How Healthy are American Banks? (w/ Chris Whalen) - YouTube

Channel: Real Vision Finance

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CHRIS WHALEN: Hi, I'm Chris Whalen, Chairman of Whalen Global Advisors.
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I'm an investment banker and author.
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I work with banks, non-bank, financial institutions, mortgage banks, helping them raise money to
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finance operations.
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I also do some M&A and work on really strange mortgage assets with my friends at Ginnie
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Mae.
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So, that's how I spend my time when I'm not blogging or on Twitter.
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Banks fund themselves in a variety of different ways.
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It really depends how big they are.
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If you're talking about a little bank below billion dollars in total assets, and that's
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most of the industry by the way, most of the deposits through checking account, small business
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deposits, things like that.
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The other big source for small banks is the Federal Home Loan Banks, because they can
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take a mortgage, let's say they give you a mortgage to buy a house.
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And they can finance that asset with the Home Loan Bank.
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So, it's a repurchase agreement.
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So, they sell it and they get funding, they go out and make another mortgage.
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They can also sell those mortgages to Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac, or whoever and they get
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their money back plus a little gain.
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And they go out and do it again.
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So, it's all about production, if you will, so like manufacturing assets.
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The bigger banks have a lot more diversity in terms of funding.
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If you look at JP Morgan, or Goldman Sachs, most of their funding actually comes from
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Wall Street.
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It doesn't come from deposits.
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JP is about 50% deposits, Goldman Sachs around 15.
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Why?
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Well, Goldman's a broker dealer, they're an investment bank, that's what they do.
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And they're trying to build that bank.
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But compared to say, Key or US Bank, who are still 70%, 80% deposits, they have a big advantage
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over the "universal banks", who have to fund themselves on the street every day.
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Well, if you think about the outlook for different financial institutions, you can separate them
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in a couple of groups.
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Smaller banks, and by that small, I mean anything below about 100 billion total assets.
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They're funded with deposits primarily.
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They really don't have Wall Street operations.
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They don't trade.
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They lend.
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They take deposits.
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They may have an off-balance sheet trust department, that kind of thing.
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So, their rates are determined by Main Street, and they tend to move pretty slow.
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The funding costs for smaller banks rises less quickly than the big banks.
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You look at someone like Capital One, for example.
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It's a credit card business.
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There is a retail bank in there somewhere, but the credit card business is the biggest
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part of it.
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And they actually fund most of their broker deposits, which are expensive, but they can
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manage it every day.
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They can change that number every day.
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And it's a money market operation.
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JPMorgan Chase, same thing, half the bank is deposits.
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The other half is from the bond market.
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So, each one of these banks has a different funding profile, the Wall Street banks tend
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to feel changes in Fed policy and market direction much more quickly, simply because they are
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very sensitive to those short term liabilities.
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And they have to go out and reprice like every 30 days.
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Your typical community bank is in a very different position.
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They know where their funding is, it's in their customers, and it recurs every 30 days.
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The mortgage payments, the payroll, everything else, that's your strength.
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So, that's really the biggest difference in any of the non-banks who have to borrow their
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money from big banks.
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That's where they get the money.
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They have very limited sources other than that.
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So it's a chain, if you will.
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And the smaller community banks, will they lend to a non-bank?
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Not so much they'll lend to their customers.
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They'll lend to people that they actually know and have a certain size, but it's really
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the big banks that play the money market side of this of this game.
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If you look at what the trends have been in funding costs for banks and interest rates,
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generally, you go back to the Financial Crisis.
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After the Financial Crisis, the Fed pushed the cost of funds for the banking industry
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down about 90%.
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And why did they do this?
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They did this to protect the banks, the banks are in the middle of writing off about $100
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billion in bad loans.
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And they had to finance this.
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So, the Fed deliberately reduced funding costs, at one point, they got down to about $11 billion
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per quarter for the whole industry.
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The industry is $15 trillion in assets.
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And normally on a quarterly basis, it would cost about $100 billion or so to finance everything.
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Goes down to $11 billion.
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So, what was happening there was savers were being taxed, essentially.
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And that money was being transferred to the equity holders of banks.
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So, whereas in the '80s, and the '70s, probably 50%, 60% 70% of the money a bank made went
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to depositors and bondholders.
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Today, it's the other way around, at one point 90% of the cash flow earned by banks on interest
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was going to equity holders.
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So, we're rebalancing that now.
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But it's a structural thing.
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It has nothing to do with what the Fed does with interest rates or other policy measures.
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It's really a function of what they did to interest rates in 2009, 2010 and how that
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slowly now reversing.
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Well, interestingly, the trend in interest income during this extraordinary period that
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the Fed engineered was pretty good.
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They maintain their spread because their cost of funds were so low.
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They were still making money on loans.
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And the break that they made on loans fell more slowly than the cost of funds.
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So, they got a big gift from the Fed.
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The Fed also started paying interest on what we call excess reserves, deposits at the Fed.
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That gave them another $10 billion a quarter of income.
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But now, we've been seeing the cost of funds really for the past two and a half years galloping
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long 50%, 60%, 70% annual rates have increased.
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And it's starting to slow now.
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But that's coming right out of bank income.
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So, last quarter, as we have predicted about a year ago, income for banks, net interest
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income actually fell.
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And it's now we're going to flatten out and probably go down a little bit simply because
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some markets are not repricing loans.
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In other words, banks can't make more money on their loans as their cost of funds is going
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up.
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Well, why is that?
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Because banks are competing with everybody.
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The competition for both funding on the deposit side of the balance sheet and for loans is
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intense, especially for larger banks.
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They're competing with pension funds and private equity funds, and anybody could think of,
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all chasing the same assets.
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So, it's hard for JP Morgan or any of these commercial lenders to get an extra quarter
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point on a loan when that customer can just walk cross the street and do better.
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It's extremely a competitive market right now.
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But unfortunately, the cost of funds is going to still go up.
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It's about $55 billion per quarter now.
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I think it's going to go up to $70 or $80 billion easily in this cycle.
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The interesting thing is over the long term, if you go back 30 years, banks were actually
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making less money per dollar of assets.
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And this is a wasting effect of interest rates slowly in a secular sense going down.
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And it's troublesome because you want banks to be profitable.
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The reason US banks cleaned up the mess so easily in 2009, 2010 is because they made
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money.
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You look at Europe, the banks there don't make money.
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And that's why they can't clean things up.
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It's a big difference.
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If you look at the competitive landscape for banks, especially larger banks, they are head
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to head with insurance companies, pension funds, private equity, Blackstone, BlackRock,
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Apollo, whoever.
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Commercial real estate, for example.
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That's an asset to the insurance company will finance for an investor and keep, they're
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not even going to sell it in the securities market, they just keep it because they like
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real estate, they like that kind of asset.
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So, a Citibank, JP Morgan, if you look at what they actually make on real estate lending,
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it's pretty bad.
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Their best book in the entire bank is consumer.
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That's where they make their money.
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You've seen non-banks and investors get into auto lending.
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Auto lending has doubled since 2008.
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It's the fastest growing asset class.
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You've also seen banks get out of residential mortgages in a big way, the sales of residential
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mortgage has been cut in half in the past five years.
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They just don't want the risk.
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So, the competitive landscape is such that there are certain kinds of commercial lending
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that banks make the most money on, where if you're Citi Bank or Capital One, you got a
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credit card book, deals on that are very good, but with more risk, because you can see defaults
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go up.
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And then all the other consumer stuff, residential mortgages, it's a loss leader.
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The banks don't really make money on that.
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So, if you think about it, they have to focus on commercial lending, that's their most profitable
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category.
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And as they get bigger, the big banks run into the big non-banks who want to steal that
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asset from them.
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The smaller banks have better pricing power.
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If you look at say, BB&T, or any of the smaller banks below that level, they'll be a point
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and point and have better yield on their loan book than a large bank.
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And it's simply because of competition for big assets.
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Because think about it Citibank, do they care about a half million dollar loan?
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No.
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They're looking for billions of dollars at a time because it takes the same resources
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to process each one.
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So, you might as well go for the big ones.
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And the other thing to keep in mind is most banks, a fifth of their book runs off every
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year.
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So, they have to go replace those loans.
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And then they have to go make new ones if they want growth.
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That's the tough part.
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A smaller bank, or like Bank of America, who keeps a lot of 30-year mortgages on their
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books, they have an average life of 10 years.
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So, a very different situation, less than 10% of their book is running off every year.
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But if you're Citibank, it's like 25% might and they have to run fast to keep up with
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that.
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I think investors, when we talk about net interest income, a lot of investors have this
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programmed response in their head.
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They think, well, interest rates are going up, in other words, the 10-Year Bond, Fed
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Funds, all of that.
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That doesn't necessarily translate into the banker being able to make more money on his
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loan book, or really even on agency securities.
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Most banks over the last two years have moved from being liability sensitive, in other words,
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they were focused on their funding costs, to being more asset sensitive.
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And ironically, last Thanksgiving, when the 10-Year Bond was at 3.25%, they weren't buying
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it.
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Now, they're buying it at 2%.
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And it just shows you that the volatility that the Fed has put into the market with
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all of these extraordinary measures has made it really hard to manage a bank.
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So, people see rates falling, and they're like, oh, funding costs are going to go down.
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No, because the short end of the yield curve is still propped up around 2%, 2.5%, that's
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not going to change.
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See, the thing you're going to do is understand about banks and investors, if rates fall too
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much, they just won't lend money.
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It's not worth their time.
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They'd rather just keep the cash.
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So, there's a very fine balance that the Fed has to strike, because if you really drove
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rates down to zero, I think the economy would die.
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And banks too.
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Anybody with leverage would be advantaged and all the savers, which includes banks,
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they would be losers.
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The industry's rate of return right now is a little over 1% on assets, about 12%, 13%
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on equity.
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Historically, that's low.
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We still haven't gotten back to where we were before 2008 in terms of equity returns for
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banks.
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And that's even after the tax bill.
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The tax bill effectively increased the amount the banks payout to their shareholders.
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And even with that, we still haven't gotten back to where we were in 2007, 2006.
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So, pricing is the biggest issue facing banks today.
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Do they have to compete for funding?
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Yes, of course they do.
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But the question is, what are they going to do with the funding?
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Right now, loans in the US are growing about 5% a year, which sounds like a lot.
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But that doesn't necessarily translate into great profitability for the banks.
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And the question is, how much capital do you have to put up against it?
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So, if I make a commercial loan, $8 for every $100 worth the loan, that's what we call 100%
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risk weight.
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Mortgages, 50%, $4, and so on.
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So, their calculus for the bank is not just how much do I make on the loan?
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But how much capital do I have to put behind it?
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Because ultimately, the risk adjusted returns are what mattered for banks.
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Well, credit is tomorrow's problem.
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Today's problem is liquidity.
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And that's the reason that the Fed stopped the runoff on their balance sheet this week.
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They had to say, the squeeze on liquidity is too great, we're starting to see problems.
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And you had had a couple of hiccups in the past several months with some nonbanks and
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some funds that were seeing runs.
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Credit, we'll see in a couple of years.
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Because the problem with what the Fed did was it made asset prices go up, so credit
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looks great.
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Every time there was a default in a building or a house, they just sell the collateral,
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and they make money.
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In fact, the default rate on multifamily housing financed by banks for the past five years
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has been negative, because in the rare event, there was actually a default, they sell a
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building and they make money, they pay off the full amount of the loan.
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So, that's not normal.
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And so, as we come back, and we normalize these relationships, we're going to start
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to see the real cost of credit.
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Because right now, if you look at the numbers, credit has no cost.
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When was the last time that was?
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2005.
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So, we're replaying the tape again, it'll be different this time, it always is, but
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I don't think we can escape a bit of an uptick in credit costs say 18, two years out, especially
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for consumers.
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Because during this period, you've had junk come the market gets finance like it's A paper,
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and it's just not the case.
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The slope of the yield curves discussed a lot, you hear everybody going on and on about
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the fact that the medium and long maturities are lower than say anything from Fed Funds
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out to two or three years.
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And that's because of the Fed.
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The signal that people take from that is that a recession is coming.
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And in the old days, of 10, 15, 20 years ago, when rates were higher, it certainly did function
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that way.
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Now, I'm not so sure.
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There's such a demand for US Treasuries all over the world that when you see the bond
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rally the way it did from Thanksgiving to now, point in the quarter in seven months.
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I'm just not sure what it's telling us anymore.
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It may not mean that we have a recession, it may mean that people are flying from other
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markets and they'd rather hold our paper.
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People keep saying, oh, the Chinese are going to stop buying our bonds.
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Well, who cares?
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If the Chinese stop buying our bonds tomorrow, I got news for the Bank of Japan and Norinchukin
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Bank, one of the biggest banks in that country would buy it all.
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They would just say ship it in right now.
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And so, you have to realize that the market dynamics have changed when it comes to interest
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rate, both for what that means for the economy and what it means for financial institutions.
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I think my biggest concern about regulation is that we've done too much in some cases.
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And the different regulators don't know what the other is doing.
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In other words, we don't have a holistic perspective from the Fed and the other agencies, it says,
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what do we want to achieve?
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Because if you're trying to have growth, you need lending.
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That's the only way an economy grows is if you have leverage.
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So, for example, we're not building enough homes, it's clear that we're not building
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enough housing to satisfy demand.
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But banks have been told not to do construction lending, they've cut the leverage by a third.
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So, whereas in the past, you could get a construction loan and finance three houses, now you could
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finance two with the same amount of capital.
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So, you're a builder, that slows things down.
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So, I think that we have to try and harmonize and tune the regulatory.
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So, we're not providing blockages that are unnecessary.
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In other words, we're hurting ourselves.
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And it's very much the case with the Fed.
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The Fed market out the money markets and credit robs us of indicators that we need to think
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about credit risk.
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So, if the numbers are wrong, well, what are they going to normalize so that they're meaningful
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again?
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And that's a big concern I have, because we don't know.
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Honestly, we really don't know.
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There's probably embedded credit risk in all the banks today but you can't see it.
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One basic view in the industry is slow growth on the top line in terms of revenue, funding
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costs are going to be a concern, they're going to keep rising slowly, but they aren't going
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to keep rising.
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And the capital markets side for the big banks to Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanleys is going
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to be choppy as it's been.
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There's not a lot of visibility there.
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The deal flow has been relatively small.
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So, it's been harder and harder for them to sustain growth in those areas.
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And you've seen Goldman, every quarter, they're trying to come up with a new narrative for
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this and they're struggling because they're competing with JP Morgan and JP Morgan is
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much bigger, they have a much bigger balance sheet and they were able to go out and win
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business because of that.
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So, the way I look at it is a consumer focused shops that people like Citi, Capital One are
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actually going to do better than their peers because they make more money on those businesses.
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If we see credit become a concern down the road, then it'll hurt them.
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But I think right now, to me, the most interesting story in the top four is Citi.
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The rest of them are- Wells is in the penalty box, Bank of America is okay, but continues
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to muddle along.
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They're very risk-averse.
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Bank of America, they've pulled back in every aspect.
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So, to me, there's not a lot of growth here.
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As Kevin O'Leary said on TV the other day, it's dead money.
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And I think he's right.
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In a sense, if I'm an investor, is that where I'm going to put my money on a risk adjusted
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basis?
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Not so much.
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In December, I could tell you what I did.
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I lightened up on mortgage exposures, I had owned NRC, New Residential for a long time
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because it had a 12% dividend, and I bought US Bank common and preferred, 5.5% on a preferred
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from US Bank is pretty cool.
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I bought a preferred from Citi which is almost 10%.
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Bank of America, same thing, they all traded off.
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So, I've moved to income.
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I like boring.
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I like sleeping.
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And I'm an investment banker, I can't have a margin account.
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It's too much of a pain in the ass.
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So, that's my take.
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I see the biggest opportunities in the smaller banks.
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That's where it always is.
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And for investors who can tolerate the lack of liquidity, I think it's the only place
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you want to be in banks right now.
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The rest of the sector, non-bank lenders, I think you want to careful, I really do.
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I think we're headed into a choppy phase in terms of both credit costs and funding.