Poised for growth: ECB’s Lagarde gives euro zone banks a leg up

(Repeats more widely, no changes to text)

By Joice Alves

LONDON (Reuters) -Euro zone banks’ shares extended gains on Friday to hit fresh three-year highs after the European Central Bank left the door open for interest rate hikes this year.

Highly sensitive to ECB rates moves, the euro zone banks gained as much as 1.2% when the European bourses opened on Friday, to touch their highest level since September 2018. They were set for their second best week this year, even after giving up early morning gains by 1200 GMT.

In something of a turnaround, ECB president Christine Lagarde signaled on Thursday for the first time that interest rate hikes this year were not ruled out.

Her words triggered a sharp rate repricing, but euro zone banks’ big reaction was delayed to Friday, when money market bets on ECB hikes rose even further.

They are now pricing in 10 basis-points of hikes by June 2022 and 50 bps worth of hikes by December.

Major banks UBS, BoFA and Jefferies reiterated their love for European banks amid the new ECB rates bets.

Sebastian Raedler, investment strategist at BofA, was overall negative on European equities amid rising real bond yields but he overweighted bank stocks.

“We expect a further rise in bond yields to translate into around 5% further upside for banks’ price relative,” he said.

According to analysts, monetary policy tightening by the ECB would support lenders’ margins by reducing the cost of ECB excess liquidity and by rising Euribor rates, the euro zone bank-to-bank lending rates.

But not all banks across the region will equally benefit from tightening central bank conditions.

Some liquid, retail-focused banks could gain the most, said Jefferies analysts, citing Spanish banks Banco Popular Espanol (BPE) and Bankinter and Caixabank.

“This is because liquid, retail-focused banks have seen margins negatively impacted given difficulty in passing negative rates on to depositors,” Jefferies told clients.

In the meantime, more diversified French banks Credit Agricole, BNP Paribas and Société Générale are seen as less geared. They also have significant domestic exposure, where lending is mostly at fixed rates, Jefferies added.

Traders had already turned more optimistic about European bank stocks in January after the U.S. Federal Reserve flagged it could raise its rates quicker than expected.

(Reporting by Joice Alves; Editing by Frank Jack Daniel)

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