Bank of America, Wachovia shares down on warnings

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Bank of America Chief Executive Ken Lewis said fourth-quarter results at the No. 2 U.S. bank would be disappointing due to write-downs and lower trading revenue.

NEW YORK (Reuters) - The shares of three of the major U.S. banks -- Bank of America Corp <BAC.N>, Wachovia Corp <WB.N> and PNC Financial Services Group <PNC.N> -- fell on Wednesday after they warned of fourth-quarter write-downs and loan losses.

Bank of America Chief Executive Ken Lewis said fourth-quarter results at the No. 2 U.S. bank would be disappointing due to write-downs and lower trading revenue.

Ken Thompson, chief executive of fourth-ranked Wachovia, said he saw a loan loss provision of $1 billion in the fourth quarter, nearly double the previous estimate.

PNC, a large U.S. regional bank, warned that it would report lower than expected fourth-quarter earnings, reflecting higher credit losses and the lower value of commercial mortgages in its portfolio.

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Bank of America shares were down 4.3 percent to $42.72 in late afternoon trading, Wachovia shares dropped 5.3 percent to $39.73 and PNC shares fell 4.7 percent to $67.46, all on the New York Stock Exchange. Executives of all three spoke at a Goldman Sachs conference in New York.

Lewis said Bank of America is likely to be profitable in the quarter but expects to set aside $3.3 billion for losses and write-downs.

"While we do not make a practice of forecasting quarterly earnings, I think you certainly can assume results will again be quite disappointing," Lewis said.

Wachovia's Thompson told the conference his bank was facing "as tough an environment as I've ever seen" and did not know when the credit crunch would be over.

Thompson said Charlotte, North Carolina-based Wachovia would boost its loan loss provision for the fourth quarter to about $1 billion from a previous expectation of $500 million to $600 million.

He said fourth-quarter losses from commercial and consumer mortgages, leveraged finance and structured products, including subprime-backed mortgage securities, had reached about $1.4 billion, similar to the level seen in the third quarter.

Pittsburgh-based PNC now expects to report earnings of 60 to 75 cents a share for the quarter, or between $1.00 and $1.15 excluding items. Analysts on average had expected PNC to report earnings of $1.33 a share before items.

The changes reflect a write-down of $1.5 billion in commercial mortgage loans, weak trading results amid market volatility and a higher provision for credit losses stemming from residential real estate development, it said.

HOPED FOR BIGGER RATE CUT

Bank of America's Lewis said he had hoped that the Federal Reserve would cut rates by half a point rather than the quarter point cut it made on Tuesday "because the capital markets are still so fragile."

Lewis said in response to analysts' questions that the bank hopes to sell off some of its 9 percent stake in China Construction Bank <601939.SS> <0939.HK> starting in 2008 and is "talking to the Chinese to see what level they would be comfortable with us holding."

Wachovia's Thompson said despite the difficult environment, he expected to grow earnings in 2008. He added that the bank might consider raising capital next year in a "relatively inexpensive form," such as a preferred stock offering.

(Reporting by Christian Plumb and Ed Leefeldt; editing by Tim Dobbyn and Gerald E. McCormick)