Saturday, April 25, 2009

Credit Isn't The Only Thing Hurting Banks

I possess 20 years of commercial banking experience, 10 of those as CEO. Even though the industry has changed dramatically in the nearly 20 years I have been out of banking, I feel that I should be able to spot trends, analyze financial statements, and differentiate a good bank from a poor performer. This past year has shown that I can't.

Short positions on numerous financials made me a decent amount of money, but it could have been a fortune had I not always removed my position after a nice gain since they continued to trend downward. All the money I made on shorts, and then some, was lost on a bank turnaround that I was convinced I had figured out, National City. It's a long story, but suffice to say that I had twenty pounds of analysis that turned out to be faulty. 

Being a slow learner, I still follow the banks and look at opportunities. The sharp run up that the banks have experienced isn't sustainable. The yield curve is very lucrative at present and mortgage refinancing fees are plentiful. But in a de-leveraging economy good lending opportunities will be much scarcer than at peak earnings. Lower future earnings leads to lower P/Es and stock prices. Not to be forgotten are the huge loan losses that loom and the eventual dilution that will follow capital raising.

On top of the credit problems that bankers are dealing with, their buddies at the FDIC are adding to the banks misery. Since regulators have done such a poor job of controlling bank lending quality, on and off balance sheet, the FDIC Insurance Fund is in need of replenishment. Besides raising the deposit insurance fee, FDIC has levied a special assessment of 20 basis points. That is huge! At cocktails the other evening the president of a local 200MM bank told me his assessment was going to be $400,000! That is an immediate hit to earnings, or if the bank doesn't have earnings, book value.
Our banks will be earnings constrained for some time.

After all the stress test publicity abates and banks possibly enjoy an upward run, the trend is likely to be down. Since I have proven to myself that i know nothing about the industry anymore, I intend to short selected regional banks and stay with those positions. But for heavens sake, don't follow any of my advise when it comes to banks.

3 comments:

prophets said...

funny post.

your early short position demonstrates that you might at least know more about the banks than some of the people who ran them (Stan O'Neil, Chuck Prince) and maybe even some who regulated them (Geithner) !

mistakes are part of investing... stick to principles and don't throw everything out the window because you are wrong a handful of times.

carry on.

William F. Kabourek said...

Prophts, my dog is smarter than today's generation of bankers. She lets me know when she needs to go outside to do her business. Today's banker just craps all over himself.

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