. "Even the most pious CEOs are shying away from doing deals, given the scrutiny of regulators."

Last December, the 11 biggest underwriters agreed to pay $1.4 billion in penalties resulting from the scandals, and many are bracing for thousands of investor suits. Salomon Smith Barney Smith Barney is a division of Citigroup Global Capital Markets Inc., a global, full-service financial firm, that provides brokerage, investment banking and asset management services to corporations, governments and individuals around the world. , for example, took an aftertax charge of $1.3 billion to cover penalties and legal settlements. Credit Suisse First Boston Credit Suisse First Boston was originally the trading name of the Financière Crédit Suisse-First Boston, a London-based 50-50 investment banking joint venture formed in 1978 between the First Boston Corporation and Credit Suisse.  set aside more than $400 million. The result? Investment banking revenues for the top firms are down by as much as a third.

But don't feel too sorry for these financial giants. Thanks to serious belt tightening and the development of other sources of revenue such as asset management, many of them remain profitable. Take Salomon. Though its profits dropped 33 percent in 2002, Citigroup's investment banking arm still managed to rake in rake in
Verb

Informal to acquire (money) in large amounts

Verb 1. rake in - earn large sums of money; "Since she accepted the new position, she has been raking it in"
shovel in
 a $3 billion profit. It seems some firms are crying all the way to the bank.
IPOs a No-Show

The flood of dot-com-fueled IPOs has slowed to a trickle, forcing banks
to seek out other revenue sources

      # of IPOs  $ Billions

2000     422        $93
2001      91        $37
2002      81        $19

Source: IPO Monitor

Note: Table made from line graph

Losing the Urge to Merge

Banks are handling slightly more than half as many
merger-and-acquisition deals as in the boom years, but their dollar
value has shrunk even more significantly.

      $ Trillions

2000     $1.7
2001     $0.75
2002     $0.42

Source: Thomson Financial

Note: Table made from bar graph

Still in the Black

Overall revenues are down across the board, but some banks still managed
to post a profit.

$ Billions

                       2001   2002

Salomon Smith Barney  $20.8  $20.2
Goldman Sachs          $3.8   $2.8
CSFB                   $2.9   $2.8
Morgan Stanley        $11.6   $9.3
Merrill Lynch         $10.3   $8.4

Source: Websites for each firm

Note: Table made from bar graph


RELATED ARTICLE: Stock Stats

* Number of IPOs in 2003, as of March 1:3

* Average return on '03 IPOs: (-3%)

* Performance of S&P 500 in 2002: (-23%)

* Number of U.S. corporate under-writings in 1999: 1,201

* Number in 2001: 766

Source: Reuters, Securities Industry Association
COPYRIGHT 2003 Chief Executive Publishing
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2003, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Title Annotation:2003 off to a poor start
Author:Tynan, Daniel
Publication:Chief Executive (U.S.)
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Apr 1, 2003
Words:561
Previous Article:A Spring of discontent.(shareholder resolutions will be filed this spring)(Brief Article)
Next Article:Toward more rational CEO succession. (Thought Leader).(business leaders must have business skills not just charisma)
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